Dr. Jack L. Arnold Equipping
Pastors International Appendix
4
Pneumatology
The Doctrine of the Person and Work
of the Holy Spirit
Appendix 4—The Unpardonable Sin
A.
Matthew 12:22-32 –
B.
Mark 3:20-30 –
A.
The account of the unpardonable sin is only found in Matthew and Mark.
B.
No other reference is made to it anywhere in the Bible
A.
The healing of a demoniac – (Matt. 12:22) The
King (Christ) had come, preaching that His Kingdom was at hand and He had been
performing miracles as Messianic signs to substantiate His claims (Matt. 3:2;
4:17; 11:4-6). Christ made this
claim in 12:28: ÒBut if I drive out demons by the Spirit of God, then the
Kingdom of God has come upon you.Ó
B.
The response of the people – (Matt. 12:23) The people were beginning to wonder whether Jesus truly was
the Messiah although there were lingering doubts.
C.
The accusation of the
Pharisees
(Matt. 12:24)
The Pharisees thought Christ was satanically controlled and did
this miracle in the power of Beelzebub. The Pharisees thought Jesus devilish and his family thought him
deranged (Mark 3:21).
D.
The answer of Christ - (Matt. 12:25-30) Jesus answers
by saying that Satan does not cast out Satan. Division within SatanÕs Kingdom is impossible. Jesus points out that He did His
miracles in the power of the Holy Spirit and that He is Master of the spirit world. Christ also points out that in this
struggle there is no neutrality. A
person is either for Him or against Him.
1.
It is not moral debauchery.
The Pharisees, who are the objects of this warning, were not guilty of
immoral actions. They were
outwardly moral persons but hypocritical.
2.
This is a specific sin because it is marked off by the definite article
the blasphemy against the Holy
Spirit.
3.
In Mark 3:28,29, the word hamartema is used and this usually refers to an act of sin
and not some immoral act of a general nature.
1.
It is a sin of blasphemy (Lev. 24:15,16: Ex. 22:28). By claiming that ChristÕs
miracles were done by Beelzebub, the Pharisees were blaspheming the real
author of them, the Holy Spirit.
2.
It is a sin against the Holy Spirit. They are rejecting the KingÕs testimony to the King
(12:28,29).
3.
It is a sin of refusing the Kingdom and the King (12:28; Mark
3:30). The Pharisees claimed
Christ had an Òevil spiritÓ (Mark 3:30).
They refused the King by their accusation that He was in collusion with
the demonic world.
1.
Man may misunderstand who Jesus was because His deity and dignity was
veiled due to the incarnation.
While sin against His was blameable, it was
pardonable. But the sin against
the Holy Spirit was different because it was the rejection of the works clearly
done by the divine power of the Holy Spirit.
2.
This sin was a deliberate, final refusal of light and it reveals a
hardened, impenitent heart. The
Greek word clegon
translated, Òthey were sayingÓ in Mark 3:30 is in the imperfect tense
indicating action having taken place in the past. They were constantly saying this: It was a hardened
attitude.
3.
Matthew 12 is the pivotal chapter, for the climax of
rejection is reached by the religious leaders to the person and work of
Christ. They had rejected Christ
and now were rejecting the Holy Spirit who lived in Jesus and this was
unpardonable.
1.
There are indications from the text that the unpardonable sin can only
be committed when the King is personally in the likeness of men. It is only then that a sin against the
Son of Man could be considered less in significance than the sin against the
Holy Spirit. The incarnation
is the key to this interpretation.
2.
Others feel that the unpardonable sin can be committed today if a
person accredits the works of Christ to Satan rather than the Holy Spirit which
would involve a definite, deliberate rejection to clear light. This would invoke the sin of apostasy
(Heb. 3:12; 6:4-6; 2 Chron. 36:15,16).
ÒThere is such a thing as sin which is never
forgiven, but those who are the most troubled about it are most unlikely ever
to have committed it.Ó