Regrets
While it would be wonderful to live a life of no regrets
there are few if any of us that have or will.
By the time one reaches old age, and generally a long, long time before one
can look back at his life and see things he wishes he had done differently. These things may relate to about any area of
our life. I think it would do us some
good to look back at some of the Bible's famous men and see if they had any
regrets. By doing so it may give us a
degree of strength to go on and not give up.
Adam was the very first man, our great ancestor. There is no doubt but what this man had deep
regrets. He once lived in a paradise on
earth and had an unending life ahead of him having free access to the tree of
life. For food all he had to do was
reach up and pluck it from the tree on which it grew. There was no need to store it or do hard
labor for it, for it was always going to be there. God walked with him in the garden and thus
for a time he had full fellowship with God.
Adam gave it all up.
Do you not think while he was toiling the soil by the sweat
of his brow fighting the thorns and thistles and realizing his destiny was to
but become dust himself, that he must die, and that he had also brought this
same destiny upon his children, that he was responsible for what they would
have to go through, that he often looked back on how it once was and deeply
regretted what he had done?
Samuel was a great man of God. I do not recall a single passage that speaks
ill of Samuel. He was God's man and
judged
Do you not think this grieved Samuel greatly? The thought comes naturally to mind when a
child goes wrong where did I fail, where did I go wrong in raising him or
her? There is possibly no other regret
that cuts deeper than this one. We think
to ourselves if I had just done this or that differently. We blame ourselves. I failed my child or my children.
I do not claim Samuel sinned in the way he raised his family
for I have no way of knowing but I do believe every parent will blame himself or herself to an extent and have regrets. When one looks back in time there were a
number of great men of God who could not have qualified to be an elder in the
church in the New Testament era, one of the requirements being "having
faithful children" (Titus 1:6 NKJV), due to the kind of lives one or more
of their children lived.
David was another great man of God. Here is what God thought about David after
his death, speaking of King Abijam, the scripture says, "his
heart was not wholly true to the Lord his God, as the heart of David his
father." (I Kings 15:3 ESV) And
then in the latter part of verse 4 of the same chapter we read, "David did
what was right in the eyes of the Lord and did not turn aside from anything
that he commanded him all the days of his life, except in the matter of Uriah
the Hittite." (1 Kings 15:4b ESV)
He also is listed in faith's hall of fame in Hebrews 11 verse 32. Certainly, we all expect to see David in
heaven.
Yet, David had occasion for regret in his life. Yes, the most obvious was committing adultery
with Bathsheba and having Uriah her husband murdered. No doubt he looked back on that occasion many
times in his life with deep regret. Not
only had he done this great evil it also brought with it great consequences
resulting in much harm down the road to others.
Hear the words of Nathan the prophet, "Now therefore the sword
shall never depart from your house, because you have despised me and have taken
the wife of Uriah the Hittite to be your wife.
Thus says the Lord, 'Behold, I will raise up evil against you out of
your own house. And I will take your
wives before your eyes and give them to your neighbor, and he shall lie with
your wives in the sight of this sun.'" (2 Sam. 12:10-11 ESV)
What was the evil that came down the road? Absalom, a son whom David loved, murdered
another son of David – Amnon. Awhile
later Absalom sought to take the kingdom away from his father and even have his
father put to death. David had to flee
to save his own life. In a battle that
brought defeat to Absalom, David commanded those in charge of his army,
"Deal gently for my sake with the young man Absalom." (2 Sam. 18:5
ESV) You know the story of how in
disobedience to David's orders Joab killed Absalom. You also remember the deep grief David
suffered over this.
The Bible says when David learned of Absalom's death he was
deeply moved and wept. "O my son
Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! Would I
had died instead of you, O Absalom, my son, my
son!" What sorrow, what regret. Had David not
brought this upon himself by his sin?
Much like Adam he could look back with deep regret over his sins. It had cost him dearly and resulted in much
harm to others he loved deeply. To me
the Bible is clear that had David pursued a different course in his life with
regards to Uriah and Bathsheba the life of his own family would have turned out
differently. Solomon later had another
son of David's put to death – Adonijah.
Prophecy was most certainly fulfilled.
Sin can have deep consequences in this life not only for
ourselves but also for those we love and care about. It is not as we sometimes hear "my
life" and no one else's business.
There are always consequences for good or ill for others in our acts or
lack thereof. But, the subject is
regret. There is no doubt about regret
being in David's life as he thought on these things in reflection from time to
time.
In the New Testament we also find great men of God who no
doubt had regret. We can readily name
two – Paul and Peter. Paul said he was
"not worthy to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the
Peter's case is too well known to recount here but we are
all well aware of his regret having denied Jesus just at the time when Jesus
could have used support the most.
A lesser known case is that of James and John. Do you remember when Jesus was heading to
Then there was the other time when James and John came to
Jesus asking that they might sit, "one on your right hand and the other on
your left, in your glory." (Mark
We have seen enough examples to make the point. There is often in even the best of men things
they look back on with regret. Things
they wish they had done differently, attitudes and actions they very much
regret or things they wish they had done but didn't. These are things that can drag us down and
destroy us if we allow it – a deep inner regret and sorrow that clings to us and
will not seem to abate.
