printer friendly version GODS
GREATEST PROBLEM
Gods
greatest problem is summed up in one little word: S-I-N.
Heaven is at battle stations today because sin has invaded
the human race and the moral Universe. It is high time
the Church knew her enemy! Her first enemy is not the
Devil, it is not death, it is not despair. Her enemy is
SIN, and unless she learns to understand it, face
it and deal with it, God can never grant us a visitation
from on high to turn our nations back to Him.
John
Wesley said - "Give me one hundred men who fear no
one but God and hate nothing but sin and I will move the
world." Do WE hate sin? Satan has successfully clouded
the minds of thousands of church people on this dangerous
issue. No man is a real Christian who does not hate the
things God hates and love the things that God loves, as
he sees them. And in all His holiness God hates sin.
Sin cost Him His only-begotten Son. Sin cost the Lord
Jesus His life. Sin plunged the world into a living Hell.
It will yet plunge multitudes into an endless Hell. It
is time we paid serious attention to the subject of sin.
Our
understanding of its guilt and awfulness will largely
determine our view of the love and mercy of God, our presentation
of the Gospel to sinners and our presentation of truth
to the Body of Christ. What IS sin?
WHAT
SIN IS NOT
(1)
Sin is not NATURAL
A
common answer when people are faced with sin is "Yes,
I sin. Nobody is perfect - were only human!"
So - you sin because you are only a person? Does human
equal sinful? Nothing could be further from the truth.
Only by comparing ourselves with the perfect example of
TRUE humanity - the Lord Jesus - can we see just how unnatural
sin is. When God became man, He took on a true human body.
Jesus was not God disguised as man, but God who
became man. Although He was conceived supernaturally,
He was born of a perfectly normal human girl. (Luke
1:31). He grew, learned, was hungry and thirsty. (Luke
2:52; 2:40; Matt. 4:2; Lk. 4:2; Jn. 19:8). As the
Last Adam, His body (though arguably not subject to death
or disease like ours is now) was just as special as when
our first parents walked the earth; Scripture does not
go out of its way to portray it as utterly unlike any
other human body. (Heb. 10:5; Jn. 2:21; Lk. 24:3,23;
1 Jn. 1:1; 1 Jn. 4:3). He ate, drank, felt weary and
rested; (Mk 2:16; Lk. 24:39) and declared His body
to be flesh and bones (Jn. 20:20, 27). He was a
human soul . (Is. 53:11,12; Ps. 16:10; Jn. 12:27; Acts
2:27; Matt. 26:38) John, Peter, Paul and Isaiah all
called Him a man (Jn. 1:30; Acts 2:22; I Tim. 2:5;
Is. 53:3) He called Himself a man (John 8:40).
His favorite name for Himself when He walked this
earth was "the Son of Man," used seventy-one
times in Scripture.
Christ,
was of course, always God. He was the only man without
a beginning, because He was eternal in His origin. He
knew that He had come from the Father, and after His earthly
mission He would go back to the Father. His essential
relationship with the Spirit and the Father was never
removed. But while He walked this planet, to show that
it was possible to resist temptation and defeat
the Devil with only the power of the Holy Spirit, the
guidance of His Father, and the Word of God, the Lord
Jesus used none of His Godhead powers. He laid
aside His rights and powers as God to tread this world
(Phil. 2:5-8; Lk. 2:52; Heb. 5:7-9) although His
essential nature as God remained unchanged. To be fully
"tempted in all points such as we are",
and yet be "without sin", the Lord Jesus had
to become fully human. To make Him out to be unfairly
more than this during His brief stay on Earth is to miss
completely the whole purpose of His life; not only
to offer His body as a perfect substitute for our sin,
but to show us the way a child of God was to live in this
world! (Heb. 2:14-15; 5:5-9) Understand - the Lord
Jesus had nothing available to Him on Earth that
any child of God does not have available; His Father
even arranged for Him to have some disadvantages! (Luke
2:7; Jn. 1:46; Jn. 8:41) The Lord Jesus was our pattern
of true human nature, yet He was "without
sin" (Heb. 4:15) and He "did no sin".
(I Pet, 2:22) God made human nature; God
did not make sin!
Sin
is never natural. It is horribly unnatural.
Sin is NEVER "human". It is horribly inhuman.
Sin creates remorse, guilt and shame; any time we feel
these three witnesses in our soul, they tell us sin is
not natural. Even a simple lie-detector tells us
this. The whole body reacts adversely if a man sins. Sin
is in fact, a kind of insanity. (Ecc. 9:3). The
insane treat their dream world as real, and the real world
as a dream: so, practically, does the sinner. The insane
try to do the naturally impossible; so does the sinner,
when he tries to squeeze lasting satisfaction from sin.
The insane suspect and fear the ones who love them most;
watch the sinner as he runs madly from the God who loves
him, and rushes on to Hell as if it were Heaven! This
is the worst kind of insanity; not of the head,
but of the heart.
No-one
ever sins because they love sin. Even the worst sinner
does not like to be called a sinner; he resents the fact
of his selfishness, even when he is selfish! And even
the worst of sinners cannot help but admire right in another,
whenever that other person is sufficiently far away from
him not to convict him of his selfishness. (Is. 58:1-2;
Ezek. 33:32; Rom. 7:22). Nobody sins merely for the
sake of doing wrong. Sinning men and women hate themselves
when they do wrong. A man sins only if he wants something
for himself more strongly than he wants to do right. God
never planned sin for man. It is the most unnatural thing
in the moral Universe. To equate humanity with sinfulness
is to make God the Author of His own worst enemy; to make
God responsible for the thing that has brought Him unhappiness.
Do not dare say sin is "natural"!
ARE
WE REALLY UNABLE TO OBEY?
(2)
Sin is not unavoidable
One
of the favorite heresies of the past is rapidly becoming
the favorite heresy of the present. It is the lie of Antinomianism
- that men cannot do what God expressly requires
them to do, and therefore they may live how they like
and still enter the Kingdom of God. In the midst of the
greatest moral landslide the world has ever seen, in the
midst of the most flagrant disrespect for law and order
and government of any century, it is unblushingly proclaimed
as Gospel truth from pulpits across the
nation that man cannot keep the law of God! In our wariness
of the dangers of legalism, we have forgotten the perils
of antinomianism; we have forgotten that "the
law is a schoolmaster to bring us to Christ"
(Gal. 3:24) and that "by the law is
the knowledge of sin." (Rom. 3:20). Gone is
the preaching of moral responsibility that streamed from
men like William Booth, George Fox, John Wesley, and Charles
Finney, that made men weep with conviction; gone is the
heartbreak of the Psalmist for the honor of God when he
cried "Horror has taken hold of me, because of the
wicked that forsake Thy law!" (Ps. 119:56; Ps.
