It is quite certain that those whom Christ has washed in His precious blood need not make a confession of sin, as culprits or criminals, before God the Judge, for Christ has for ever taken away all their sins in a legal sense, so that they no longer stand where they can be condemned, but are once for all accepted in the Beloved; but having become children, and offending as children, ought they not every day to go before their heavenly Father and confess their sin, and acknowledge their iniquity in that character? Nature teaches that it is the duty of erring children to make a confession to their earthly father, and the grace of God in the heart teaches us that we, as Christians, owe the same duty to our heavenly father. We daily offend, and ought not to rest without daily pardon. For, supposing that my trespasses against my Father are not at once taken to Him to be washed away by the cleansing power of the Lord Jesus, what will be the consequence? If I have not sought forgiveness and been washed from these offences against my Father, I shall feel at a distance from Him; I shall doubt His love to me; I shall tremble at Him; I shall be afraid to pray to Him: I shall grow like the prodigal, who, although still a child, was yet far off from his father. But if, with a child's sorrow at offending so gracious and loving a Parent, I go to Him and tell Him all, and rest not till I realize that I am forgiven, then I shall feel a holy love to my Father, and shall go through my Christian career, not only as saved, but as one enjoying present peace in God through Jesus Christ my Lord. There is a wide distinction between confessing sin as a culprit, and confessing sin as a child. The Father's bosom is the place for penitent confessions. We have been cleansed once for all, but our feet still need to be washed from the defilement of our daily walk as children of God.
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
Good stuff
God bless you for reading....
...I have been saved...
...I am being saved...
...I will be saved....
Heresy. Confess your sins, one to another. It’s not one and done. If you sin, you need to confess that sin.
Those who do not eat of my body and drink of my blood have no part in me.
...I believe you have misconstrued Spurgeon's intent....
No, he is a baptist, so he believes once saved/always saved (and does not believe in the sacrament of reconciliation) which leads to, as Luther put it: “Sin, and sin boldly.”
...that is not how I read his words at all...
...we can continue this discussion with Spurgeon when we get to Heaven....
It’s standard protestant theology, and it is not what the early church practiced. We must confess our sins to a person, acting as Christ, and in Christ, who has been given the authority to forgive our sins through Christ, as Christ said: “The sins which you forgive are forgiven, and the sins you retain are retained.” He said that to Peter, not to a crowd.
Confessing in prayer is generally an act of convincing oneself that one is forgiven in order to FEEL forgiven, but the words must be spoken by one who has authority to speak them.
...I can speak to Jesus directly, and through him, acting as my intercessor, he represents me before his Father, God....
Yes, you can.
But you cannot be sure that you are speaking to him directly and confessing honestly without doing as He commanded, and “confess your sins, one to another.”
God bless you...
Go in peace....