| AnswersThe Ultimate Guilt Trip? By Julie-Allyson IeronGuest Writer
 
 CBN.com 
		   Guilt is a tricky  thing. It can work for us or against us. It can warn us off dangerous behavior  or it can keep us tied in knots so we can’t achieve our full potential. The key  is in identifying its source. Once we know what kind of guilt is  plaguing us, we’ll be able to deal with it appropriately. The first brand of  guilt is rational guilt. The definition would be “a remorseful awareness of  having done something wrong” (American Heritage Dictionary). This  rational guilt is God-sent. It is the built-in guidance system that can keep us  from harming ourselves or others, and it can lead us back to the right track  when we derail.  We all know wrong  when we see it, and that’s thanks to rational  guilt. You know what I mean. Lying: wrong. Cheating:  wrong. Stealing: wrong. Killing: wrong. So when what you want to do is clearly  wrong, you’ll feel good guilt. Not feel-good guilt at the moment. But end-result-good  guilt. Guilt’s deterrent element can keep us from disappointing God and missing  His perfect standard in the first place, or it can draw us back to Him when  we’ve failed.  Good guilt over an offense committed can lead us to  restitution, reestablished relationship with someone we’ve wronged,  forgiveness, and finally freedom. Listen to the way the psalmist describes the  joy of a formerly guilty heart, “I acknowledged my sin to you and did not cover  up my iniquity. I said, ‘I will confess my transgressions to the Lord’—and you  forgave the guilt of my sin” (1). But there is a  second, more insidious brand of guilt: irrational guilt. It’s debilitating, and  its source is not God. It takes the form of false guilt—as  in holding ourselves responsible for things that weren’t our responsibility.  And it takes the form of insistent guilt, that refuses to see ourselves as  forgiven or forgivable—despite our confession to God and His offer of  forgiveness, full and free. As long as we’re focused on irrational guilt, we’re  paralyzed and ineffectual. The root of  irrational guilt is—wait ’till you hear this—self-centeredness. It’s saying, in  essence, “God, I know You say You’ve forgiven me, but my standard is higher  than Yours. I won’t forgive myself.” Well, now, that’s audacious. God requires a  contrite heart (2), not sacrifice and penance. When He forgives, He  tosses our sins farther away than we could even imagine (“as far as the east is  from the west,” He says [3]) and promises to “remember them”  against us “no more” (Hebrews 10:17). When we refuse to forgive ourselves, we  are taking on irrational guilt. The solution is to see ourselves as God sees  us—sinners who have confessed before Him and have accepted His forgiveness. So, there is no  easy answer to the question of why we feel guilt when we do “what we want to  do.” Because the answer may be that we’re feeling good guilt to deter us from  doing something detrimental or we may be feeling false guilt that is holding us  back from doing what God wants us to do. The only way to know for sure is to  become familiar with God’s standard. See, those who have established a personal  relationship with God, who enjoy spending time talking with Him (prayer) and  listening to Him (reading His Word, the Bible), will be free of guilt. We’ll  find the truth the psalmist/poet penned, “Delight yourself in the Lord and he  will give you the desires of your heart” (4). If we meet that first  criterion (delighting ourselves in the Lord), we can be free of guilt when we  receive from Him direction to move on the desires He places in our heart. And  if we’re still not certain about the source of incessant guilt, He offers this  invitation, “Let us draw near to God with a sincere heart in full assurance of  faith, having our hearts sprinkled to cleanse us from a guilty conscience”  (5). Perhaps in the end that’s the ultimate solution to our guilt  dilemma. 
           
   References: #1 Psalm 32:5 #2 Psalm 51:17 #3 Psalm 103:12 #4 Psalm 37:4 #5  Hebrews 10:22   
 
 CBN IS HERE FOR YOU!Are you seeking answers in life? Are you hurting?
 Are you facing a difficult situation?
  A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need. | 
	
	
 |