119:36).
Some
sincere men say "God gave us good laws to keep"
but in the next breath say "but He knew we couldnt
keep them."! If this is really true, then how are
Gods laws good? No law is good that asks the impossible
of its subjects, If God demands obedience to impossible
laws, then God is not just, for even men do not require
obedience to impossible laws. If even more, God demands
such obedience under penalty of death, then God
is not only unfair, but monstrous! What kind of Being
would pass laws upon his subjects they are actually unable
to keep, then condemn them to death for their failure
to obey? This is a blasphemy on Gods character.
Which of Gods laws are we actually unable
to keep - if we love the Lawgiver? Do we have to relegate
God to some other position than King of our lives and
put something else in His place? Do we have to take His
Name in vain? Must we steal? What man has ever been born
that could not help but murder? Do we have no choice
but to be sexually immoral, to lie, to covet, to dishonor
parents and refuse to honor God on a special day of rest?
God says "His commandments are not grievous."
Do we say they are not only grievous, but impossible?
The Lord Jesus said - "My yoke is easy and
My burden is light." Do we say His yoke is
not only heavy, but completely unbearable
for any human being?
The
Bible expressly declares that God has given good laws.
All the laws of God are based on the one great
Law of Love. Love is to govern the actions of all
moral beings in Gods Universe - that every moral
creature should unselfishly choose the highest good of
God and His Universe according to their real, relative
values. As Gods own being is greatest, He must be
loved first of all; then all others in the order of their
true value under God. The Ten Commandments are just a
letter expression of that law, given when men began to
ignore the original love law written on their hearts.
They define mans obligations God-ward in the first
three commandments, then those of his obligations to his
fellow men in the last seven. The Lord Jesus summed these
in His two commandments (Matt. 22:36-40; Mk.
12:28-34; Lk. 10:25-28) covering what Moses had already
given. (Deut. 6:5; Lev. 19:18) Paul summed up the
Law into the one basic word "love" (Rom.
13:8-10; Gal. 5:14; 1 Tim 1:5; Jas. 2:8-10. This Law,
expressed in different ways, is given as the unchangeable
condition of happiness and holiness. It defines human
obligations and can never be changed or suspended
in our present relationships. (Gal. 3:19; Ps. 19:7;
Matt. 5:17; Rom. 7:12; 1 Tim 1:8)
No
saint in Scripture thought they were "unable"
to keep Gods laws. Moses didnt (Ex. 24:3;
Deut. 5:1, 6:24-25; 10:12-13). Neither did Joshua
(22:5) Ezra (7:23-26) David (Ps. 19:7;
40:8) his psalmist friend (Ps. 119:165-168)
or Daniel (9:9-11) or others! (2 Kings 17:13,
7-18, etc.). The Lord Jesus Himself told men
to obey His Fathers laws; this was the test of being
a true disciple. (Matt. 5:17-20; 19:17; Jn. 14:15,21;
14:23-24; 15:10). The Apostle John stresses this obedience.
(1 Jn. 2:3-6; 3:18-22). Obeying Gods love
law simply means living for Him with no selfish interest;
to live up to all the light you have with all the effort
of will, mind and feeling necessary for the task in hand.
For the Christian, obeying God and keeping His commandments
are a natural part of his new life. Only a sinner finds
it hard to walk in Gods ways; when he tries to use
law as a means to his own end, the ultimate gratification
of his own selfishness. And he will fail.
IS
SIN A "SOMETHING"?
(3)
Sin is not physical
Many
think they have explained the fact of sin in the human
race by using a phrase we shall call "Doggie Logic".
It goes essentially like this: "A dog is not a dog
because he barks: he barks because he is a dog. Thus,
man is not a sinner because he sins; he sins because he
is a sinner." The assumption is, of course, that
all sin flows from a preexistent sinful nature, and
it is this nature that creates the sinful acts of the
sinner. Just as the bark of a dog comes undeniably from
the fact that he is a dog, so mans sin will flow
inescapably from the fact that he is a sinner, and was
born so. It sounds nice; is it true? There are unfortunately
two things wrong with this logic. They are serious flaws,
because once they are assumed, they actually destroy the
basis of the very thing they seek to prove - that all
men are guilty of, and responsible to God for their sin.
These logic flaws are:
- A
man is not a dog. A dogs actions
are right if he barks, because God created a dog to
express itself naturally by barking. But God did not
create men to sin! A dogs bark is natural; sin
is not. The Bible everywhere represents sin as an
alien invasion to a moral nature made in the image
of God. Assuming that man sins because it is his normal
nature to sin, also assumes that sin is natural. A
dog barks because he is a dog. A man can also bark
if he chooses to. Does this prove that he is a dog?
No, it proves that he has chosen to do a thing he
was never created to do naturally. If a man sins,
it merely proves that he has chosen to sin, and his
sin will certainly be treated as unnatural in the
eyes and judgment of God.
- Do
we need a sinful nature to sin? Is it necessary
to have an preexistent "implanted sinfulness"
to enable man to do wrong? If one sinner can be found
in Scripture who sinned without first having
a sinful nature, the answer is no, and the
case is closed. And of course, there are at least
three moral beings who committed sin without sinful
natures. Satan was the first. The first man Adam was
the second, and then his wife Eve. The angels who
were cast out of heaven were apparently first perfect.
No moral being needs a sinful nature to sin.
If he is given one that makes it really impossible
for him not to do right, he is not guilty,
but helpless.
Neither
does sin reside, as some sincere men have speculated,
in the blood. Scriptures associate mortality with
blood, but never morality. It is a symbol of human life.
As the key electrochemical and circulatory system of the
body, it is both the "life of the flesh" and
the "circuitry" of the soul. As a statement
of outpoured life, it is certainly a precious symbol of
Christs atoning sacrifice. (Is. 53:10-12; Heb.
9:22-23; Matt. 26:28; Acts 20:28; Rom. 3:24-26; 5:9-11;
Eph. 2:13; Heb. 10:10-14; 10:19-20; 1 Pet. 1:18-19; 1
Jn. 1:7). But blood in the Bible does not carry good
or evil. If we can transmit morals through blood,
then a blood transfusion from a saint will make a man
more holy, and one from a sinner will make a saint less
sanctified. It will follow then, that a prenatal blood
transfusion on a "blue" baby will give it a
totally different nature. Now, while it is true that the
blood of any creature contains its life essence and the
blood of Christ cleanses from sin, no Scripture assigns
either sin or love to blood. Blood never holds morals
in the Bible.
What
is sin if it isnt a substance? As Christians we
speak of sin as a power or a force and know it is something
much more than just an isolated wrong decision. Somehow
personal sin can keep record in our body, mind and emotions.
