While I was talking with a gifted pianist, she asked me if I played any
musical instruments. When I responded, “I play the radio,” she laughed and asked
if I had ever wanted to play any instrument. My embarrassed answer was, “I took
piano lessons as a boy but gave it up.” Now, in my adult years, I regret not
continuing with the piano. I love music and wish I could play today. That
conversation was a fresh reminder to me that life is often constituted by the
choices we make—and some of them produce regret.
Some choices produce much more serious and painful regrets. King David
discovered this when he chose to sleep with another man’s wife and then killed
that man. He described the guilt that filled him as devastating, saying, “When
I kept silent, my bones grew old through my groaning all the day long. For day
and night Your hand was heavy upon me; my vitality was turned into the drought
of summer” (Ps. 32:3-4). But David acknowledged and confessed his sin to God
and found forgiveness (v.5).
It is only from God that we can receive the grace of forgiveness when
our choices have produced painful regrets. And only in Him do we find the
wisdom to make better choices.
God’s forgiveness frees us from the chains of regret. (RBC)