Daily Lenten Reflection – Saturday of the Second Week of Lent (March 7, 2026)
“For I know my transgressions, and my sin is always before me” (Psalm 51:3).
These words reveal a moment of painful honesty. David is no longer hiding from what he has done. He is not denying it, explaining it, or blaming others. He admits it plainly. “I know my transgressions.” This daily Lenten reflection brings attention to a step that must happen before forgiveness can take place: recognition of sin.
Many people try to move forward without facing what lies behind them. They bury mistakes under distraction, busyness, or justification. But sin does not disappear simply because it is ignored. The conscience remembers. The heart carries the weight.
David describes that weight clearly. “My sin is always before me.” This is not despair. It is awareness. It is the moment when a person stops pretending that everything is fine and begins to confront the truth. Without that moment, repentance never begins.
The modern tendency is to soften the language of sin. Words such as failure, weakness, or poor judgment are used instead. Scripture speaks more directly. Sin is real, and it separates the heart from God. Yet recognizing sin is not the end of the story. It is the beginning of restoration.
Lent is a time for this kind of honesty. It is a time to stop hiding what God already sees. When a person acknowledges sin openly before God, the path toward mercy becomes clear.
The prayer of Psalm 51 teaches that truth must come first. Only when sin is recognized can it be forgiven. Only when it is confessed can the heart begin to heal.
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