All habits, both good and bad, are developed the same
way: by repetitive choices, stored as patterns
in our memory. Sinful patterns built around a life of
supremely serving ourselves can be terrifyingly addictive
and far stronger than any wishful intention to do better.
We may see and approve what is good, but have no power
in our own strength to escape the bondage.
In
Romans 7:7-24, the Apostle Paul personifies sin
to show its power over an enlightened, but unconverted
mind. He calls it the law of sin and death. Any
habit of wanting our own way clashes with the judgment
of conscience and Gods moral law. Any such developing
death-style of evil habit (the "law" or "rule
of action of sin") conflicts with the changeless
reality of the true state of things, the law of God. A
sinner may discipline his life to try to break some bad
habits, but no-one ever escapes unaided the ultimate addiction
of serving ourselves. Without the drawing power of the
Holy Spirit, no sinner can free himself. Only Christ by
the Gospel can truly deliver him. (Rom. 7:25; 8:1).
Paul
illustrates the battle by speaking as if he is presently
in it. That it is only an illustration and not a present
personal problem is clear; the passage ends in true freedom.
He speaks of the tug of this "law of sin" as
if it is at home in his bodily members. "Flesh"
is a phrase used to describe the concentration on emotional
gratification through our five senses. We feel excited
desires sparked into unnatural strength by habits of selfish
gratification in our bodies. Jesus comes to break the
cycle of death and bring deliverance.
Even
here Paul does not really make a case for "physical"
sin, and certainly is not seeking to prove it as his helpless
inheritance. He is not concerned with how a man
sins, but the fact of an internal battle raging that cannot
be won alone. His point is to show us we have no hope
of salvation in ourselves; the law of moral thermodynamics
is against us. Who can help him get free? Only Jesus Christ,
who faced all the temptations in His own body and did
not give in at all; only Jesus, whose perfect character
was sealed in death and whose resurrection demonstrates
His power to face our worst and ugliest and win.
If
sin is physical, in what form does it exist? Is
it solid, liquid or gas? If sin is identifiably material,
can it be isolated in a test-tube? Can it be injected
into a saint to make him wrong? May we see the phenomena
of a vial of sin concentrate? This is, of course, absurd.
All efforts to trace actual sin to some biologic or materially
organic connection with parents have failed of genetic,
medical or physiological evidence,. Attempts to trace
actual wrong to some gene or chemical deficiency is the
humanist's last shot at explaining morality, and still
fails to deal with the universality of sin. At the most,
all inherited traits from parents simply contribute
influences for later selfish choices.
How
then, can we account for the fact that all have sinned?
It is customary to trace this universal sinfulness to
some kind of organic connection with Adam. Out of the
mass of historical theological opinion, we may reduce
all views to two basically opposite ideas:
- Augustine,
began with the premise that souls, like bodies were
transmitted to children. Thus man was unable to help
sin, since he inherited a sinful soul. The logical
conclusion of a premise like this is that man is not
to blame for his sinful nature, and cannot properly
be urged to repent of it, since true repentance involves
self-condemnation by the sinner. It follows then,
that man can do nothing in salvation; God
makes all the choices, and man becomes a mere puppet
in His hands. In such a system, man can be sub-Scripturally
devalued; being human is equated with sinfulness.
Doctrines of infant damnation, physical baptismal
regeneration, unconditional eternal security; annihilation
or Universalism, and forms of fatalism may logically
follow. On the other hand, the Bible holds man fully
responsible for sin; though he is indeed damaged,
hurt and unable to save himself, he is not pictured
as irresponsibly "helpless". He himself
can choose to respond to Gods Spirit drawing
him to repent, believe Jesus and obey His Word.
- Pelagius,
held that a man was born innocent, free of contamination;
if left to his own way, he would "naturally"
choose God. Logically then, a man might actually save
himself from sin by consistent right choices; he does
not need a Savior at all! If this was true, why should
God need to intervene in our lives? Given the right
teaching and environment, we can carve out our own
holiness and happiness without Christ! This leads
to the unscriptural deification of man, and the dangerous
errors of humanistic and rationalistic thought, which
may lead on to religious atheism and the abandonment
of God altogether. On the contrary, the Bible teaches
that man is incapable of saving himself; that his
plight cannot be corrected by education or environment,
but only by the sovereign drawing power of God the
Holy Spirit, who alone can lead a man into a "grace-by-faith"
salvation not based on mans works. We all need
God, even the holy angels who never sinned at all.
All
other positions on human depravity place somewhere between
these two extremes. Our own understanding of this subject
will modify every facet of practical theology!
This is no mere theoretical issue, but essential to our
picture of the Gospel. If we excuse sin, we shall do so
at the expense of Gods love, and at the peril of
our souls. If we dogmatise as sin what Scripture does
not support, by calling temptations, influences and involuntary
actions "sinfulness", we will be bound and falsely
condemned by the Enemy of our souls, too busy fighting
our own failures to turn the world upside down, while
all Heaven mourns. We have seen what sin is not;
to resolve these difficulties, let us see what sin is.
What
Sin Is
(1)
Sin is universal
Nothing
is clearer in Scripture or in daily life. World history
is a chronicle of wickedness. Every man prior to conversion
is a slave to his own selfishness. Every unsaved man knows
that he is selfish. The Bible shows the unsaved to possess
one common wicked heart or character: Gen. 6:5; 1 Kings
11:9-11; 15:3; 2 Chron. 12:14; Ps. 28:3; 66:18; 78:37;
95:10; Jer. 17:9-10; Ezek. 14:2-3; 18:30-32; Eccl. 9:3;
Matt. 5:27-30; 9:4; 13:15; Mark 3:5; 7:18-23; 8:17; Lk.
21:34; Acts 8:21(18-24); Rom. 2:4-6; Rom. 8:7; Heb. 3:7-15.
All men without God are totally selfish at heart. It is
exceedingly humbling to admit that all of a mans
pre-conversion actions are not in the least virtuous when
examined in Eternitys light. Man has nothing to
commend him to God, when he comes asking for forgiveness.
He can never pass the final test at the bar of justice.
The
Bible further reveals that from the beginning of our moral
accountability (seeing spiritual responsibility to God
and our fellow men) we have made a choice to live supremely
for self. True virtue consists in right relationship
to God. Without this surrender and trust, everything
is tainted by self-seeking. No exceptions of true goodness,
no pauses for really virtuous behavior, no alternating
weeks of true holiness with sinning. Many factors influence
the forms of this selfishness; there are many "good"
clean-living, outwardly moral sinners, as well as those
who are humanly despicable and degraded. Sinners choose
the particular forms of selfishness that bring them the
greatest pleasure, and this includes deeds and actions
usually considered "good" by society, including
prayer, religious activity, Bible-study and preaching!
