The Uses and Abuses of Shame and Guilt | Greg Dismuke
Sermons With Study Guides
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31m
THE USES AND ABUSES OF SHAME AND GUILT - Group Discussion Guide
OPENING
Start with prayer, then go around and answer this:
"Without going into too much detail — have you ever avoided a conversation you knew you needed to have? What made you put it off?"
SETTING THE STAGE
The sermon drew a line between very different responses to the same feeling. Saul felt shame and immediately looked around to see who was watching. Judas felt it and couldn't find a way back. David felt it and fell on his face before God. The prodigal felt it in a pig pen and got up and went home.
Same emotion. Completely different outcomes.
* What do you think is the difference between guilt that drives someone toward God and guilt that drives them away?
* Which of those four responses do you think is most common today?
THE BAD USES: WHEN GUILT GOES WRONG
Saul's first concern after being confronted wasn't his soul — it was his reputation. Judas is described as caring afterward. He sat at the table with Jesus, dipped his hand in the dish, and still walked out and did it. The remorse came, but by then he didn't know where to take it.
* Saul said "I have sinned" but really meant "don't let anyone find out." How often do we treat repentance that way without realizing it?
* Greg made the point that Judas cared afterward. What tends to get in the way of caring beforehand?
* What's the difference between being sorry about sin and being sorry for sin?
THE GOOD USES: WHEN GUILT LEADS HOME
David owned it completely when Nathan put him face to face with what he had done. The prodigal hit rock bottom and the Bible says he "came to himself" — meaning he had been so far gone he was barely recognizable. When he came home, he was ready to be a servant. Just let me in. That was the posture. And his father ran to meet him.
* David and the prodigal both did the same thing — they stopped making excuses and came back. What makes that so hard to do in real life?
* The prodigal was willing to come home as a servant but his father wouldn't allow it. What does it say about God that He responded that way?
* What do you think David and the prodigal had that Saul and Judas didn't?
THREE WAYS WE HANDLE IT WRONG
Greg identified three things people do with shame and guilt that don't work — and they're worth considering honestly.
Covering up. We show everyone the good hand and keep the withered one hidden. We show up; we smile; we make sure nobody gets close enough to see what's really going on. Greg pointed out it's easier to keep friends in the world because they won't notice the withered hand the way Christians will.
Shutting up. James says to confess your faults to one another — but most people would rather carry it silently than say it out loud. Greg shared stories of couples who waited until there was nothing left to save. One of them said it plainly: we were ashamed.
Giving up. Judas and Peter both betrayed the Lord. The difference was what they did next.
* Why do you think it feels safer to hide something than to bring it into the light — even when hiding it is making things worse?
* We tend to wait until something is almost beyond repair before we say anything. Why do you think that is?
* What usually keeps people from asking for help when they actually need it?
THREE WAYS TO GET IT RIGHT
Instead of covering up — open up. God has given us a worldwide family and most of us aren't taking advantage of it.
Instead of shutting up — speak up. The church exists in part to carry burdens that get too heavy. That only works if someone says something.
Instead of giving up — shape up. Peter didn't just recover — he went on to write two letters that are still strengthening people today.
* Is there someone in your life right now that you could actually call if things got bad — someone who would show up? If so, what makes that relationship work?
* What would it take for this group to become a place where people feel safe enough to be honest?
* Peter's worst moment eventually became something that helped everyone around him. How does that change the way you think about failure?
CLOSING
Read this together before closing in prayer:
"If we will humble ourselves, God will lift us up."
The father didn't let the prodigal stay demoted. He ran to meet him. The posture God is looking for isn't perfection — it's the willingness to get up and go home.
Close in prayer, asking for the honesty to stop hiding, the courage to stop staying silent, and the strength to keep going when giving up feels easier.
