The Benefits of Guilt and Shame - John Ortberg
- Andy McIlvain

- 3 days ago
- 2 min read
Video from Become New
The Benefits of Guilt and Shame - John Ortberg
"In this episode, John Ortberg offers what he calls “two cheers for guilt and shame.” Drawing from the book of Judges, John explores why justice matters, why moral reality is woven into the fabric of existence, and why a world without any sense of guilt or shame would not be more humane — it would be more dangerous.
From the brutal story of Adoni-Bezek to the violent cycles of Judges, we see a profound truth emerge: no one ultimately gets away with injustice. As Jesus says in Luke 8:17, nothing hidden will remain hidden.
John traces a major turning point in human history — what C.S. Lewis called the moral law — the moment when ancient Israel connected two ideas that had often been separated:There is one God.And that God is good.
Justice is real. Accountability is real. And judgment, properly understood, is good news — especially for the oppressed.
But here’s the deeper turn:
Guilt and shame can either crush us… or redeem us.
Healthy guilt points out where we have done wrong so we can confess and be cleansed. Healthy shame invites us out of hiding into relationship and grace.
And ultimately, Jesus steps into the story and absorbs the consequences we could not.
“The wages of sin is death.”The sin is ours.The death is his.
The cycle of Judges is broken at the cross.
Justice is upheld. Mercy is given.And condemnation does not win.
📚 Today's Resources:
Tom Holland, Dominion: How the Christian Revolution Remade the World
C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man
Tomas Sedlacek, Economics of Good and Evil: The Quest for Economic Meaning from Gilgamesh to Wall Street
Sabrina B. Little, The Examined Run: Why Good People Make Better Runners" from the video introduction

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