But all sinners, from those who have done
"many wonderful works" to those God has had
to "give up to vile affections", have one uniform
morality - "there is none that doeth good,
no, not one." This universal persistency in sin is
also shown in: Gen. 8:21; Ps. 10:4; 14:13 (53:1,3);
28:3; Ps. 94:11; Eccl. 1:14; Is. 55:7-9; 64:6; Jer. 13:23;
17:9-10; Matt. 7:21-23; 12:34-35; Rom. 1:21; 3:10-12;
3:23; 6:16-17; 6:20; Eph. 2:1,3; 5:8; Tit. 1:15; 3:3;
1 Pet. 2:25.
YOU
AND YOUR ORIGINAL SIN
(2)
Sin is original
There
is nothing clearer in the Bible; man is very original
in his sin! Sin is not transmitted; it is re-created
by any being misusing the elements of true morality -
emotion, reason, choice, moral light and spiritual perception
of Gods law. (See "Man and The Origin of
Evil" for a full discussion and documentation
on this subject.) To see why man is accountable
for his own "original sin" we must study the
fall of our first parents.
At
the dawn of Creation, God made His most wonderful work;
out of the basic elements of the earth, a being "made
in His image", beautiful and perfect in every respect.
There was no sickness, pain, or death. Man was not made
sinful. He was placed in an earthly Paradise, in the best
possible circumstances. He was given the elements of morality,
(made like God as a person) and subjected to a test of
his obedience. Since "right" and "wrong"
cannot be created in a being, morality is the result
of any beings own response to that which they perceive
as most valuable. If Adam were designed so he could not
have sinned, he would not have even been "good;"
a man unable either to do good or bad cannot be
considered moral or responsible. For Adam, a tree was
the test: provided he choose to draw his life and truth
first from his loving Creator, he was righteous.
Adams
body and soul were perfect and unblemished. He served
God, but without any real test of obedience, as nothing
had yet entered Eden to tempt him to disobey. He was more
innocent than holy, having no real pressures
of temptation to test his faithfulness. No command of
God crossed any of his natural inclinations; he was allowed
to have his own way within the Garden God had given him.
Finally, the great test came. The serpent suggested something
that appealed to Adam and Eves love of conscious
freedom in opposition to the direct command of God. Tree
of life or tree of knowledge; and they chose terribly.
Tragedy struck; Eve, then Adam, surrendered to the desire
to have their own way, and broke the clear command of
God. In unspeakable sadness, God was forced to clamp down
His Divinely-appointed penalties. These penalties were
of a twofold nature:
- Physical
- Man began to physically die. His body felt
the sting of the results of sin, and began to feel
the curse of sickness, weakness and decay. This curse
was essential, as a man who was allowed to continue
forever in sin would become a second Devil, with every
unrepentant year of his existence reinforcing his
evil and increasing his wickedness. It spread to his
family, society and his world.
- Moral
- Adam and Eve were cut off from God, in spiritual
death. Their sin now separated them from their brokenhearted
Creator, Who came saying "Adam, where are
you?" Other terrible consequences followed.
With sin also came guilt and, remorse and shame. They
were expelled from the Garden, losing their sense
of place and belonging lest they become immortal in
sin by taking of the Tree of Life. The ground itself,
even the whole creation around them was cursed, so
men would have to labor to live, having less time
for self-pleasing and resultant deeper sin. Eve was
placed under protective subjection to her husband,
because she had been first deceived. Their first child
murdered their second and became a fugitive.
WHAT
HAPPENED TO ADAM?
It
is vitally important to notice here how Adam fell,
and the consequences of his fall. To understand present
human depravity, we must first define the word "depravity".
From the Latin de, very, and pravus crooked,
depravity means the failure to meet an existing standard,
a fall from a place of original perfection. Adam became
depraved in two ways; his heart and soul
first failed to obey God, then his body began to
fail. The first depravity was thus moral, followed
by the second, which was physical, caused by Adams
selfish choice in spite of the clear warning of the penalty
of God. These two depravities caused two kinds of death;
physical and spiritual. Although these are linked, they
are not the same thing. Both deaths are states of separation:
spiritual death being a state of separation from God (essentially,
to live sinfully is to be spiritually dead, (1 Tim.
5:6)) and physical death being finally a separation
from the material world of Earth. And as a careful study
of Romans 5 shows, it is physical death, not moral,
that is transmitted to his race.
Every
time in this difficult and disputed passage, (with the
possible exception of v.17), where "death" is
mentioned is manifestly temporal, or physical,
and not spiritual death. This passage has nothing to do
with proving that sin "descended from Adam".
This interpretation was not found in the early church
fathers; it was never given to the passage until the fourth
century; was never adopted by the Greek church at all;
and is wholly at variance with the design and scope of
Pauls whole argument and presentation. Romans
5:12-14 shows that "death" was the penalty
of disobeying Gods law, but men died from Adam to
Moses when there was no law. Thus, the transmitted
death that all die is not spiritual, but physical. Because
Adam sinned, all men die; they inherit not sin,
but death. In verse 17, Paul catches on points
of correspondence between Adam and Christ (cf. I Cor.
15:45-49). Here the work of Christ equals and
even surpasses Adams own failure; while Adam brought
temporal death to his race, the Lord Jesus brought to
man the gift of eternal life. Nothing is said,
as would be expected in verse 20, about Adams fall
extending to his race. Paul knew the word for "impute"
(logazomai) meaning to count, reckon, and used it for
righteousness (Rom. 4:22) but a different word
is used in Romans 5:13 (ellogeo - to bring into
account). Verse 20 shows instead that the law came
in as the occasion of universal sinfulness, implying that
men sin now just as Adam did then; by intelligent transgression
of known law of God.
Romans
5:19 is an exact parallelism. A key is the phrase
translated "were made." What does it mean? Does
it mean made so without choice or chance? If it should
be translated "constituted" as some have said,
then all men are or will be saved, (no choice or chance)
because of what Christ did! This is obvious Universalism.
However, this phrase occurs 21 times in the New Testament
and in all other places where Paul uses it, it
means "to ordain, appoint, put in place of".
It is used of the ordination of elders, bishops, priests
or judges, and properly means "to put, place, lay
down" or "put in a position". To be put
in a position is not genetic. Deacons and elders have
conditions to meet for their place; they can also lose
it. With this qualification, the passage is clear. Adams
sin put all men in the place of choosing sin. He
fell first, damaged us all and set us up to follow
his lead. But Jesus did not sin. His victory over
sin and death put all men in the place of choosing
righteously if they will respond to Him! As
Adams sin is the occasion (not cause) of a races
ruin, so Christs obedience is the occasion, not
cause of its redemption.
