This is just my opinion, but I think the adversary wants to make us frightened to repent and doesn't want us to feel like we are forgiven or can be....... that our efforts are not sufficient. When we acknowledge that we have sinned to our Bishop, we are doing exactly what the Savior wants us to do. I believe that Bishops probe deeper when they feel led by the Spirit to do so....they want to insure that you have truly turned away from the sin. My Bishop wept with me when I confessed my sins and I am certain that I didn't tell him every instance of serious sin that I committed or every detail. If you feel like you want to talk with him some more about your past....do so. He isn't going to change his mind about you, he will likely feel that you are further along the road of repentance than he first thought. Remember, the Church doesn't forgive sin....only the Lord does that and HE knows your heart and what you were trying to convey to your Bishop. Sometimes it's difficult to express exactly what you want, the Spirit is usually very strong during confession. Oh, and don't forget to forgive yourself .......because the Lord will forgive and forget about it if you forsake it.
Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool.
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We've got nothing to fear...but fear itself?
Not pain, not failure, not fatal tragedy?
Not the faulty units in this mad machinery?
Not the broken contacts in emotional chemistry?
Last edited by bytor2112; 06-21-2009 at 10:21 PM.
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