THE CONFESSION OF SIN

‘I will go and return to My place, till they acknowledge their offence, and seek My face: in their affliction they will seek Me early.’

Hosea 5:15

It is the picture of a father dealing with a child who has not yet owned his fault. The father has been trying to persuade the child, but the child will not confess. Then the father says, ‘I will try another way, “I will go and return to my place, till they acknowledge their offence, and seek my face”; my absence will be sure to bring with it sorrow and trouble: and “in their affliction they will seek me early.” ’ And then it is beautiful to link on the next verse. It is almost a pity that it has been thrown into another chapter. The absence has brought the affliction, and the affliction has brought confession: ‘Come, and let us return unto the Lord: for He hath torn, and He will heal us; He hath smitten, and He will bind us up.’ We often feel as if God was gone away from us. May it not be that there is just that difference, that distinct boundary line between absence and presence—‘till they shall acknowledge their offence’? And may not that affliction which has visited you, have come upon this very errand, to say, ‘Confess, confess that secret sin, which is keeping God away from you’? Confess your sins. Let us consider how this confession is to be made.

I. Confess in humiliation.—Confession is to God, and it should be done with the deepest and most careful humiliation. Whatever can help to humiliation, do it. God requires that the relation with Himself which has been interrupted and reversed by your sin, should be re-adjusted. You must go very low down into the dust, and God must go up very high. The one will not do without the other. As self goes down, Christ must go up; and as Christ goes up, self must go down. Put yourself, really and simply, at the very lowest—down into the dust—that is the essence of confession.

II. Particularise your sins.—To the same end, let your confession to God particularise. Be very minute—as minute, let your confession be, as you can possibly make it. Mention all the little things. Make them stand out in bold relief. It is the sum of confession. Generally, persons are ready enough to confess many, nay, most of their sins—but there is one which they do not like to speak of, even when they are speaking to God. Now, your confession will be nothing at all if you only reach to that. There are a great many good suggestions and rules about confession in the Book of Leviticus: ‘And it shall be, when he shall be guilty in one of these things, that he shall confess that he hath sinned in that thing’—‘ that thing.’ That thing do you lay out before God in all its parts—the guilty omissions which went before it—the wrong motives—the secret feelings—the aggravating circumstances, the special acts—the guilty pleasure—the resistance of the Spirit, the grievings of conscience—the miserable consequences.

III. Accept the punishment.—When you confess sin, always do it as one who is accepting punishment. Open your breast to take punishment. Feel and say, ‘Lord, I am here—no punishment can be too heavy for me.’ But, O Father, ‘mercifully look upon our infirmities, and for the glory of Thy name, turn from us all those evils that we most righteously have deserved.’ ‘O Lord, correct me, but with judgment; not in Thine anger, lest Thou bring me to nothing.’

IV. Lay the sin upon the altar.—And at the same moment realise, and do not doubt, that you are laying your sin upon the true altar, the Lord Jesus Christ. As you speak the self-demeaning words, and as you feel the heaviest convictions, believe that you are laying all upon the head of our Lord Jesus Christ, Who shall carry all that is there laid on Him, up, far, far away into a land, not inhabited, where they shall be seen and mentioned no more.

V. Make some act of devotion.—Then go and try to embody that confession, and give it all the force and substance you can, by some holy act—some self-denying labour of love—some gift of God—some special act of devotion.

But true confession to God will always be accompanied with, and will always produce, the wish to make some confession to man. If you have ever stolen anything—restore it. If you have told a lie, acknowledge it. If you have done anything that can hurt anybody’s feelings, or anybody’s soul, go and make what amends you can. You owe it to that man, you owe it to your own soul. It will be good evidence to all men of the reality of your faith and love.

—Rev. Jas. Vaughan.

Illustration

‘When men begin to complain more of their sins than of their afflictions, there begin to be some hopes of them. And this is that which God requires of us when we are under His correcting hand, that we own ourselves to be in fault, and to be justly corrected.’

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