What
then, did Adam pass on to his race? It is easier
to sin than do right. People that sin keep sinning more.
All, indeed, "have sinned". What
happened in Adam that brings us now into a world with
two strikes against us? The effects of sin are as profound
as Gods creation connections in our beings. Because
of his organic link to us, Adam fathered physical
depravity, reinforced by our ancestral parents selfish
choices to recur right down through history. This is the
true "original sin", an inherited, accumulated
damage that hurts us with a bias, or tendency towards
self-gratification. Notice, it is not sin that
is passed down, but degraded emotional patterns, a weakened
or defiled physical body and over-hyped propensities that
give sin its power and make all of us open to the tug
of temptation. A parental addiction or greed may result
in a childs inherited unnaturally strong appetite.
While this is not in itself sin, the results of their
sin are still transmitted, becoming in turn the occasions
of further wrongdoing in future generations. Thus, a parents
sin is "visited on their children" although
all such awakened desires or weakened bodies are the childs
misfortune, not his crime. Such hereditary effects
may last three or four generations, even when the child
does not follow his parents or grandparents
example. Apart from Gods transforming work in salvation
through Christ, the worlds sin once begun can only
multiply with each generation. (Ex. 20:5; Num. 14:18;
Deut. 5:9)
The
Bible testifies to our physical depravity by birth
and circumstances. This makes it easier for the will to
choose self-gratification, while not the cause of our
wrong action. It is obvious that man is in a weakened
and unbalanced condition: Ps. 103:15-16; Matt. 26:41;
Rom. 6:19; Rom. 8:3,23; 2 Cor. 4:11; 5:2-4; 12:7; Gal.
4:13-14; Phil. 3:21; Jas. 4:14. This gives him a bias
towards selfish action, the key among many influences
for sin.
WHY
DO CHILDREN SIN?
How,
then does a child sin? You do not have to teach a child
to do wrong. An explanation becomes clear as we carefully
consider human development. A baby enters the world as
the object of its parents fondness, unceasing care,
and concession by those who guard it. In these circumstances
its natural, inherited appetites are first developed,
and that childs natural desire for conscious freedom
also begins to express itself. Feelings develop long before
reason, and both are deeply entrenched before the spirit
begins to awaken to the claims of God. Much depends at
this point on the parents. If they are faithful in their
duty to God, they must train their child to yield up its
own way when that self-willed way will interfere with
the happiness of others. The child will learn at first
obedience to its parents only in a love/discipline relationship:
it is here that the habit of response to authority must
be ingrained in a childs soul, so that later, when
God opens up their spiritual understanding, that child
will surrender to Him. (1 Sam. 15:22; Prov. 6:20-23;
Prov. 10:17; Prov. 13:18; Prov. 15:5,31-32; Eph. 6:1;
Col. 3:20.)
Since
the feelings develop before the reason and conscience,
the will begins to form the habit of obeying desire, which
deepens every day. The obvious consequence is that self-indulgence
becomes the master principle in the soul of the
child long before it can understand that this self-indulgence
will interfere with the rights or happiness of others.
This repeated bias, while not sin in itself, grows stronger
each day, before knowledge of right or duty can possibly
enter the mind. Finally, a moment of true moral responsibility
arrives. The child is now old enough to understand wrong.
(This will probably be earlier in a Christian home than
in a non-Christian one.) Does the child approach this
test in a perfectly neutral state? If Adam, in the maturity
of his reason, with full consciousness of the morality
of his actions, could give in to such temptation, how
small is the hope that an unaided child will not? The
Bibles sad record is, "All have sinned,
and come short of the glory of God." The moment that
child chooses selfishly, it sins. Paul put it like this:
"I was alive without the law once; but then sin revived
(sprang into life), and I died." Paul was
Jewish. He grew up in a home surrounded by the law. How
could he be alive without the law? It had to be as
a child. The only time he was "without law"
was when he didnt see or understand it. Spiritual
death begins the day you first see, understand and disobey
a known law of God. From this point on (and apparently
not before) God holds the child responsible for
his own actions and destiny. It is significant that all
words of the Lord to sinners begin from their youth,
and not from birth, as some have supposed.
It
may be objected - does not the Bible teach that
man is born sinful? Many who follow Augustines assumptions
think so. A number of verses are at times urged to support
this idea, but they do not fairly stand up to alternative
scholarship, and have only been used if no better explanation
of the universal sinfulness of man is forwarded. We have
to explain the universalness of sin somehow, and the inability
of man to save himself. Yet to blame sin on another and
to claim helplessness for our own evil is in itself an
obvious evil. God is very plain; He does not hold
the child in any kind of responsibility for its parents
sins. "What do you mean, you who use this proverb
- the fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the childrens
teeth are set on edge? As I live... you shall not have
occasion to use this proverb in Israel. All souls are
mine; as the soul of the father, so also the soul
of the son is mine; the soul that sinneth, it shall
die." (Ezek. 18:1-3,20, see also the whole chapter;
Jer. 31:30; Deut. 24:16; 2 Chr. 25:4; Ps. 94:23.)
In
speaking of the coming judgment, we are expressly told
in the Bible that God shall judge every moral being for
his own sins, no mention being made of the imputation
of Adams guilt. Ps. 9:7-8; 96:13; Ecc. 11:9;
12:14; Is. 3:l0;11; Jer. 31:30; 32:17-19; Matt. 12:36-37;
16:27; Lk. 12:47-48; 20:46-47; Jn. 5:27-29; 12:48; Acts
l7:30-3l; Rom. 2:2-11,12,16; l4:10-12; Gal. 6:7-8; 1 Cor.
4:5; 2 Cor. 5:10; 1 Tim. 5:24-25; Heb. 9:27; 1 Pet. 1:17;
Jude 14-15; Rev. 2:23. God has specifically stated
He would not judge man for anothers sin. Yet, all
sin in Scripture without exception is under the judgment
of God. Man cannot, therefore, inherit sin from his parents
or Adam.
Some
Scriptures used to try to support this "inherited
sin" idea have been pressed right out of context.
In examining these, it will be important to adhere to
some universally accepted principles of Biblical interpretation.
They are:
- Interpret
each verse or passage in the light of all other
revealed Scripture;
- Examine
each verse in the context where it is placed,
taking into account the design, purpose, authority
and author of each passage;
- Texts
used to prove either of two theories prove neither;
- Passages
must be interpreted in a way (if they can be) by which
they will not contradict each other.
It
is with these principles in mind that we shall examine
the so-called Scriptural objections:
(1)
Psalm 51:5
"I
was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive
me." Isnt it saying here we are born sinful?
