Day 17

Confession



Ezra 9:4-9, Psalm 32:1-5, Matthew 5:23-24, Colossians 3:12-17, James 5:16, 1 Peter 2:9. 1 John 1:5-10

BY Scarlet Hiltibidal

Years ago, I was a sometimes anorexic, but mostly bulimic, church secretary/Bible-college student/pastor’s wife. Wow, that reads pretty rough, even now. Then, on September 10, 2008, I called my pastor-husband from a Starbucks parking lot and told him I was going to die. Exhausted, I’d just ordered a double espresso so I could sit up straight, but then my heart began beating too fast. I kept looking at my eyes in the rearview mirror, wondering why the whites of them looked so gray. Actually, they’d been looking gray for a while.

Up until that point, being dysfunctional with food was my secret life. I’d always thought of myself as an honest person, but I was desperate to hide my secret—so I became deceitful. Nearly every waking moment was spent lying and then trying to cover up the lies. Even at that time, I was familiar with every passage listed in today’s reading. I knew James 5:16 by heart: “Confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, so that you may be healed.” 

But I couldn’t confess. I wouldn’t confess. I just wanted to be healed. I wanted the healing part without the confession part. Hiding seemed safer than sharing because I was convinced confession would bring the opposite of healing: humiliation, destruction, and ruin. 

Still, God’s Word kept telling me that His kingdom was different. That keeping silent would brittle my bones (Psalm 32:3), but sharing would bring life, not death. God repeatedly led me to one verse in the Bible that I could find right now, blindfolded and upside down. It was like a weight hanging around my neck for all those miserable years when I was caught in this sin.

The one who conceals his sins will not prosper, 
but whoever confesses and renounces them will find mercy (Proverbs 28:13).

I can’t really think about it without crying. Mercy. I’d never wanted anything so much, yet nothing felt further away. But on that September day, with the espresso and heart palpitations and gray eyes, I just knew something had to change. My sin and disobedience and hiding were going to kill me. With a sliver of surrender and a mountain of God’s grace, after three-and-a-half years proving I just wasn’t strong enough to stop on my own—I obeyed. I made a phone call to confess my sin and my struggle. First, to my husband, and then, to a counselor.

And I felt a release. I’m not sure of the exact moment, of where or when. Maybe it was there in my car, sitting in the Starbucks parking lot, my heart racing. Or in the lobby of the counselor’s office. Maybe I felt the release in my confession. The exact moment doesn’t matter so much. What matters is that God heard my cry and confession. He met me in my brokenness. His healing, however He chooses to give it, is always miraculous. It’s always a kindness and mercy.

Post Comments (116)

116 thoughts on "Confession"

  1. Rhonda Jury says:

    Amen, Tara.

  2. Tara Craig says:

    This hit me in a different way today as I’m not struggling with confession but with making a decision so “And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.” was just what I needed, I’m trusting in His leading me so that any decisions today or any day are made under His Holy name!

  3. Samantha A says:

    Scarlet, thank you so much for your vulnerability in sharing your story. I too have walked a road of struggling with an eating disorder, and the beauty and freedom found after letting the light in on the dark places in our lives and in our hearts is such a powerful thing.

  4. Elizabeth M. says:

    Hopefully no one sees your eating disorder as the sin in question but the hiding and lying. I understood where the devotional author was coming from but as someone who suffers from an anxiety disorder, I was a little concerned with this particular one.

    1. Susan Coleman says:

      I thought the same thing. She could have been more clear on what the sin actually was! I would hate for others struggling with eating disorders or mental health issues (which can go hand in hand) to think that those are the sins she was talking about. This would just bring shame.

  5. Victoria Lillibridge says:

    After confessing to the lie you believed did you ask him to truth? He will tell you! Trust his voice, scripture and your community. After confession comes seeking his truth and healing! Hoping you can find that.

  6. Carrie St. James says:

    I have a question, I feel the weight of my sin. I have asked for forgiveness and turned away from my sin for 16 years yet I still feel it heavy on me. A secret that I keep from 90% of people. When do you stop confessing? And who do you confess to. My husband , my parents and my best friends all know and urge me to forgive myself. However this secret holds me back from feeling I have the right to be baptized until I confess to the elders of my church I feel I can’t become a member either…. ok that was long sorry ladies I’m just looking for direction…

  7. Erin Wilson says:

    My thoughts exactly! I felt very uncomfortable with the way that was worded, I thought I was the only one!

  8. Megan Peterson says:

    This has been said, but I want to agree and stand in solidarity with women coming forward as survivors. Eating disorders are not sinful and it is so troubling that it was put this way.

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