Two different kinds
of forgiveness are found in the Scriptures, and if we are
going to be careful students of the Word, we must learn to
distinguish them. We will call them judicial and parental
forgiveness (though these names are not used in the Bible).
To put it very
simply, judicial forgiveness is the forgiveness of a judge and
parental forgiveness is the forgiveness of a father. The first
term is taken from the courtroom and the second from the home.
First let us go to
the courtroom. God is the Judge and sinful man is the person
on trial. Man is guilty of sinning, and the penalty is eternal
death. But the Lord Jesus appears and announces, "I will pay
the penalty which man's sins deserved; I will die as a
Substitute for him!" This is what the Savior did on the Cross
of Calvary. Now the Judge announces to sinful man, "If you
will surrender to my Son as your Lord and Savior, I will
forgive you." As soon as the man puts his faith in the Savior,
he receives judicial forgiveness of all his sins. He will
never have to pay the punishment for them in hell, because
Christ has paid it all. The forgiven sinner now enters into a
new relationship: God is no longer his Judge; now He is his
Father.
So now we move into
the home for an illustration of parental forgiveness. God is
the Father and the believer is the child. In an unguarded
moment, the child commits an act of sin. Then what happens?
Does God sentence the child to die for the sin? Of course not,
because God is no longer the Judge, but the Father! What does
happen? Well, fellowship in the family is broken. The happy
family spirit is gone. The child has not lost his salvation,
but he has lost the joy of his salvation. Soon he may
experience the discipline of his Father, designed to bring him
back into fellowship. As soon as the child confesses his sin,
he receives parental forgiveness.
Judicial forgiveness
takes place once-for-all at the time of conversion; parental
forgiveness takes place every time a believer confesses and
forsakes his sin. This is what Jesus taught in John 13:8-10:
we need the bath of regeneration only once to deliver us from
the penalty of sins, but we need many cleansings throughout
our Christian lives to give us parental forgiveness.
The difference
between the two types of forgiveness may be summarized
graphically as follows:
|
|
Judicial Forgiveness |
Parental Forgiveness |
|
The Person's Status |
Sinner (Romans 3:23) |
Child (1 John 3:2) |
|
Relationship of God |
Judge (Psalms 96:13) |
Father (Galatians 4:6) |
|
Result of sin |
Eternal Death (Romans
6:23) |
Broken fellowship (1
John 1:6) |
|
Role of Christ |
Savior (1 Timothy 1:15) |
High Priest and Advocate
(Heb. 4:14-16; 1 John 2:1) |
|
The Person's Need |
Salvation (Acts 16:30) |
Joy of salvation (Psalms
51:12) |
|
Means of Forgiveness |
Faith (Acts 16:31) |
Confession (1 John 1:9) |
|
Kind of Forgiveness |
Judicial (Romans 8:1) |
Parental (Luke 15:21,
22) |
|
Consequence Averted |
Hell (John 5:24) |
Chastening ((1 Cor.
11:31, 32)
Loss of reward at the Judgment Seat of Christ (1 Cor.
3:15) |
|
Positive Result |
New Relationship (John
1:12) |
Renewed Fellowship
(Psalms 32:5) |
|
Frequency |
Once - one bath of
regeneration (John 13:10) |
Many times - many
cleansings (John 13:8) |
From now on, when we come to verses that speak about the
once-for-all forgiveness that is granted to us as sinners
through the work of Christ, we will know that the subject is
judicial forgiveness. The following illustrate this: In whom
we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins,
according to the riches of his grace. (Eph. 1:7).
And be kind to one
another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in
Christ forgave you (Eph. 4:32 RSV).
And you, being dead
in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath he
quickened together with him, having forgiven you all your
trespasses Col. 2:13).
However, there are
other passages of Scripture that deal with parental
forgiveness:
For if ye forgive men
their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you;
but if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your
Father forgive your trespasses (Matt. 6:14, 15).
Judge not, and ye
shall not be judged; condemn not, and ye shall not be
condemned; forgive, and ye shall be forgiven (Luke 6:37). And
when ye stand praying, forgive, if ye have ought against any,
that your Father also which is in heaven may forgive you your
trespasses (Mark 11:25).
Notice that in two of
these verses God is specifically mentioned as Father; it is
the Father's forgiveness that is involved. Notice also that
our being forgiven depends on our willingness to forgive
others. That is not true of judicial forgiveness; willingness
to forgive others is not a condition of salvation. But it is
true of parental forgiveness; our Father will not forgive us
if we don't forgive one another.
In Matthew 18:23-25
Jesus told the story of a slave who had been forgiven 10,000
talents by the king. But that same slave wouldn't forgive one
of his fellow-slaves 100 pence. The king was therefore angry
with him and delivered him to the jailers till he paid all his
debt. Jesus concluded the parable by saying "So likewise shall
my heavenly Father do also unto you, if ye from your hearts
forgive not every one his brother their trespasses." Here
again it is a matter of the Father's forgiveness. It is sin to
have an unforgiving spirit, and God cannot forgive us
parentally until we confess that sin and forsake it. One of
the thrills of Bible study is to see these basic distinctions
and to be able to apply them in our daily reading. From now on
when you come to the subject of forgiveness in the Word you
should be able to say, "Oh, yes, that refers to judicial
forgiveness, or else "that must refer to the Father's
forgiveness of His child."