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Blasphemy Against the Holy Spirit in Its Jewish Context

What is the unforgivable sin, and are you guilty of it?

By Dr. Eli Lizorkin-Girzhel (read bio)

Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.

In Matthew 12, Jesus heals a demon-possessed man who was blind and mute. Once healed, the man could see and speak. The crowds responded with astonishment: “Is not this the Son of David?” (Matt 12:22-23). The Pharisees, however, answered:

“It is only by Beelzebul, the prince of demons, that this fellow drives out demons.” (Matt 12:24)

Beelzebul is a Jewish polemical slur against Baal. Original Canaanite title: Baʿal Zebûl (“Prince Baal” or “Lord of the Exalted Dwelling”). Philistine god (2 Kgs 1): Baʿal-Zebûb (“Lord of Flies”). Second Temple Jews deliberately altered it to Beelzebul, using Hebrew/Aramaic זֶבֶל (“dung”), creating the contemptuous “Lord of Dung.” Most NT manuscripts preserve this polemical form.

Jesus responded with reasoning and examples (Matt 12:25-29) and then connected his Spirit-empowered work directly to the arrival of God’s Kingdom:

“But if it is by the Spirit of God (πνεῦμα τοῦ θεοῦ) that I drive out demons, then the kingdom of God has come upon you.” (Matt 12:28)

The Context

Jesus performed public, miracle-working signs—primarily healings and exorcisms—through the Spirit of God (Matt. 12:28; Mark 1:27). Some of his Jewish critics, who held authoritative status in the community, actively opposed him. They publicly slandered and defamed his ministry, skillfully recasting the work of Israel’s God in Christ as demonic. These were not ordinary voices in the crowd; they were part of the Judean authority structure spread throughout the Galilee region. Jesus himself later acknowledged their position:

“The scribes and the Pharisees have seated themselves in the chair of Moses. Therefore, whatever they tell you, do and comply with it all…” (Matt 23:1-2)

In Matthew 12, their accusation against Jesus had a clear objective: to deter as many people as possible from following him as the Messiah, thereby shutting the door to the Kingdom of God for many. Jesus articulated this reality:

“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, because you shut the kingdom of heaven in front of people; for you do not enter it yourselves, nor do you allow those who are entering to go in.” (Matt 23:13)

It is in this critical moment in redemptive history that some Pharisees publicly opposed God’s visible work in Christ, attributing it to the demonic realm. By doing so, they wrongly exercised their spiritual authority and misled unsuspecting people, barring them from entering the Kingdom of God. Interestingly, the Gospels often portray the Pharisees in a positive light, despite their heavy criticism. For example, Nicodemus defends Jesus (John 7:50–51), or certain Pharisees warn Jesus about Herod (Luke 13:31). Gamaliel, a Pharisee, speaks wisely in defense of the Jesus movement and its apostles, expressing his doubt but acting wisely and avoiding blasphemy against God (Acts 5:34–39).

The Degrees of the Great Sin

Any persistent, willful, and knowing attribution of the Holy Spirit’s plainly evident work to Satan is an extraordinarily grave sin—one that places the soul in mortal spiritual danger. Jesus makes this clear when He declares, in the most universal language possible, “Whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven; they are guilty of an eternal sin” (Mark 3:29; Matt 12:31–32). The deliberate use of “whoever” shows that no one, regardless of status or privilege, stands outside the reach of this warning.

Nevertheless, the clearest, most dangerous, and paradigmatic instance of this sin is precisely what some Pharisees committed on that day in Galilee. Holding recognized teaching authority—“seated in the chair of Moses” (Matt 23:2)—they stood before the crowds and publicly declared that Jesus was casting out demons by Beelzebul, the prince of demons (Matt 12:24). Their accusation was not offered in private doubt or honest confusion; it was a calculated, witnessed act intended to discredit the Messiah and to prevent the watching crowds from following Jesus (Matt 12:28; 23:13).

In that single moment the Pharisees combined two deadly elements: a hardened, knowing rejection of the manifest power of God with the deliberate use of their spiritual influence to lead others astray. It is this aggravating combination—personal obstinacy joined to public obstruction—that makes their blasphemy the horrifying illustration Jesus chose when He uttered His most solemn and terrifying warning. Their act, therefore, does not limit the sin to religious officials; rather, it stands forever as the classic, most perilous example of what blasphemy against the Holy Spirit looks like when taken to its fullest and most destructive expression.

