Laela
Sidestepping the "lynch mob"
Are You Under Conviction or Condemnation?
Written By Mary Whelchel
November 28, 2011
Question: Are you under conviction or condemnation? You may wonder, "What's the difference?" But there's a big difference and I'm learning how very important it is for me to discern the difference between condemnation and conviction.
Condemnation is a vague, indefinite guilty feeling, like a black cloud over your head all the time following you everywhere you go. And no matter where you are or what you're doing, you just can't get rid of the black cloud. But the problem is you don't know exactly what you feel guilty about.
Conviction, on the other hand, is definite and specific. When you are convicted about something, you know exactly what it is, and you know exactly what you need to do. It's not vague; it's usually piercing. It feels like an arrow in your heart or your side or your stomach. But you're not confused about what the problem is. And that feeling of conviction bothers you until you do what you know you should do, and then it goes away and your joy returns.
God is not the author of confusion and he never deals with us in vague and indefinite feelings. He gives us clear signals when we are in disobedience, and his conviction is easily recognizable. So, the big difference between conviction and condemnation is that one is from God-conviction-and the other one is not-condemnation. In Romans 8:1 Paul reminds us that there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ. God never condemns his children. He often convicts us for our own good, but he never deals with us in condemnation.
Usually conviction concerns something in our immediate past: an unkind word we spoke yesterday, or a jealous reaction we had last week; a relationship that is not glorifying to God. Those are the kind of things in our lives that God convicts us about. And the closer you walk to the Lord, the more quickly you are convicted and the more the little things bother you, as well as the big ones.
Not long ago my tongue got out of control-again-and I said some really stupid words to a person. No sooner had I said them than the arrow of conviction pierced my heart, and I had no rest until I apologized and asked for forgiveness. That is conviction; it's painful, but you know what it is and you know what to do.
Condemnation, on the other hand, often drives us into ancient history and dredges up things that have long been forgiven and forgotten by God. It is messages we've received or been given from our past which come back to haunt us. Condemnation is often untruthful and it is never edifying. It doesn't cause you to repent and change, because you don't know what you're guilty of!
Are you under conviction or condemnation?
Written By Mary Whelchel
November 28, 2011
Question: Are you under conviction or condemnation? You may wonder, "What's the difference?" But there's a big difference and I'm learning how very important it is for me to discern the difference between condemnation and conviction.
Condemnation is a vague, indefinite guilty feeling, like a black cloud over your head all the time following you everywhere you go. And no matter where you are or what you're doing, you just can't get rid of the black cloud. But the problem is you don't know exactly what you feel guilty about.
Conviction, on the other hand, is definite and specific. When you are convicted about something, you know exactly what it is, and you know exactly what you need to do. It's not vague; it's usually piercing. It feels like an arrow in your heart or your side or your stomach. But you're not confused about what the problem is. And that feeling of conviction bothers you until you do what you know you should do, and then it goes away and your joy returns.
God is not the author of confusion and he never deals with us in vague and indefinite feelings. He gives us clear signals when we are in disobedience, and his conviction is easily recognizable. So, the big difference between conviction and condemnation is that one is from God-conviction-and the other one is not-condemnation. In Romans 8:1 Paul reminds us that there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ. God never condemns his children. He often convicts us for our own good, but he never deals with us in condemnation.
Usually conviction concerns something in our immediate past: an unkind word we spoke yesterday, or a jealous reaction we had last week; a relationship that is not glorifying to God. Those are the kind of things in our lives that God convicts us about. And the closer you walk to the Lord, the more quickly you are convicted and the more the little things bother you, as well as the big ones.
Not long ago my tongue got out of control-again-and I said some really stupid words to a person. No sooner had I said them than the arrow of conviction pierced my heart, and I had no rest until I apologized and asked for forgiveness. That is conviction; it's painful, but you know what it is and you know what to do.
Condemnation, on the other hand, often drives us into ancient history and dredges up things that have long been forgiven and forgotten by God. It is messages we've received or been given from our past which come back to haunt us. Condemnation is often untruthful and it is never edifying. It doesn't cause you to repent and change, because you don't know what you're guilty of!
Are you under conviction or condemnation?