What is The Unpardonable Sin
February 13, 2023
Commentary
These next verses have been referred to as the unpardonable sin. The big question is: Can it be committed today, and if so, how? First of all, Jesus made it clear that all sins can be forgiven (v. 31). Then what is blasphemy? It has been defined as intentionally speaking evil against the Holy Spirit (v. 32). But even blasphemy Jesus says can be forgiven just as any other sin when it is confessed and repented of. Then what was blasphemy against the Holy Spirit which was more serious? Warren Wiersbe explains it this way. “When the leaders rejected John the Baptist, they were rejecting the Father who sent him. When they rejected Jesus, they were rejecting the Son but when they rejected the Holy Spirit that is the end. There is no more witness.” This means that the “unpardonable sin” is the final rejection of Jesus. You can tell what a tree is like by the fruit it produces (v. 33). Our words say what is in our hearts (v. 34). Good people produce good things and evil people produce evil things (v. 35). On the day of judgment, we will have to give account for every careless word spoken (vv. 36-37).
The religious leaders demanded that Jesus give them a sign that would prove Himself to be the Messiah (v. 38). The kind of sign they wanted is not specified but must have been an extraordinary one of worldwide magnitude. Jesus had already performed thousands of public miracles of healing, casting out demons and raising the dead. Jesus answered by saying only an “evil and adulterous generation seeks after a sign” (v. 39). For Jesus to have given them a sign would have been wrong. He would have been catering to their unbelief and allowing them to set the standards of faith. Besides no matter what miracle He performed, it would not have pleased them. Instead, He gave two examples from history: (1) The Sign of Jonah (vv. 39b-41). The men Nineveh repented at the preaching of Jonah, though they were gentiles and enemies of God’s people. Jonah’s time in the great fish was a foreshadowing of Jesus’s death and resurrection. (2) The Wisdom of Solomon (v. 42). The queen of Sheba traveled from the end of the known world just to hear Solomon’s wisdom. Jesus’s wisdom is greater than that of Solomon.
Application
Do you know anyone who has committed the "unpardonable sin"? Not if they are still alive because as long as a person is rational, he can still be forgiven.