Jesus then delivered a startling pronouncement:

“Every kind of sin and blasphemy (βλασφημία) will be forgiven people, but the blasphemy (βλασφημία) against the Spirit will not be forgiven. Whoever speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but whoever speaks against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, either in this age or in the age to come… For by your words you will be justified, and by your words you will be condemned.” (Matt 12:31-37)

Why Only Against the Holy Spirit?

Why did Jesus single out the Holy Spirit? For instance, why did Jesus not condemn blasphemy against the Father as unforgivable? The answer lies in understanding the Jewish framework of his time.

Contemporary Christian interpretations frequently superimpose fully formulated later doctrines, such as the Trinity, onto the first-century Jewish context, thereby obscuring the original framework and complicating the understanding of why blasphemy against the Holy Spirit is uniquely unforgivable. In Jesus’ era, the Holy Spirit was not yet understood as a distinct person of the Trinity (a doctrine that would only later be articulated in the life of the church). Rather, the Holy Spirit was God’s personal, active presence and power within creation—God’s own action made manifest in the world. Therefore, to blaspheme the Holy Spirit/Spirit of Holiness (רוח הקודש) was not to blaspheme the third person of the Trinity but the LORD God Himself (what in systematic theology would be called the Godhead).

Jesus declared a profound distinction in forgiveness. Blasphemy against the Son of Man would be forgiven. This title draws from the Danielic Messianic figure in Daniel 7:13–14. Yet blasphemy against the Holy Spirit would never be forgiven. The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Holiness, God Himself. Such unforgiveness extends to both this age and the age to come (Matt 12:31–32; Mark 3:28–30; Luke 12:10).

In other words, misunderstanding the Messiah’s identity remains forgivable. Misjudging His person might also find mercy. However, seeing God’s power manifest unmistakably changes everything. To attribute that work to Satan is unforgivable. This act calls divine good evil. It commits the unforgivable sin.

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This sin reaches its most terrifying form through public declaration. It occurs when authorities act with deliberate intent. Their goal is to shut the kingdom against others. The Pharisees exemplified this grave error.

Hillul HaShem: Desecration of the Name

To better understand Jesus’ teaching, we must examine its roots in Jewish tradition. The Torah treats blasphemy with the utmost severity, viewing it as a direct assault on God’s sanctity and sovereign authority. Leviticus 24:16 prescribes death by stoning for anyone who “blasphemes the Name” (וְנֹקֵב שֵׁם־יְהוָה מוֹת יוּמָת)—a capital offense that demonstrates how central this violation was to Israel’s covenant relationship with God. It is crucial for us to understand this: the Law of Moses offers no penal forgiveness for blasphemy against Israel’s God. The guilty party receives a death sentence.

Jesus, in the statement under consideration, refers directly to this law. It is no surprise that the sanctity of God’s Name is Jesus’ highest priority, since the very first petition he taught his disciples in the Lord’s Prayer is “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name” (Matthew 6:9; Luke 11:2)—asking that God’s Name be sanctified on earth as it is already sanctified in heaven.

Throughout the Old Testament and both Jerusalem and Babylonian Talmuds, two paired concepts emerge: Hillul HaShem (חִלּוּל הַשֵּׁם, desecration of the Name) and Kiddush HaShem (קִדּוּשׁ הַשֵּׁם, sanctification of the Name).

The foundation of Hillul HaShem is articulated in Leviticus:

“You shall not profane My holy name, but I will be sanctified among the sons of Israel.” (Lev 22:32)

This passage reveals a crucial emphasis: desecration of the Name is fundamentally a public and communal matter (among the sons of Israel), not simply a private offense. Moreover, the severity escalates based on who commits the offense. When a private person speaks ill of God, it is a serious matter. When those with public authority defame God’s name, the violation becomes exponentially more serious. The Pharisees, endowed with communal authority as official interpreters of Scripture in synagogues (those seated in the seat of Moses), meant that their public denunciations of Jesus’ Spirit-empowered work were a profound desecration of God’s name. (Matt 23:2–3)

