Quotes about Forgiveness
The Bible says that our core problem, the fundamental reason we do what we do, is sin.
— Paul David Tripp
He never mocks your weaknesses or throws your sin in your face. He never gets tired of you or gives up on his relationship with you. He doesn't ask you to earn what you can never deserve, and he never makes you feel guilty for needing his good gifts. His love isn't conditional and his grace is never temporary.
— Paul David Tripp
Every time you ask for forgiveness, you declare that your life does not belong to you, but has been created for the purpose of Another.
— Paul David Tripp
I no longer need to carry the burden of the past on my shoulders, so I am free to fully give myself to what God has called me to in the here and now.
— Paul David Tripp
You will treat the weaknesses and failures of others with grace when you humbly admit that you're more like them than unlike them.
— Paul David Tripp
You can be courageous in admitting your sin precisely because God is richly abundant in his mercy. He comes to you in mercy not because you are good but because you are a sinner, and he knows that because of this condition, you are unable to help yourself.
— Paul David Tripp
When your ears hear and your eyes see the sin, weakness, or failure of your husband or wife, it is never an accident; it is always grace. God loves your spouse, and he is committed to transforming him or her by his grace, and he has chosen you to be one of his regular tools of change. So, he will cause you to see, hear, and experience your spouse's need for change so that you can be an agent of his rescue.
— Paul David Tripp
Parents, if your eyes ever see or your ears ever hear the sin and weakness of your children, it's never an accident, it's never a hassle, it's never an interruption; it's always grace. God loves your children and because he does, he has placed them in a family of faith so that you can be his tool of convicting, forgiving, and transforming grace.
— Paul David Tripp
When someone who knows you points out a sin, a weakness, or a failure, are you thankful?
— Paul David Tripp
It's a grace to regret. Grace allows you to face your sin, to own it and not shift the blame. But it is also grace that forgives what has been exposed. Grace forces you to feel the pain of your regrets, but never asks you to pay for them, because the price has already been paid by Jesus.
— Paul David Tripp
God's grace frees you from having to deny your weaknesses.
— Paul David Tripp
Here's how gospel growth works: you cannot grieve what you do not see, you cannot confess what you haven't grieved, and you can't repent of what you haven't confessed.
— Paul David Tripp