Here David speaks; he speaks from personal experience,
and not for the whole world; and who is the subject of
this sentence? Not David, but his mother!
Pressed literally, this verse says that during his time
of gestation and conception, his mother was a sinner;
David is the object. There is a world of difference between
being shapen in iniquity and iniquity shapen in
him, just as there is a great difference between being
born in New Zealand and New Zealand being born in me!
So does this mean (as Augustine once believed) that any
act of sexual procreation because of sexual feelings even
in marriage is itself sinful? Surely not. God made
sex. It is His idea. What He calls clean ought not to
be called unclean. What then, does this passage teach?
There are three different interpretations, none of which
teach the dogma of transmitted or inherited sin;
- That
David's conception was considered illegitimate,
as some Jews have always believed; not from his
fathers
side (a bastard could not enter the temple of the
Lord) but on his mothers. Davids mothers
name is not mentioned. David is not shown with
the sons of Jesse when Samuel came to anoint
them. Davids
brothers seem embarrassed and angry in his presence.
David apparently has a different mother than
his brothers, Jesse's sons. His sisters
dad is Nahash, not Jesse! (cf. I Chron. 2:13-16;
II Sam. 17:25 and Ps. 27:10) If so, it explains
many things about his life, his personal battles
and abandonment to God, but nothing about Adam.
- That
David came from a lineage in which there had been
family immorality, and remembered his "lineage"
mother in comparison to his own sexual sin; David's
mother calls herself a "handmaid" (concubine)
who belongs to the Lord.
- That
David was simply deeply cut to the heart by his sin,
and broke out in the extravagant language of poetry
(cf. v3,4,7 and 8). Thinking back along his
life, he broke out affirming that from the earliest
moments of light he had been a sinner, and came from
parents who were sinners, without in any way implying
that this sin had been transmitted down to
him by his mother. In no way does this passage teach
"inherited" sin, no matter which way it
is interpreted literally or figuratively.
(2)
Psalm 58:3, Job 14:4, 15:4, and John 3:3
This
first verse in Psalms 58:3 has been pressed into service
along the same lines. Note that it is the wicked
who are spoken of and that even they "go astray".
If the text is forced to literal interpretation, it means
that infants talk as well as lie from birth! Job
14:4 and 15:4 have been stretched to fit into
this dogma. Both these two verses simply imply the universality
of human sin and bodily frailty, without any reference
to the means by which man sins. Both may be used
to support the idea that man is physically depraved, and
by these influences will certainly (not necessarily fixed)
sin. John 3:3 can only at the limit state that
that which is born of fleshly desire will tend to sin
(when the will yields to its control) while that which
results from the Holy Spirits agency (in the sense
that the will yields to Him) is holy. Nothing here about
inherited sinfulness.
(3)
Eph. 2:3
"by
nature, the children of wrath" must be compared
with Eph. 2:1 which plainly states man is dead
through his own trespasses and sins. Mans
wicked nature has come as the result of his wicked
walk in the way of this world. As previously stated, the
word "nature" does not mean the way we were
born. God shows that a sinner goes against his nature
in his sin (Rom. 1:31; 2 Tim. 3:3; James 3:6). His
"nature of wrath" is the result of his sinful
actions, forming in his life a character that makes God
angry with him.
THE
FINAL CONCLUSION - WHAT SIN REALLY MUST BE
(3)
Sin is always moral
All
gathered evidence points finally and irrevocably to this
fact. Moreover, an extensive study of the root words for
sin in the Bible show overwhelmingly that each man is
held responsible for his own sin; none of
these words give any hint of a physical or moral cause
back of the will that produces sinful choices.
All Bible words for sin overwhelmingly show its voluntary
viciousness; all describe a deliberate choice.
1)
Words with a root meaning to miss, err from the mark,
or wander from the path of right prescribed by a loving
Creator. The idea of a bad aim of an archer (Judges
20:16) or those who stumble or make a false step out
of haste on their way to a goal (Prov. 19:2)
a)
To sin (khaw-taw) Gen. 20:6,9; 39:9; Ex. 20:20;
Num. 15:27(27-31); Deut. 20:18(16-18) (see 9:3-5); 1
Sam. 2:25; Job 5:24; Prov. 8:36(32-36); Ezek. 18:4,20,24.
b)
Sin (khat-tawth) Gen. 18:20-21; 50:17; Ex. 32:30-34;
Ps. 32:5; Prov. 14:34;; Is. 6:7; Ezek. 32:30-34; Ps.
32:5; Prov. 14:34; Is. 6:7; Ezek. 3:20; 18:24; 33:14-16;
Dan. 9:20-21; Zech. 13:1.
2)
Words with a root meaning to bend, curve, twist, distort
or make crooked.
a)
To act perversely (aw-vaw) Act contrary, do wickedly
or wrong: Ester 1:16; Dan. 9:5
b)
Perversion (aw-vone) Crookedness, depravity, iniquity,
perversion of Divine law; guilt contracted by sinning
(Gen. 15:16; 32:5) It is the character of the
action that is emphasized: (Ps. 32:5) Gen. 4:13;
44:16; Ex. 34:7,9; Num. 14:34; 1 Chron. 21:8; 32:5;
51:2,9; Is. 6:7; 53:6; Jer. 31:30,34; Ezek. 3:18-20;
18:17-20; 18:30; Hosea. 4:8; Mic. 7:18.
3)
Words meaning break away from just authority, revolt,
rebel (2 Kings 1:1;, 3:5-7; 8:20,22)
a)
Transgress (paw-shah) Is. 1:2-4; 46:8; 66:24; Jer.
2:29; 3:13(12-15); Ezek. 2:3; 18:31; 20:38 (35-38);
Hosea. 7:13... "a breach with God, aspotacy
- design and set purpose are always involved".
b)
Transgression (peh-shah) Revolt, rebellion (conscious
breach of duty, desertion-while 1(b) (khat-tawth) involves
sins of negligence and weakness, 3(b) (peh-shah) always
implies design, set purpose. Job 34:37 is a key
- "he adds to his sin rebellion") Gen.
31:36; 50:17; 16:15-16; 16:21; Ps. 32:1;51:l,3; Is.
43:25; 44:22; 53:8; 58:1; Ezk. 18:28; 18:30-31.
Involves trespass and apostasy.
4)
To be wicked (raw-shah) properly means to make a noise,
or tumult. It denotes a state of impiety, making disturbance,
confusion, trouble, with the idea of strong excitement.
(Cf. Job. 3:17, Is. 57:20) If evil becomes the habitual
feature of the disposition or action, it is raw-shah.
1 Kings 8:47(47-50); Job 3:17; Ps. 18:21; Is. 57:20; Daniel
9:15. Other words come from this.