Later rabbinic thought, as stated in Talmud Bavli Yoma 86a, holds that intentional public hillul ha-Shem is the worst type of sin and the hardest to atone for. It often requires suffering, public vindication, or even death in addition to repentance to fully restore God’s honor. This passage states that for desecration of the Name, repentance, Yom Kippur, and afflictions merely suspend divine punishment, with death alone effecting full expiation, derived from Isaiah 22:14 to emphasize its unparalleled severity. The Jerusalem Talmud, Nedarim 3:14 (38b), reinforces this gravity, deeming it the most heinous offense, punishable even unintentionally, and demanding immediate rectification to prevent communal dishonor. Avot de-Rabbi Natan (ARN) 1:39, attributed to Rabbi Akiva, asserts no ordinary forgiveness exists for it, highlighting the need for extreme measures like public acts of sanctification (kiddush ha-Shem) to counter the desecration. Maimonides codifies this in Hilchot Teshuvah 1:4, based on Yoma 86a, requiring a sequence of repentance, Yom Kippur, tribulations, and mortality for atonement, as public profanation impugns God’s sanctity before witnesses and necessitates divine vindication.​

Much earlier than rabbinic materials, the letter to the Hebrews reads:

“How much more severely do you think someone deserves to be punished who has trampled the Son of God underfoot, who has treated as an unholy thing the blood of the covenant that sanctified them, and who has insulted the Spirit of grace?” (Heb 10:29).​

Although Matthew 12 is different, this passage also discusses a similar concept: the increase in the severity of punishment based on the level of sin committed.

Kiddush HaShem: Sanctification of the Name

Kiddush HaShem—the sanctification of God’s name—stands as the redemptive counterpart to desecration. This concept refers to actions that honor and elevate God’s reputation in the eyes of the world, often through faithful obedience, public testimony, or even martyrdom. True devotion to God involves not merely personal piety but communal witness that reflects his holiness.

Biblical narratives vividly illustrate the concept of Kiddush HaShem through defiant faithfulness amid persecution. Daniel survives the lions’ den, prompting empire-wide reverence for God (Dan. 6:22). His three friends emerge unharmed from the furnace, transforming idolatry into testimony (Dan. 3:18, 28). As Hebrews 11 recounts, Old Testament martyrs faced torture and refused release, enduring stoning, sawing, and the sword—public spectacles of fidelity that both shamed oppressors and sanctified God’s name. Through such costly witness, God’s reputation was elevated and his power vindicated before the nations.

Conclusion

Blasphemy against the Holy Spirit is the deliberate, persistent, knowing attribution of the plainly visible work of God to Satan. It reaches its most perilous and unforgivable form when those in recognized spiritual authority publicly wield their influence to discredit the Spirit’s power and bar others from the kingdom that has drawn near.

That is precisely what happened in Matthew 12. Men who sat in Moses’ seat (Matt 23:2–3), entrusted with Israel’s teaching office, stood before wondering crowds and declared, “It is only by Beelzebul, the prince of demons, that this man casts out demons” (Matt 12:24). Their accusation was neither private hesitation nor honest confusion; it was calculated, public desecration of God’s Name (Hillul HaShem), branding the finger of God as the finger of Satan, and slamming the kingdom door in the faces of those pressing to enter (Matt 23:13).

Yet the story refuses to end in darkness. The deeper the desecration, the more dazzling the vindication. At the cross and the empty tomb, Jesus accomplished the final, cosmic Kiddush HaShem—the ultimate sanctification of the Father’s Name. Every slander was nailed there and cancelled (Col 2:14–15); every lie was shattered by the resurrection shout that echoed to the ends of the earth: “This is My beloved Son.”

Therefore, if terror grips you that you have committed the unforgivable sin, lift your eyes. Your pain and desire to be right with God prove the Spirit is still working with you. While that holy striving remains, the door stands flung wide.

No repentant sinner—no matter how far, how long, or how bitterly he once opposed—will ever hear Jesus say, “Depart.” The One who turned history’s worst Hillul HaShem into heaven’s greatest glory has given His unbreakable word: “Whoever comes to Me I will never cast out” (John 6:37).

Come, then. The kingdom has come upon you, and the King Himself waits with open arms.

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Comments (139)

Mare
Mare US November 28, 2025 at 3:43 PM

I will just add a small explanation of what I think, because I haven't proven it yet. I feel eternal life is for the earth. This existence we have is precious. If Adam had to now die because of what he did ,wouldn't you think Jesus came to fix that. Jesus did fix the reason for death. So I believe the unpardonable sin is a sin that will take us out of the earth realm. I truly believe these people that come against the Holy Spirit, will die and have another chance in a Judgment day in the future...

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL November 28, 2025 at 10:35 PM

I don't quite get your point :-). But I think that heaven and earth will be merged into one entity. The Garden of Eden used to be the lobby of heaven. Soon (or not soon) the earth will be Heaven too. No tears, no sickness, no sin, is coming to your neighborhood some time in the future.

