Can God Forget?
By Pastor Ricky Kurth
"And their sins and iniquities will I remember no more"
(Heb. 10:17).
We know that God forgives the sins of His
people, but does He forget them? It would seem so. Our text suggests that He
"will not remember" the sins committed against Him by His children (Isa. 43:25).
Believers have always found a great deal of comfort in this
blessed thought.
But then God calls upon us to likewise forgive others
"even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you"
(Eph. 4:32). Doesn't this suggest that we too should forgive
and forget? Perhaps you are thinking, "But Pastor, you don't know what they did to me!" True, but was
it more than what was done to God when men crucified His Son?
Remember, God's vow to forgive and forget the sins of His people
includes even the brutal murder of His only begotten Son.
We are tempted to think, "Well, it's easy for God to forget,"
but such is not the case. God says of the sins of
unbelievers that He "will NEVER forget ANY of their works"
(Amos 8:7). How then can this God of "total recall" forget
our sins? Does His memory have a convenient "on/off" switch that makes it easy for Him to forgive and
forget? If so, then we who do not have such a switch would have
an excuse for forgiving but not forgetting. But if God has such a
switch, would He not also have to erase His memory of Calvary, or else
forever wonder why His Son had to die? But it cannot be that God
could forget the Cross, for Revelation 5:6 joins John 20:27 to reveal
that the Lord's resurrection body will
forever bear the scars of the Cross, making it impossible for Godor
usto ever forget His sacrifice for our sins.
What then is the answer to our question? Can God forget
our sins? Perhaps the reader has noticed that we never read that
God will forget the sins of His people, but rather that He
"will not remember" them. By a deliberate act of His "will" He
chooses to act toward us AS IF He has forgotten our
sins, on the basis of the blood of the Cross. That's how fully and completely He has forgiven our sins.
And if we are to forgive others "as"
God forgave us, then we too must choose to act toward others as if we have so fully forgiven their
transgressions against us that we have forgotten
themalso on the basis of Christ's shed blood. This and this alone is complete forgiveness
of others, and it is high spiritual ground indeed.
May God help us to begin the new year with a slate wiped clean
of "all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and
evil speaking...with all malice" (Eph. 4:31).