SA33 - How the Congregation
Reflects Jehovah’s View of Sinners
Jehovah desires that all people serve him out of love and free will, but if a baptized Christian commits a serious sin and remains unrepentant, they must be removed from the congregation. However, Jehovah hopes for their repentance and has made forgiveness possible through the ransom, as shown by how Paul instructed the congregation in Corinth to welcome back a repentant wrongdoer.
- Jehovah created humans with free will, allowing each person to make their own decisions.
- The most important decision is dedicating oneself to Jehovah and becoming part of His family of worshippers, which He desires for all because He loves people and wants the best for them.
- Jehovah does not force anyone to serve Him, and if a baptized Christian commits a serious sin without repenting, they must be removed from the congregation (1 Corinthians 5:13).
- Even when removed, Jehovah hopes for the wrongdoer’s return by providing the ransom to make forgiveness possible for repentant sinners.
- The congregation should reflect Jehovah’s attitude toward wrongdoers, urging them to repent, as Paul directed in dealing with serious wrongdoing in the first-century Corinth congregation.
- Paul, under divine inspiration, instructed the Corinth congregation to remove the unrepentant sinner to protect the congregation from corruption (1 Corinthians 5:13).
- Avoiding close association with the wrongdoer might cause them to feel shame and repent, as happened in Corinth.
- After the sinner in Corinth repented, Paul urged the congregation to forgive, comfort, and confirm their love for him, ensuring he was warmly welcomed back (2 Corinthians 2:7-8).
- Failing to forgive a repentant sinner could overwhelm them with sadness and put the congregation’s relationship with Jehovah at risk, reflecting Satan’s harsh attitude.
- To imitate Jehovah’s mercy, the congregation must forgive and assure the repentant sinner of their love, following Jehovah’s example of being "good and ready to forgive" (Psalm 86:5).
- Paul’s direction showed the importance of quickly reinstating the repentant wrongdoer when the discipline had served its purpose—leading to repentance.
- Jehovah’s love, righteousness, and justice are seen in how He deals with wrongdoers—He desires to save people and lead them to repentance rather than destroy them.
- The way the Corinth case was handled provides instruction for us today, showing that Jehovah’s justice is not permissive, but it is filled with mercy for repentant sinners.
- The following articles will discuss how congregation elders can reflect Jehovah’s desire to lead a wrongdoer to repentance and how the congregation should react to decisions to remove or reinstate someone.
Thank you for reading,
-Soli Jehova Gloria (1 Corinthians 10:31)
Do you have a comment that did not get mentioned during the Watchtower study? What encouraging observations would you like to point out? Share your thoughts by leaving a comment below.
9 comments
I’ve waited for this discussion for a long time. Thanks for developing this summary to refer to at a later date.
These past 3 articles have been 🔥 can’t wait for the next two.
This article was very encouraging that we all should warmly forgive and welcome back repentant ones.
Yes Pablo, Jehovah’s example of patience and mercy serves as a reminder for us all to mirror his qualities in our interactions with others. Paragraph 16 put it so nicely, we are sinners (every one of us) and we need his forgiveness.
What the world doesn’t understand is that removing an unrepentant wrongdoer protects the congregation. The message is so clear now that the purpose isn’t punishment but protection and ultimately, restoration.