New Beginnings: A New Year's Challenge
Virginia Brandt Berg

As we stand before the New Year, we don’t know what’s in store for us. But there’s one thing we do know, and that is that we can leave the past behind with all of its cares, pains, heartaches, and mistakes. We can’t undo one single act and we can’t unsay one single word, but if we will give our grief and regrets to God, He can make this New Year a thing of joy and beauty. The Bible promises, “All things work together for good to them that love the Lord” (Romans 8:28)—even our past.

Every day of the past year is beyond our reach, and we should leave it there. God has the past in His keeping, and we should not go back and be tormented with regrets. It’s sad how some people say they’re trusting God, yet they worry about the blots and stains on the pages of their past.

Once we have turned to God and confessed our mistakes and wrongdoings and asked for forgiveness, then we must not go picking around in the past and bringing up those things again. God says of your past sins, “I, even I, am He who blots out your transgressions for My own sake; and I will not remember your sins” (Isaiah 43:25). If God doesn’t even remember them, why should we?

It isn’t God’s way to make us relive the past, and who wants to when the future is as bright as the wonderful promises of God?

The Bible calls the Devil “the accuser” (Revelation 12:10). He loves to accuse us about our past, because he wants to make us feel guilty and condemned. But God’s Word says, “There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus” (Romans 8:1). Rather than going back into the past and regretting this and that and weeping over things that we can’t change, we should remember God’s comforting promise, “Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they shall be as wool” (Isaiah 1:18).

I once read a poem that went something like this: “If I could find the road to yesterday, I’d write the page with cleaner pen and wipe out yesterdays.” Well, I don’t want to find the path to yesterday, because I can’t wipe out anything! Only God can cover those mistakes of the past, and when He looks at us in light of the sacrifice that Jesus has already made, that makes all the difference! It isn’t God’s way to make us relive the past, and who wants to when the future is as bright as the wonderful promises of God?

When I think about the year that is set before us, I think about all of the promises in God’s Word and about the wonderful things that can happen because those promises are unfailing, unchanging, and meant for each of us personally. With all of those promises, why would anyone want to go back and retrace the past, to walk the road to yesterday?

The cross of Christ, like outstretched arms, stands blocking the way to the past. Because Jesus has already paid the penalty for our wrongdoing, we can and ought to say with the apostle Paul, “Forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forth to those things which are ahead, I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:13–14).

Forget those things which are behind! Forget them! Press onward and upward toward the goal and the prize! You can’t make the sands in the hourglass run backwards, and even if you had the wealth of the whole world, you couldn’t retrace the path to yesterday, you couldn’t go back.

What a pity if we carry the burden of the past when the Lord paid such a price to lift that burden and set us free! “Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe,” as the old hymn so beautifully expresses.

A young man once came up to me after I’d spoken to a large group about that. He was an ex-convict just out of prison, and he couldn’t believe that it was so easy, that God would cleanse his past if only he would confess his wrongdoings and ask Jesus to come into his heart and be his Savior. He kept talking about all of his wrongs. It was just too much for him to believe that God could forgive such an awful past, but that night he gave his heart to Jesus, and Jesus lifted that load. Jesus forgave that man and gave him freedom he’d never known. After that, the man never stopped talking about the mercy of God and how God had rid him of the torment of the past. He would often repeat the words of a hymn that he fell in love with: “My yesterdays so filled with guilt and shame, my yesterdays are gone, oh praise His name!”

Is there anything more wonderful than the miracle of forgiveness and the assurance of having our wrongdoing forgiven? This wonderful forgiveness is for all of us. Jesus died for all of us. All we have to do is accept His forgiveness and receive Him as our Savior. “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9). That’s His unqualified, unbreakable promise to you.


If you haven’t met the One who can lift the burdens of your past and give you a bright future now and eternal life in the world to come, you can today. He stands meekly at your heart’s door, waiting for you to invite Him in. Simply pray, “Jesus, please come into my life, forgive my sins, fill me with Your love, and give me Your gift of eternal life.”

Virginia Brandt Berg (1886–1968) was the mother of Family International founder David Brandt Berg (1919–1994).

 

For more Activated content, as well as many extras and never-published material please visit www.activated.org