I Don’t Mind Confessing Sins—As Long As They Aren’t Mine

Why is confessing sins so important to our relationship with God? Shannon encourages us to “face the decay” and ask God for help.

Asking Jesus for help

Confessing Sins And Facing The Decay

I don’t really like confessing my sins. It’s a lot like going to the dentist, which I didn’t mind until last October. I sat in the exam chair, looking up at the X-rays and trying to process what my dentist was saying. Not me, I thought, not after thirty-two years.

The tiny spot on the X-ray, though, refused to illuminate. My dental sins had found my out. After years of not flossing, I had a cavity.

The problem with confessing is that it requires us to face the decay inside. A pearly exterior doesn’t matter—how often we go to church or the amount of our charitable donations. Confession, like X-rays, looks for the evil rotting beneath the surface.

confessing sins

Maybe we read our Bible several mornings a week and feel pretty “spiritual,” but that’s like showing up to God’s Dental with two rows of shiny teeth. He’s more concerned with what’s under the enamel.

His radiographs might find that we’re rolling out of bed, not to hear from the God we love, but to manipulate him—we give up twenty minutes of our time and expect him, in return, to answer our prayers. Our devotions, held up to his light-box, might actually reveal self-centeredness.

Making Excuses About Our Sin 

But, this is an uncomfortable thing to do—inviting the Holy Spirit to X-ray our lives and show us the decay. So, we say things like “I just needed to vent,” instead of calling it gossip. We tell ourselves, “We’re practically married, so it’s okay,” instead of labeling it sexual sin.

We prefer to talk around the evil inside of us, without ever actually making eye contact with it. But, that’s what it is—evil—the place in our hearts that cares more about satisfying ourselves than it does about God.

confessing sin

This evasion lets us go on believing that we’re pretty good people. We compare our slip-ups to really bad sins and walk away feeling relieved. Or, after sinning, we try to balance the score with God. If we “fudge” on our taxes and feel guilty about it later, we might sign-up to volunteer at the homeless shelter.

This is strange behavior for people who believe that God’s love for us is completely disconnected from our successes and failures. He knows how deeply the evil in us goes—miles deeper than we think possible—and he see all the times when we’ve demanded that he serve us.

And, he still keeps loving us. Heaven knows we don’t deserve it. Only someone perfect could deserve that kind of love—only someone like Jesus, the very person who turns around and shares that love with us.

Asking God For Help

So, why don’t we reach for God’s grace when dark spots show up in our lives? Why do pray for Aunt Martha’s broken hip or our upcoming job interview, but keep our failures silent and unnamed—those hours before the computer screen, the whole cake we ate after everyone else went to bed, the black hole inside that keeps us at work when our spouse needs us at home. Then, we wonder why God seems distant, and why the gospel, when we know it by heart, tastes stale.

confessing sin

Real grace, though, never loses its flavor, but the only way to get a bite of it is to face the evil inside ourselves and turn to God for help. When we hide our sins and tiptoe around them, we rob ourselves of the chance to experience, all over again, how the gospel is truly fantastic news.

Unconfessed sin deadens our relationship with God. Like a cavity, it needs to be named and dealt with—even if that means a root canal.*

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Do you find it difficult to confess your sins? We would love to hear from you. Comment below or contact us at HopeStreamRadio.

Previously published at ShannonGianotti.com on March 15, 2016 and ConvergeMagazine.com on May 3, 2016. 

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Shannon Gianotti Baker

Shannon Gianotti Baker

Shannon is a writer, nurse practitioner, and student at Dallas Theological Seminary. On her 10th birthday, she got lost in the pages of her favorite gift, an atlas of the human body. Her next treasure was a pink Bible. Those books tell the story of her life. Now, she splits time listening to patients’ heart beats at work and examining her own at seminary.  As a writer and speaker, Shannon wants to give more than the facts about Jesus. She hopes to offers a taste of who he is and what life with him is like. Her program doesn’t pretend to be comprehensive or exhaustive, but she hopes you’ll find something genuinely him in it.

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