Day 1: Forgiveness
What Christians Typically Believe: Believers must regularly confess sins and ask God for forgiveness to restore fellowship or stay forgiven (using 1 John 1:9 as a daily requirement). Many have been trained to treat their relationship with God like a checking account that needs constant deposits of confession to stay in the black, creating a life of perpetual self-monitoring where every misstep sends them back to “get right with God again.”
The Biblical Truth: All sins—past, present, and future—were fully forgiven and cancelled at the cross. God remembers them no more (Col. 2:13–14; Heb. 10:14, 17–18; Eph. 1:7; Heb. 9:12). When Jesus declared “It is finished,” He accomplished complete redemption. The blood of Jesus did not merely cover sin but removed it entirely from God’s sight.
Why It Matters: This ends the exhausting cycle of guilt management and sin-focused living, opening the door to constant, confident intimacy with God instead of a yo-yo relationship based on performance. Prayer shifts from duty to delighted communion, and the conscience is liberated because forgiveness is not maintained by our efforts but by Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice.