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  <title>Psalm 51 - 19th April 2026</title>
  <description>Vijay preaches on Psalm 51, David’s great psalm of repentance after being confronted by Nathan over his sin with Bathsheba and Uriah. The sermon begins by distinguishing between healthy and unhealthy guilt. False guilt can burden people for things that are not their fault, while real guilt can become unhealthy if it traps us in the past. But healthy guilt faces sin honestly and leads us towards repentance, change, and restoration with God. Vijay explains that Psalm 51 teaches us that repentance begins not with ourselves, but with God’s character. David appeals to God’s steadfast love and abundant mercy. Forgiveness is not based on how sorry we feel, how much we punish ourselves, or whether we can “forgive ourselves”; it rests on the mercy of the God who forgives. David then confesses his sin without excuse. He names it as transgression, iniquity, and sin: rebellion against God, inner corruption, and missing the mark. Though David’s actions hurt Bathsheba, Uriah, and others, he recognises that all sin is ultimately against God. The sermon then moves to David’s request for cleansing. Vijay explains that David is asking for more than legal pardon or ritual cleansing; he wants God to restore the relationship and cleanse him from the inside out. This leads to the heart of the psalm: “Create in me a clean heart, O God.” True repentance is not only asking to be forgiven, but asking to be changed by the Holy Spirit. Vijay shows that forgiveness changes people outwardly too. David says he will teach sinners God’s ways and praise God again. Forgiven people become reconcilers and worshippers. The example of John Newton and Amazing Grace illustrates how God’s mercy can reshape a life and continue teaching others long afterwards. The sermon also stresses that God desires a broken and contrite heart, not merely outward religious acts. David’s failure does not become a good thing, but God uses even repentance after failure to teach humility and bring restoration. Finally, Vijay explains that sin is never purely private. David’s sin damaged his kingdom, but his restoration also had wider effects. God continued his promises through David, Solomon, and ultimately Jesus. The sermon closes with the story of Mick Fleming, whose life of trauma, violence, guilt, repentance, and transformation shows how God meets broken people, forgives them, changes them, and makes their lives a source of good for others. Core message God meets us in guilt, forgives us through his mercy, changes us by his Spirit, restores us into relationship with him, and uses our restored lives for the good of others and the glory of God. </description>
  <author_name>Sermons from Aberdeen Christian Fellowship</author_name>
  <author_url>http://www.aberdeencf.com</author_url>
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