5)
Words with a root meaning covering up or over; treachery,
falsehood or faithlessness:
a)
To act treacherously (maw-al) Deut. 32:51
(of Moses, 6(a) (maw-raw) used in Num. 27:14)
Josh. 7:1; 1 Chron. 5:25; 10:13; 2 Chron. 12:2(1-3);
Neh. 1:8.
b)
Treachery (mah-al) Job 2l:24.
6)
Words with a primitive root meaning to be or make bitter;
stroke or stripe; lash with a whip, strike, contend with
both hands, repulse anyone; to strike anyones mouth,
i.e. refuse to hear his words, treat him with contempt;
thus to be grievously perverse in resisting authority.
a)
To be rebellious (maw-raw) Num. 20:23-24
(Aarons rebellion) 27:12-14 (of Moses;
he uses the same word of Israel. Num. 20:10)
Deut. 21:18-21; 1 Sam. 15:23; Ps. 5:10; Ps. 78:8.
b)
Rebellion (mer-ee) Num. 17: l0;Deu. 3 I
:27;1 Sam. l5:23; Neh. 9: 17; Pr. 17:11 ;Is. 30:9; Ezek.
2:3,5.
7)
Words from a primitive root meaning to rebel, be rebellious,
thus stubbornly disobedient:
a)
To rebel (maw-rad) Josh. 22:15-16; 2 Kings
18:7(1,3,5-7); Job 24:13; Ezek. 2:3; Dan. 9:9.
b) Rebellion (mer-ad) Ezek. 4:19;
c) (meh-red) Josh 22:22;
d) Rebellious (maw-rawd) Ezek. 4:12,15
8)
Iniquity or wickedness (vanity-awven) From a root
meaning to pant, thus exert oneself in vain, come to nothingness.
This emptiness idea is applied to:
- Vanity,
hence falsehood, wickedness;
- Lightness,
ease;
- Living
at ease, riches, wealth;
- Ability
to do;
- Exhaustion.
a)
Emptiness or vanity (characterizing sin and false
worship) Is. 41:29; Zech. 10:2; 1 Sam. 15:23
(of the vanity of idols) Is. 66:3 (of idols themselves)
Hosea 4:15; 10:5.
b)
Vanity of words, falsehood, fraud; Ps. 36:4; Prov.
17:4
c)
Wickedness, or iniquity: Num. 23:21; Job 34:8; Prov.
11:7; Is. 1:13.
9)
Words with root meaning to spoil, with idea of break in
pieces, or crushing with a loud noise or crash (Job
34:24; Ps. 2Z:9; Is. 24:19) Thus to make good for
nothing, bad in any way.
a)
To be evil, to have an evil disposition (raw-ah)
Ex. 5:23; Num. 20:15; Josh. 24:15; 1 Sam. Chron.
21:17; Ps. 22:16-17; 37:1,8-9; Prov. 24:18,19; Is. 1:16;
41:23; Jer. 13:23.
b)
Evil, bad, wicked (rah) of manner of thinking or acting:
Gen. 2:9,17; 6:5; 8:21; 39:9; Deut. 17:2(2-5); 1
Sam. 12:17(16-19), 20(20-21); Ps. 7:9; Jer. 4:14,18;
7:24; 8:6; Ezek. 11:2.
NOT
WEAKNESS IN THE NEW TESTAMENT
Who
can look over these penetrating descriptions of sin in
the Old Testament and say that sin is merely some kind
of weakness, committed through inability of will? The
New Testament goes on in the gallery of the portraits
of selfishness:
1)
Words with root meaning to miss the mark, the road,
to fail to do what one intended to do, to err, do or
go wrong, miss or wander from the path of uprightness
and honor, thus to sin: (To "miss the mark"
does not imply a target is too hard but the aim is too
low.)
- To
sin (hamartano) Lk. 15:18-19; Luke 15:21; 17:34;
Rom. 2:12; 3:23;5:12;6:14-l5; I Cor. 15:34; Heb.
10:26; 1 Jn. 1:10; 2:1; 3:6,9; 5:18.
- A
sin (hamartema) An evil deed, an error, an offense:
Mark 3:28; Rom. 3:25.
- Sin
(hamartia) A failing to hit the mark, error, mistake,
failing to accomplish what was intended, or what
was good and useful, misdirection of our faculties:
Matt. 1:21; Lk. 24:4647; Jn. 1:29; 8:21,24,34,36,46;
16:8-9; Acts 13:38-39; Rom. 3:9; 6:1,2,6; 6:11,20;
1 Tim. 5:24; Heb. 3:13; 11:25; 12:1,4; Jas. l:l5;4:17;5:20;
1 Jn. 1:7-9;2:2;3:4-5; I Jn. 5:17.
- A
sinner (hamartolos) Devoted to sin: Matt. 9:13;
11:19; Lk. 18:13; Rom. 5:8; 1 Tim. 1:15; James 5:20;
1 Peter 4:18.
2)
Words carrying the idea of falling away, fall beside
or near, stumbling, false step, a blunder (derived from
para, beside, and pipto, to fall, fall down)
- To
fall away (parapipto) To deviate from the right
path, turn aside (climactic action) Heb. 6:6
- A
trespass (paraptoma) A falling away from right,
truth, duty, lapse or deviation from truth and uprightness,
an error, sin, misdeed or fault arising from ignorance
or inadvertance: Matt. 6:14-15; 18:35; Rom. 4:25;
Gal. 6:1; Eph. 1:7; 2:1; Col. 2:13; James 5:16.
3)
Words conveying the more serious idea of stepping beside,
going past without touching; from para, beside, and
basino, to step out, walk, go. The words are all active
and positive:
- To
transgress (parabaino) To morally violate,
overstep: Mt. 15:2-3; Acts 1:25; 2 Jn. 9.
- Transgression
(parabasis) Deviation, extravagance, digression;
hence violation of Gods law, deliberate departure
from truth: Rom. 2:23-25; 4:15; 5:14; Gal. 3:19;
1 Tim. 2:14; Heb. 2:2(1-4)
- A
transgressor (parabates) A breaker or violator of
the law: Rom. 2:25-27; James 2:9,11.
4)
Words involving law with a prefixed negative; thus the
condition of one without law (either ignorant of it,
or violating it)
- Lawlessness
(anomos) Destitute of law (1 Cor. 9:21) Generally
used in the sense of departing from the law, a violation
of the law, lawless, wicked; Lk. 22:37; Acts
2:23; 2 Thess. 2:8; 2 Pet. 2:8
- Lawlessness
(anomia) Want of conformity to the law, contempt,
violation of it, iniquity and wickedness; Matt.
