The Commercial Appeal

Our forgiven sins are not without any consequenc­es

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FROM THE WRITINGS OF THE REV. BILLY GRAHAM TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY

Q: My cousin got involved in drugs years ago and now suffers from brain damage. I know there are consequenc­es for our actions but if he were to ask God to forgive him would God restore him? — D.A.

A: God does not promise that all the consequenc­es of sin will vanish when we come to him with repentant hearts and submit ourselves to Him, but he does promise to be with us. Sin is a terrible and destructiv­e thing, and sometimes we have to pay the consequenc­es for our foolishnes­s and rebellion against God.

King David sinned greatly when he committed adultery with another man’s wife. God forgave him when he truly repented and asked God for forgivenes­s — but the child born of that illicit union still died as an act of God’s judgment on David.

Now God does not always respond in the same way to the same circumstan­ces, but he is sovereign and will use things in our lives to teach us about him. But God is able to do immeasurab­ly more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power (Ephesians 3:20). There are times when God works in ways that are beyond our human understand­ing to bring healing and restoratio­n, although none of us can predict when this will be the case or in what fashion he demonstrat­es his power.

The best we can do for those who suffer from their past is to tell them about the savior — Jesus Christ — and show them through Scripture that he is ready to hear their prayer of repentance and receive him as lord of their lives. “But God demonstrat­es his own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). This column is based on the words and writings of the late Rev. Billy Graham.

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