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Restitution
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When you admit you've done something wrong and
that you're truly sorry for doing it, you want to make it
right. If you had run over your neighbor's bicycle, you'd
buy him a new one. If you had never returned a wrench that
you'd borrowed years before, you'd take it back to the owner.
If you said something untrue about someone, you'd contact
those you talked to and straighten it out. These actions are
called restitution.
To become a Christian is to
admit to God that one is sorry for his sins. God in turn forgives
him. So is that the end of the matter? If the new Christian
had never in any way harmed any other person or organization,
then yes, the slate would be completely clear. But if that
isn't the case, then God expects him to straighten out the
past wherever possible.
Now some will take issue with the subject of
restitution and say God's forgiveness is so far-reaching that
He does not expect a person to take care of the past. The
only problem is that the Bible says no such thing, nor does
it even imply that this is the case. Furthermore, it just
doesn't make sense!
Picture a new Christian, aglow with a fresh,
born-again experience. As he excitedly tells his friends what
the Lord has done for him, he thinks of his childhood friend,
John. He hasn't seen John since high school. So he calls him
and tells of his new life in Christ. John is moved by the
change in his old friend's life, but after listening for a
while, he finally asks, “Hey, what about all those tools you
stole from your neighbor? And that farmer's gas tank you shot
full of holes. Are you going to make those things right?”
The new Christian then says, “Oh, John, Jesus forgave me for
everything I did wrong, so I don't have to make the past right.
Isn't that wonderful? Now, don't you want to become a Christian
also?”
Preposterous? Of course it is! And yet some
are misled into thinking that God sanctions their defrauding
others. Not so! Paul the Apostle said, “And herein do I exercise
myself, to have always a conscience void of offence toward
God, and toward men” (Acts 24:16). Not just toward God, but
toward his fellowman also.
If you are not a Christian, you may be saying,
“Well, that makes sense. I wouldn't think much of someone
who said that God had made him an honest man but that he wasn't
going to make the past right. But what about me? I owe people
thousands of dollars for things I've done. Does that mean
I can't get saved until I pay it all back?”
No, it doesn't. As long as you are honestly
willing to make restitution as soon as you are able, God will
save you the moment you ask Him to. If a person has many restitutions
to make, it may take him years to pay them all back. But God
will certainly not withhold salvation from him until he can.
If you don't remember all that you need to take
care of, God will gently remind you. And more than that, He
will go before you when you make things right. Some of the
most convincing testimonies are given by new converts who
are making restitution. Once you've straightened out the past,
you will rejoice in the peace that comes with a “conscience
void of offence toward God, and toward men.”
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