John20:23
Maybe this will help maybe not. I know you weren't really asking me to answer the question, but it got me thinking. Jesus was giving instructions to His disciples, the Apostle, as His appointed founder and head of His church. They had the authority, s now church leadership, has the authority, (though it is seldom exercised today)to pronounce a sin forgiven or not. It was about church discipline. My study Bible referenced Matt.16:19, Matt.18:18, 1Cor.5:4,5.
16:19 IS the keys to the kingdom passage
18:18 the binding and loosing passage
1Cor.5:4,5 (actually beginning inv 3
"For though absent in body, I am present in spirit;and as if present I have already pronounced judgement on the one who did such a thing. When you are assembled in the name of the Lord Jesus and my spirit is present, with the power of our Lord Jesus, you are to deliver this man to Satan for the destruction of his flesh, so that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord." This is an example of Paul using this authority to discipline a church member. In other places it makes clear that someone who commits open sin visible to the church, is disciplined by the elders, and if he doesn't repent, publicly in the church, and if he still doesn't repent, he is to be put out of the Church, for the purpose of bringing him to repentance, and if he does repent, restore him to fellowship.
So. That passage in John is about church discipline.
1John1:9 says, "If we confess our sins He is faithful and just to forgive our sins and to cleanse us of all unrighteousness."
And the Bible is full of people confessing privately before God. No examples that I know of of confessing to any human in order to receive forgiveness from God. Jesus alone is our mediator.
Hi Boaz,,,
What a well thought out post !
After dinner I pulled out my NASB and also the Living Bible because there were a couple of verses that I couldn't understand 100%. I have many bibles and this is what I do when I don't understand something or have a question. I read the verses in 2 or 3 bibles and I tend not to use commentaries unless absolutely necessary.
I agree with you that confession is about church discipline!
I had never thought of it this way.
What I HAD believed once was that confession had to do with whether or not one was allowed to enter into the Christian community. IF they had sinned, were they truly repentant? If so, they could be allowed in, if not they would not be.
You brought up 1 Corinthians 5:1.....and this is what I needed time for because I remembered that there's another verse in
2 Corinthians 2:5.....regarding this same person/event.
It's speaking exactly about what you stated.
In 1 Cor 5:1 the person has done something truly terrible, something that wouldn't be tolerated even outside the church.
Paul is telling those in that church in Corinth that the person should be dealt with and not ignored. Paul specifically says to deal with it with the authority of Jesus. The man's conduct is to be held up to public scrutiny so he could defend himself -- if possible. And if he cannot, then he should be removed from the church.
Then in 2 Cor 2:5....
Paul says he does not want to be too hard on the person, that there has been punishment enough...they should forgive the man and invite him back into the church and show him love.
The interesting part here is that in 2 Cor Paul says that the reason for his first letter to them... 1 Cor 5, was not so much to punish the person as to make that church take responsibility for what had happened and act accordingly as a church.
If they forgave the man...then Paul will forgive him too.
The two ideas above seem to mesh somewhat...
The one I used to have and still really believe,,,
and the one you brought forward.
A confirmation of this is how the early church viewed confession and how it developed...no use to get into this.
You did make two contrasting statements, however, that confused me and could you please clarify...
First you said:
They had the authority, s now church leadership, has the authority, (though it is seldom exercised today)to pronounce a sin forgiven or not.
Then you said, at the end:
No examples that I know of of confessing to any human in order to receive forgiveness from God. Jesus alone is our mediator.
I think you're saying what I also said...
about the church having the authority to declare that one has sinned...not necessrily to forgive it.
Please confirm.