Main Theme:
God judges us according to our present choices — and He will forget an entire past (good or evil) when we truly turn.
I. You Are Judged for Your Own Choices (vv. 1–20)
Key Idea:
We are not condemned for someone else’s sin — but neither are we excused because of it.
The proverb in Israel:
“The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children’s teeth are set on edge.”
God rejects this mindset.
1️⃣ Each person answers for their own sin (vv. 4, 20)
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“The soul who sins shall die.”
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The son will not bear the guilt of the father.
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The father will not bear the guilt of the son.
This does not deny influence — it denies blame-shifting.
2️⃣ Influence is real — but accountability is personal
Verses 5–18 give three generations:
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A righteous father
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A wicked son
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A righteous grandson
The grandson learns from the consequences of his father’s sin and chooses differently.
Application:
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You may have been raised in sin.
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You may have been sinned against.
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You may carry wounds from others’ choices.
There is grace for what was done to you.
But you are accountable for what you choose to do.
This answers the objection:
“How can someone be blamed for unbelief if that’s how they were raised?”
Because everyone can observe the fruit of sin and choose differently.
You can:
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Repeat sin.
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Or learn from its destruction and turn.
No one is trapped by upbringing.
Everyone can choose obedience.
II. God Forgets the Entire Past When We Truly Turn (vv. 21–29)
This is the heart of the chapter.
1️⃣ Hope for the sinner (vv. 21–23)
If a wicked person turns from all his sins and practices righteousness:
“None of the transgressions that he has committed shall be remembered against him.”
God does not partially forgive.
He erases the record.
This is the hope of salvation:
No matter how sinful your past, repentance brings life.
2️⃣ Warning for the righteous (vv. 24, 26)
If a righteous person turns to sin:
“None of the righteous deeds that he has done shall be remembered.”
Long obedience does not excuse present rebellion.
A good past does not cover present unbelief.
This aligns with:
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Matthew 7:21–23 — Some who called Jesus “Lord” are told, “I never knew you,” because they practiced lawlessness.
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Hebrews 6:4–6 — Falling away after knowing truth.
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Hebrews 10:26–29 — Willful, ongoing sin after receiving knowledge of the truth.
The chapter is clear:
God cares about the direction we are presently choosing.
3️⃣ The Justice of God (vv. 25, 29)
The people say, “The way of the Lord is not just.”
God responds:
It is your ways that are unjust.
We often want:
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Credit for past righteousness.
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Excuses for present sin.
God does not operate that way.
III. We Are Judged by Our Fruit (vv. 30–32)
Verse 30:
“I will judge you… according to your ways.”
Our actions reveal our faith.
Yes, we are made righteous through belief in Christ.
But genuine belief produces fruit.
This connects to:
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James 2:26 — Faith without works is dead.
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Matthew 7:16–20 — You will know them by their fruit.
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Jeremiah 17:10 — God rewards according to conduct.
Fruit does not earn salvation.
Fruit reveals whether faith is real.
If someone chooses ongoing evil, that is the fruit of unbelief.
If someone turns and practices righteousness, that is the fruit of faith.
IV. The Call to Repentance — A Complete Turning (vv. 30b–31)
“Repent and turn from all your transgressions.”
Repentance is not partial reform.
It means:
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Turning from all known sin.
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Refusing to justify sin.
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Choosing a new direction.
If we justify certain sins, we are still serving sin.
Repentance is not perfection — but it is full surrender.
We must:
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Believe in God’s mercy for past sin.
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Decide to turn away from sinful practices.
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Refuse to defend what God condemns.
Salvation involves both:
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Faith in God’s forgiveness through Christ (belief).
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A decision to walk in obedience (repentance).
V. The Hope — A New Heart (v. 31–32)
“Make yourselves a new heart and a new spirit.”
The command reveals our need.
We cannot produce righteousness in our own strength.
This points forward to:
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The promise of a new heart (Ezekiel 36:26).
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The Holy Spirit dwelling within us.
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New Covenant salvation.
The pattern is:
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Repent (turn).
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Believe.
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God gives a new heart and Spirit.
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New desires produce new fruit.
God takes no pleasure in death. He desires that we turn and live.