When I look at you or you look at me we think we know the
person we are seeing if we have been acquainted with them for any length of
time. That is often not the case. We do not know the inner man and the sorrow
he or she may be carrying everyday of his/her life. Paul said in 1 Cor.
Sometimes we see those who are overly righteous so to
speak. They feel they have led exemplary
lives and perhaps their sins have not been as great as that of others except
for one thing – their attitude. One is
reminded of the two men who went up to pray, the one a Pharisee and the other a
tax collector. The Pharisee prayed
thanking God he was not like the tax collector. (Luke 18:10-11) He busied himself telling God the good things
he was doing and how he was not doing evil and yet Jesus says of the tax
collector "I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather
than the other." (Luke
When we begin to think too much of ourselves we ought to
stop and consider. If I am so good why
do I need Jesus' blood? There is not a
person on the face of the earth who has lived such a life that on its own merits
deserves anything other than eternal hell fire.
A nasty bad attitude toward others is just as bad as anything else and
even more distasteful to others. It is
disgraceful and unbecoming a Christian.
It matters not how bad a life a person, or even a Christian,
has lived in the past. When a person
repents and comes to God or back to God, as the case may be, they deserve all
the honor and respect that can be given one of God's children whom Jesus came
to earth to save. No matter how bad a
life they may have lived they are just as good as you in God's eyes no matter
how good a life you have lived or think you have lived. You probably never committed the sins David
did but would you dare say, because you have not, that God sees you as superior
to David? We sometimes, despite
ourselves, carry about a sense of superiority.
We did not do this or that and we become the Pharisee that went up to
pray.
Remember the account of the man who sent workers out into
his field at different times of the day in Matthew 20? When evening came those who had worked longer
felt they deserved more money than those who had worked less
hours and in some cases far less hours.
They felt the landowner was unjust when he gave the same amount to every
man regardless of the hours worked. It
seemed unfair to them. We have to be
careful that we never develop that kind of attitude toward our fellowman and
especially toward one another, brethren in Christ. The attitude of we have done more, we have
been better, we deserve more, is unchristian.
Truth is we deserve nothing, nothing that is but punishment for our
sins, the sins we think we don't have.
Why do people sometimes develop this kind of negative
attitude? Perhaps there are other
reasons as well but here are a couple that come to mind. One, they are not willing to be honest with
themselves for they find more comfort in self deception. The Bible says, "Every way of man is
right in his own eyes, but the Lord weighs the hearts." (Prov. 21:2
NKJV) God said in Jeremiah 17:9 (NKJV),
"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; who can
know it?" If we want to be self
deceived it is not hard to do so.
A second reason some develop this negative attitude is their
ignorance of the scriptures. Some really
do not know the scriptures well enough to know what is and what is not sin. There is
all kind of sin apart from just sins of commission but some are relatively
unaware of this. If I do not love my
brother have I sinned? Some act as
though as long as they do a man no harm all is well. Is it?
Did you do him any good if and when he needed it?
We sometimes blame a person for his or her past and seem to
want to see it corrected before we will accept them. There are a ton of things in our past we cannot
correct and if that is to be the standard of Christian love one toward another
it is a standard that sinners can never attain to. How do you correct the past? There is only so much any one of us can do to
correct the past.
We want mission impossible out of people sometimes rather
than accept them as full fledged brothers and sisters in Christ. We will love them later when everything has
been corrected. The trouble is that it
is often impossible to correct the past no matter how much we might desire to
do it.
I would like to reflect on the men that have been mentioned
in this study. Of the men we have
studied some were already children of God at the time events unfolded in their
lives that brought them regret. I guess
Paul would be the only exception. Of the
6 men we have mentioned I believe we all agree that we expect to see at least 5
of them in heaven. As for Adam I am only
willing to say that I do not know what happened in the many years after his
fall in the garden. Did he repent? Did God forgive him? I am willing to leave that with them.
Because we are all in the same boat together should we not
fully accept one another with all of our faults of the past and count them as
but nothing (the assumption being we have repented and turned to God)? We have all sunk our own boat and all of us
are reaching up to Jesus for salvation.
We are all hoping with Christian expectation that Jesus will reach out
his hand to us as he did to Peter when Peter was sinking in the water he had
been walking on. Only Jesus can save us.
The past is the past but we can help one another, comfort
and console one another, and help one another get to heaven. We all have regrets but we all can have hope
if we will as the old song goes but trust and obey. The time comes when we must move on. The past cannot be undone and we do not want
it to destroy us. Paul gave us inspired
advice when he said, "But one thing I do:
forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I
press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ
Jesus. Let those of us who are mature
think this way." (Phillipians
3:13b-15a ESV)
The inspired advice is let the past go. Look to the future. That is the best advice you will ever get on
this subject – inspired advice. Turn
loose of the past, let it go. Christ has
called us to freedom, not to bondage.