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Gary Rickard
Gary Rickard HU November 28, 2025 at 1:20 PM

Your sentence in one of the comments, 'The “unforgivability” does not stem from a limit in God’s mercy, but from the sinner’s entrenched refusal to repent: as long as one insists that light is darkness, one will never seek or receive forgiveness' is very clarifying. Perhaps it could be moved into the text itself?
And a Q: Some commentators write that this particular sin could only be committed during Jesus' earthly ministry, when he was standing right in front of them. Do you agree with that? If not, what would the blasphemy look like today?

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL November 28, 2025 at 1:51 PM

Gary, thank you for your comment. About your question: no, I do not agree. But I do think that this sin has to do with the public manner and the authority/status/standing in the community of the one committing it.

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Ray Joseph Cormier
Ray Joseph Cormier CA November 28, 2025 at 12:04 AM

Rather, the Holy Spirit was God’s personal, active presence and power within creation—God’s own action made manifest in the world.
This reality is confirmed in this Time of the Revelation of Jesus Christ in other words, To him that overcomes will I grant to SIT WITH ME IN MY THRONE, even as I ALSO OVERCAME, and AM set down with my Father in his throne.
He that has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.
Revelation 3:21-22

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL November 28, 2025 at 1:59 PM

Thank you for your comment Ray.

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Hana Conkova
Hana Conkova GB November 25, 2025 at 4:01 PM

Thank you very much! Very good explanation. God bless you!

Hana

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL November 25, 2025 at 4:48 PM

Hana, thank you for your comment and God bless you!

Reply
Tonni
Tonni ZA November 25, 2025 at 2:42 PM

Thank you for your very clear explanation of the Blasphemy against the Holy Spirit. No one has ever explained it the way you did and it puts my spirit and soul to rest. Hallelujah

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL November 25, 2025 at 2:46 PM

HALELUYA INDEED!!!

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 6, 2026 at 5:57 PM

I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.

Angela Watson
Angela Watson November 25, 2025 at 8:19 AM

Dear Dr Eli, It was a great pleasure to read your article and also the contributing comments. Thank You.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin November 25, 2025 at 11:05 AM

So happy to hear that! Stay tunes more good is coming!

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Arnault Bonafos
Arnault Bonafos November 25, 2025 at 6:07 AM

Excellent analysis, I’ve learned more than I could hope. I sense repetition along the text but I admit repetition is base to pedagogy and is required to such an important subject.
I’m pleased to read you.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin November 25, 2025 at 11:05 AM

Arnault, please point out repetition (I may have missed it).

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Carlyle Smith
Carlyle Smith November 25, 2025 at 5:30 AM

I believe Blessed John writes of this matter:
"If any man see his brother sin a sin which is not unto death, he shall ask, and he shall give him life for them that sin not unto death. There is a sin unto death: I do not say that he shall pray for it" (1 Jn. 5:16 AV).
A great humility is needed in this, to yield a cautionary warning, as did our Most Revered Messiach.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin November 25, 2025 at 11:06 AM

Yes.

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Constantine Michailidis
Constantine Michailidis November 25, 2025 at 4:56 AM

Toda Dr Eli. Best explanation I have heard about this difficult verse. I actually puts a new light on John 17:1 for me.
A key for me was to not try to understand it in the light of later Trinitarian formulation but just as God.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin November 25, 2025 at 11:06 AM

exactly that is indeed the key.

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Greg
Greg November 25, 2025 at 4:07 AM

Thank you, Dr. Eyzenberg. I really appreciate the research and depth of insight you give to the context and meaning of Scripture. It made me think of present day Church leaders in positions of influence who criticize the work of the Spirit happening in local churches other than their own. They seem to easily condemn the works of the Spirit - healing, transformation going on in people's lives as a result of signs and wonders. I feel they should really be careful. Unless they have clear proof that what is happening violates Scripture, they should leave such criticism to the Lord to judge.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin November 25, 2025 at 11:40 AM

Greg (you can call me Eli), there is no doubt that we all should be careful and learn from Rabbi Gamaliel I (Gamaliel the Elder), a wonderful Pharisee believer whose wise words we read in Acts defending the apostles. He was, by the way, the grandson of Rabbi Hillel (!) and the teacher of Paul.

Reply
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 6, 2026 at 5:57 PM

I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.