Many today teach
the truth that God is love but fail to teach that within His love He rebukes,
corrects, chastises and disciplines those whom He loves. (Jn.3:16; 1Jn.4:8, 16;
Rom.8:28; 2Sam.7:14; Heb.12:7, 8)
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GotQuestions.org: What does it mean to be chastened?
Hebrews 12:6 says, “For whom the Lord loves he chastens, and
scourges every son whom he receives” (KJV). Another word for “chasten” is
“discipline.” The passage goes on to quote Proverbs 3:11-12, which says, “My son, do not despise the Lord’s
discipline and do not resent his rebuke, because the Lord disciplines those he
loves, as a father the son he delights in.” Proper discipline is a proof of
love.
Throughout
Scripture, God portrays Himself as a Father. Those who have received Jesus as
Savior are His children (John 1:12; Galatians 3:26). He uses the analogy of father/son because we
understand it. He compares Himself to a loving father who not only blesses but
disciplines His beloved children for their own good. Hebrews 12 goes on to show that those who do not
receive God’s discipline are not legitimate children (verse 8). A loving father
carefully watches his son, and when that son defies his orders and heads for
danger, the father disciplines him to keep him safe. God does that with us.
When a born-again child of God heads for sin or refuses to resist temptation,
our Heavenly Father brings chastening into his life to direct him back to
holiness.
Chastening
can come in the form of guilty feelings, unpleasant circumstances, loss of
peace, relationship fractures, or any number of negative consequences for
choosing sin. Sometimes, the chastening of the Lord can be physical illness or
even death (1 Corinthians 11:30).
Often,
people ask if God is “punishing” them for wrong choices in the past. All our
punishment for sin was exhausted upon Jesus on the cross (Romans 5:9). The wrath of God was poured out on Him so that
for those who are “in Christ Jesus” (Romans 8:1) no wrath remains. When we give our lives to
Christ, our Substitute for sin, our sin is forgiven and God remembers it no
more (Hebrews 8:12; 10:15-18). However, often, our wrong choices in the past
have brought about unpleasant consequences now. God does not necessarily remove
the natural consequences of sin when we repent. Those consequences are tools
God can use to teach us, to prevent us from repeating the same mistakes, and to
remind us of God’s grace.
Examples
of chastening are found throughout the Bible. The Israelites were continually
disobeying God’s commands (Numbers 14:21-23; Judges 2:1-2; 2 Kings 18:12). He was patient with them, He sent prophets to
plead with them, and He warned them many times. But when they dug in their
heels and embraced idols or evil practices, God brought chastening upon them in
the form of plagues or enemy attacks (Jeremiah 40:3). He still loved them, and in His love He could
not allow them to continue in behavior that would destroy them.
There
are many examples of personal chastening in the Bible, as well, even upon those
in whom the Lord most delighted—Moses (Numbers 27:12), David (1 Chronicles 28:3), and Solomon (1 Kings 11:11), to name a few. Notice that, although these men
made mistakes and were chastened for them, God did not stop loving or using
them. He brought discipline appropriate to the crime, but always forgave the
truly repentant heart. God always restored the relationship.
When we
sin, we can expect that our loving Heavenly Father will not let us get away
with it. Because He loves us, He desires us to live holy lives (1 Peter 1:15-16; Romans 8:29). If someone professes to know Christ but is
living a lifestyle of unrepentant sin and claims to “feel fine about it,” with
no qualms, then that person is not a legitimate child of God (Revelation 3:19; Hebrews 12:5-11; Job 5:17; Psalm 94:12; I John 3:4-12). God “chastens everyone he accepts as his son” (Hebrews 12:6).
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