SCRIPTURES REFERENCED
* 1 Samuel 15 (Saul)
* Matthew 27:3-5 (Judas)
* 2 Samuel 12:13 (David)
* Luke 15:17-24 (The Prodigal Son)
* Luke 6:6-11 (The Withered Hand)
* James 5:16
* Galatians 6:2
* Hebrews 10:38
* Revelation 2:5, 10
5-Day Devotional: Overcoming Shame and Guilt Through God's Grace
Day 1: The Danger of Caring Too Late
Reading: Matthew 27:1-10
Devotional: Judas experienced a tragic form of regret—he cared afterward instead of beforehand. His remorse came only when he witnessed the consequences of his betrayal, not from genuine sorrow over his sin against Christ. This teaches us a sobering truth: regret over consequences is not the same as repentance from sin. Today, examine your heart. Are there areas where you're walking toward compromise, thinking you can care about it later? Don't wait until the damage is done. True wisdom cares beforehand—it considers the cost of sin before taking the first step. God offers forgiveness now, while there's still time to turn back. Don't let pride or shame keep you from seeking Him today.
Day 2: Every Sin Is Against God
Reading: 2 Samuel 12:1-13; Psalm 51:1-4
Devotional: When confronted by Nathan, David made a profound confession: "Against You, You only, have I sinned" (Psalm 51:4). Though David's actions devastated Bathsheba, destroyed Uriah, and scandalized Israel, he recognized the ultimate offense was against God Himself. This perspective transforms how we view our failures. When we gossip about a brother, mistreat a sister, or disrespect authority, we're not merely having interpersonal conflicts—we're sinning against the God who created and redeemed us. This realization should both humble and motivate us. It humbles because our sin is more serious than we imagined. It motivates because the God we've offended is also the God who forgives. Like David, bring your withered hand—your hidden shame—into God's presence today through repentance, confession, and prayer.
Day 3: Coming to Yourself
Reading: Luke 15:11-24
Devotional: "When he came to himself" marks the turning point in the prodigal's story. Before this moment, he was "beside himself"—living in spiritual insanity, separated from his true identity. Sin always does this; it makes us strangers to ourselves and to God. But notice what happened when he came to his senses: he remembered his father's house, acknowledged his unworthiness, and was willing to accept a demotion. True repentance requires honest self-assessment and humble return. The beautiful truth? The Father doesn't demote us—He restores us fully, with robe, ring, and shoes. Are you living "beside yourself" today, separated from who God created you to be? It's time to come to yourself, arise, and return home. Your Father is watching and waiting.
Day 4: Don't Hide Your Withered Hand
Reading: Luke 6:6-11; 1 John 1:5-10
Devotional: Jesus deliberately placed the man with the withered hand in the midst of everyone before healing him. He wanted the very thing the man was ashamed of—that damaged, embarrassing hand he'd rather keep hidden. What's your withered hand? Your struggling marriage? Your anger? Your ignorance of Scripture? Your sharp tongue? We all have areas we'd prefer to conceal, especially from fellow Christians. But hiding prevents healing. Jesus can't restore what we won't reveal. The enemy wants you isolated, covering up, pretending everything is fine. But God's family is meant to be a place of openness, where we confess our faults to one another and pray for healing. Stop flashing only your good hand. Stretch forth that withered one to Jesus today. He specializes in making broken things whole.
Day 5: Never Give Up—Shape Up
Reading: Revelation 2:1-5; Galatians 6:7-10
Devotional: Peter and Judas both betrayed Jesus. Both experienced crushing guilt and shame. The difference? Peter shaped up while Judas gave up. After his denial, Peter wept bitterly, but he didn't end his story there. He returned, was restored, and went on to strengthen countless Christians through his epistles--including us today. Jesus told the church at Ephesus: "Remember from where you have fallen, repent, and do the first works" (Revelation 2:1-4). This is the pattern: remember, repent, return, and do better. Whatever your failure, however deep your shame, it's not too late to shape up. Don't let the enemy convince you to give up. Be faithful unto death, and Christ will give you the crown of life. Your past doesn't define your future—your perseverance does.
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