Verse explainer
Every sin is forgivable — the one exception isn't a slip of the tongue, it's a settled, willful rejection of the Spirit's testimony about Jesus.
Wherefore I say unto you, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men: but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men.
BSBTherefore I tell you, every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven men, but the blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven.
The plain meaning
Jesus had just healed a blind and mute man, and the Pharisees responded by claiming he cast out demons by Beelzebul — the prince of demons (v. 24). That accusation is the immediate context. Jesus' first move is astonishingly generous: all sin and blasphemy — in Mark's version, 'all sins and whatever blasphemies men utter' (Mark 3:28) — can be forgiven. The exception is not about a particular category of bad words. It is about attributing the undeniable work of the Holy Spirit to Satan: a deliberate, eyes-open inversion of good and evil that closes the very channel through which repentance and forgiveness come. The sin is serious not because it outrages God's honor beyond repair, but because the person committing it has hardened themselves against the only power that could bring them to repentance.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
JFB insists the opening clause — 'all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven' — is the controlling statement, not a footnote. No sin whatever can simply be labeled unpardonable in the abstract. The exception must be read in light of that sweeping promise, not the other way around. The unforgivable sin is the specific act of consciously attributing to Satan what is plainly the Spirit's work.
Calvin argues the sin consists in maliciously fighting against known truth — not mere ignorance or weakness, but a deliberate, spiteful revolt against the light. He connects it to Hebrews 6: those who have been fully enlightened and then trample the Son of God underfoot. The gravity is not that God's mercy runs out, but that the sinner has destroyed in themselves the capacity for repentance.
Gill notes the immediate occasion: the Pharisees' charge that Christ worked by demonic power was not spoken in ignorance but in willful defiance of clear evidence. He ties this forward to verse 36's warning about idle words — if even careless speech faces judgment, how much more a deliberate, knowing slander of the Spirit's unmistakable testimony?
The word behind it
'Blasphemy' — from blaptō (to harm) + phēmē (speech): injurious speech, defamation. In New Testament usage it can be directed at God or humans. Here the critical distinction is between blasphemy spoken against the Son of Man out of confusion or hostility (forgivable — Paul himself did this, 1 Tim 1:13) and blasphemy against the Holy Spirit: a knowing, persistent attribution of the Spirit's evident work to Satan, which by its nature forecloses repentance.
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