7:23(21-23); 13:41(37-42); 23:28(27-28); 24:12;
Rom. 4:7; 6:19; 2 Cor. 6:14; 2 Thess. 2:7; Tit.
2:14; Heb. 1:9; Heb. 8:12(10-12); Heb. 10:17(16-17);
1 Jn. 3:4.
5)
Words involving the word just or righteous with a negative;
refusal to do what is right.
- To
do wrong (adekeo) To be just unrighteous, to wrong
someone, to hurt, act unjustly or
wickedly; Matt. 20:13;Acts 7:24-27; Col. 3:25;
Rev. 22:11.
- Unjust
(adikos) Unrighteous, one who violates justice or
has violated it; Matt. 5:45; Lk. 16:10-1l;Acts
24:I5; l Cor. 6:9; l Pet. 3:18; 2 Pet. 2:9.
- Unrighteous
(adikia) Injustice, wrong; Lk. 13:27(24-27);
Jn. 7:18; Acts 1:18; 8:23(20-24); Rom. 1:18, 29;
2:8; 2:6-11; 6:13; I Cor. 13:6; 2 Thess. 2:l0-12;
2 Tim. 2:19; 1 Jn. l:9; 5:17.
6)
Words involving godly, pious, worship with a negative;
to be irreverent:
- To
be ungodly (asebeo) To act impiously, to
be destitute of reverential awe towards God: Peter
2:6(4-9); Jude 15 (14-15).
- Ungodly
(asebees) Impious, despising God. Rom. 4:5; 5:6;
1 Tim. 1:9; 1 Pt. 4:18; 2 Peter 2:5; 2 Pet. 3:7;
Jude 4, 15.
- Ungodliness
(asebia) Want of reverence. Rom. 1:18; 11:26;
2 Tim. 2:16; Tit. 2:12; Jude 15,18.
7)
Words denoting evil, bad, of a bad nature or condition.
- Evil
(poneros) Bad, wicked in an ethical sense; also
used of labors, hardships, peril, toil:
- Evil
in general: Matt. 5:11; 7:17-18; 9:4; 15:19;
Mk. 7:22,23;Jn. 3:19;7:7; Rom. 12:9; Col. 1:21;
2 Thess. 5:22; Hebrews 3:12; Heb. 10:22; 2 Jn.
11.
- Evil
persons: Mat 5:45; 12:34-35,39,45; 13:49;25:26;
Lk. 6:35; Gal 1:4; 2 Thess. 3:2; 2 Tim. 3:13
- (3)Satan
and the evil angels: Matt. 13:19,38; Lk.
7:21; Eph. 6:16; 1 Jn. 2:13-14; 3:12; 5:18-19.
- Wickedness
(poneria) Depravity, iniquity, badness, evil disposition
of mind: Matt. 22:18; Mark 7:22; Lk. 11:39; Acts
3:20; Rom. 1:29; 1 Cor. 5:8; Eph. 6:12.
A
Final Word
From
the study of Bible words describing sin, we look in vain
for evidence that sin is anything else than ultimately
a wrong choice. There is always the idea of movement,
voluntary action, never a static or inactive something
behind the will, received by heredity, that causes
the will to act in sin. The Word of God protects itself
from theological speculation like this; sin is a selfish,
lawbreaking choice.
Without
God, man does have a sinful nature, but this nature is
not physical. He inherits no absolute causation
from his parents or anyone else. Man is held responsible
for his own actions. His sinful nature consists in the
habit patterns of a life lived for self instead
of God. They flow from a wrong heart, or ultimate
choice in life. They need not be all premeditated to be
sin. A man who has unyielded rights and resentment in
his heart that has been allowed to build for some time
does not have to coldly calculate to fly into a rage.
A man says an unkind thing. He tries to cover it by saying,
"Oh, I didnt mean that!" Scripture flatly
contradicts him by stating "out of the abundance
of the heart the mouth speaks". He may not have meant
it to be revealed in all its ugliness. But it was
in his heart, and the unconscious action followed. Nature
does not mean natural, as compared to ordinary,
but that which is common, that which man does as a
rule. If we say man has a sinful nature, we
are not talking about some solid "thing" causing
sin, but that as a rule of life, as a habit of
actions the sinner always behaves sinfully. His own heart
is set on pleasing himself; out of this primary choice
or idolatrous preference flows all his thoughts, actions
and lesser choices.
Scripture
reveals that no sinner seeks God. His selfishness
has made him run from the call of God just like Adam did
long ago: Gen. 6:5; 2 Chr. 12:14; Ps. 10:4; 53:2; 119:115;
Ecc. 8:11; Is. 9:13; 31:1; 59:4; 64:7; 65:1; Matt. 23:37;
Jn. 5:40; 6:26; Rom. 2:4; 3:11. For this reason, he
cannot be saved unless God invests great efforts in him
to turn him back to righteousness. Man is able
to repent when faced with the love of God and the enormity
of his sin, and must do so as a first condition of Gods
restoration to His family. This is directly asserted in
both the Old and New Testaments. (Is. 1:16-18; 55:6-7;
Hosea. 10:12; Matt. 3:2; Lk. 13:3,5; Acts 17:30-31)
Because repentance involves a facing of, and turning from
sin, sin is ultimately a moral act.
It
is precisely this emphasis that needs to be restored to
the Church today! The dogma that men are made to sin and
are blamed for sin primarily because of Adam is taught
neither by revelation, reason, or the record of the Early
Church for the first three hundred glorious years of its
ministry. It is unbiblical, inadequate and unreasonable,
a hindrance to the deep and powerful convicting work of
the Spirit of God, and has been the foundation of more
subtle heresies and misrepresentations of the Gospel than
almost any other falsehood. It detracts terribly from
the loving, just character of the great Godhead. Its misuse
and misapplication in practical living turns the actual
idea of Gods grace into an ugly travesty of justice,
makes repentance unreasonable and holiness unattainable.
It has historically been the chief foundation of Universalism
and the key reason for the rational rejection of the truth
of future punishment. Through its mesh "the goodness
of God" which leads men to repentance loses much
of its meaning. No wonder some churches practically do
not give themselves to missions and evangelism while theoretically
believing it, and little wonder that sinners hearts
are not broken by much of our preaching today! All through
history, when God has found men and women who dared preach
personal responsibility for sin and the necessity
and practicality of a holy life through faith in Jesus,
lasting revivals resulted. Let us then throw away all
excuses for our failure to obey the Lord of Hosts; let
us admit it is not just the fault of Adam or our ancestors,
but we who are to blame; and let us repent deeply,
that God may grant us true conversions and revival!
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2.0 © 1998 Winkie Pratney
Contact at Box 876 Lindale, TX 75771
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