Chaplain’s Corner – July 24, 2007

Rev. Rich Hines

What Sin Really Is

 

This message is primarily for those who call on the name of Jesus Christ as their own Lord and Savior from sin, and serve as a Chaplain or a gospel minister in a jail, prison or a follow-up ministry such as a rescue mission – in the United States.

 

All Scripture quotes are taken from the New King James Version (NKJV) of the Bible, copyright 1979, 1980, 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.  Used by permission.  All rights reserved.  When quoting a text, any deviation from the NKJV text is placed within parenthesis signs ().  These usually occur as direct translations from the original languages, or as notes from the original setting to help apply the text to today’s culture.

 

ALL CAPITAL LETTERS are sometimes used to emphasize words in a text, or to make a comment about a biblical text, or emphasize a statement.

 

Last month I stressed how we mustn’t get soft and man-centered in our gospel presentations and why you must make SIN the issue of why your listeners need Jesus.  I said, “Sin is an important issue to God.” 

 

This month I want to go a bit further and give you a biblical way of defining and describing sin to the inmates and residents, and even to the correctional staff you are there to help.

 

If you’re upholding the biblical gospel, someone should be asking you, “What is sin?” 

 

The New Testament word translated “SIN” actually means “missing the mark.”  It pictures falling short of what we should be.  Further, God defines this word in 1 John 3:4, where He says:

 

4 Whoever commits sin also commits lawlessness, and SIN IS LAWLESSNESS.

 

So Sin is a breaking of God’s law. 

 

But sin is not only an outward action, it is also an attitude. 

 

This is true because the decision to do what we want in direct knowledgeable disobedience of God’s law, or else against our once sensitive conscience, is rebellion against God.  A good example of this is found in Psalm 2:2,3 -

 

2 The kings of the earth set themselves (as if in battle array), and the rulers take counsel together, AGAINST the LORD and AGAINST His Anointed (lit. His Messiah-Christ) saying,

3 “Let us BREAK THEIR BONDS IN PIECES, AND CAST AWAY THEIR CORDS (i.e. control) FROM US.”

 

So, SIN IS AN ATTITUDE OF REBELLION that expresses itself in rebellious acts AGAINST GOD.

 

Lucifer, who became Satan (the Adversary) was the first rebel sinner – and it was his pride that was manifested in his rebellion.  Note it in Isaiah 14:12-14,

 

12  How you are fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning!  How you are cut down to the ground, you who weakened the nations!

13  For you have said in your heart: ‘I WILL ascend into heaven, I WILL exalt my throne ABOVE the stars of God; I WILL also sit on the mount of the congregation on the farthest sides of the north;

14  I WILL ascend above the heights of the clouds, I WILL be like the Most High.’ ”

 

Those five “I WILL” statements show Lucifer’s – Satan’s pride.  Further we see it was Satan’s pride that kept on encouraging this angelic rebellion in Ezekiel 28:2, 12-15, 17

 

2  Thus says the Lord GOD: “Because your (Satan’s) heart is lifted up, and you say ‘I am a god, I sit in the seat of gods, in the midst of the seas,' …”

 

12  Thus says the Lord GOD: “You were the seal of perfection, full of wisdom and perfect in beauty.

13 "You were in Eden, the garden of God; every precious stone was your covering; the sardius, topaz, and diamond, beryl, onyx, and jasper, sapphire, turquoise and emerald with gold.  The workmanship of your timbrels and pipes was prepared for you on the day you were created.

14 “You were the anointed cherub who covers; I established you; you were on the holy mountain of God; you walked back and forth in the midst of the fiery stones (other bright angels).

15 "You were perfect in your ways from the day you were created, TILL INIQUITY WAS FOUND IN YOU."

17  Your heart was lifted up because of your beauty; you corrupted your wisdom for the sake of your splendor; I cast you to the ground,…”

 

A good Bible teacher I know has observed, “In one way or another PRIDE is connected to every act of sin.”  When you really stop and think about that, you have to agree it’s true.  Whether we realize it or not, when we sin, we put ourselves above God in our life.  We are in effect saying to God, “You’re not the boss of me!” or, "You're not Lord in MY LIFE, I am!" 

 

So Sin really is an attempt on our part to dethrone God and make ourselves our own god.  Therefore all sin is, in one sense, IDOLATRY.

 

Another way to say this is that SIN is COMMITMENT TO SELF, rather than to God.    This is explicitly spelled out in Isaiah 53:6, where it says:

 

6  All we like sheep have GONE ASTRAY; WE HAVE TURNED, EVERY ONE, TO HIS OWN WAY; …

 

One of the most important things to realize from Scripture and, in turn, to teach inmates and residents about sin is that IT IS AN INTERNAL, HEART ISSUE. 

 

This is important to teach because so much man-made religion only deals with the outward appearance of moral failures or sins.  Cleaning up the outside never really gets to the source of the infection.  Jesus taught on the worthlessness of self-reformation.  Notice what He said in Matthew 12:43-45,

 

43 “When an unclean spirit goes out of a man, he goes through dry places, seeking rest, and finds none.

44 Then he says, ‘I will return to my house (the body of the formerly possessed man) from which I came.’  And when he comes, he finds it empty, swept, and put in order. (In other words, he finds the man has cleaned up his act externally)

45 Then he goes and takes with him seven other spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter and dwell there; AND THE LAST STATE OF THAT MAN IS WORSE THAN THE FIRST. …”

 

So self-reformation never gets to the root of the sin problem – which is in the heart.  Listen to, and, in turn, teach your flock Genesis 6:5 – where the word “wickedness” is used as a synonym for sinfulness.

 

5 Then the LORD saw that the wickedness (or evil, from the idea of rottenness) of man was great in the earth and that EVERY INTENT OF THE THOUGHTS OF HIS HEART WAS ONLY EVIL (the same basic word as “wickedness”) CONTINUALLY.

 

Further, Jesus taught His disciples in Matthew 15:17-20,

 

17  Do you not yet understand that whatever enters the mouth goes into the stomach and is eliminated?

18  But those things which proceed out of the mouth COME FROM THE HEART,  and they defile a man.

19 FOR OUT OF THE HEART PROCEED EVIL THOUGHTS, MURDERS, ADULTERIES, FORNICATIONS, THEFTS, FALSE WITNESS, BLASPHEMIES.

20  These are the things which defile a man, but to eat with unwashed hands does not defile a man.”

 

Again, SIN IS AN INTERNAL PROBLEM.

 

Sin is often brazen because, in time, the sinner truly comes to believe the lie that what they are doing is not wrong!  Note this in Proverbs 30:20,

 

20 This is the way of an adulterous woman: she eats and wipes her mouth, (which is to say poetically, she commits the act and covers it up) and says: “I have done no wickedness.”

 

Here in this verse the adulteress knows she has committed an act that at least some people would say was bad or wrong.  The very fact that she "wipes her mouth" shows she is trying to cover up what she did.  This has to mean she knows she did it, but her statement "I have done no wickedness," shows where sin has taken her - it has totally numbed her conscience. 

 

For many inmates, especially repeat offenders, this is a very real issue.  Scripture speaks of a lessening conscience as sin is pursued.  Note this in 1 Timothy 4:2 –

 

2 … speaking lies in hypocrisy, HAVING THEIR OWN CONSCIENCE SEARED WITH A HOT IRON.

 

The context of that verse is dangerous false teachers, bringing to believers what really is satanic teaching.  The point of verse 2 is that they do this PRETENDING TO BE BRINGING MESSAGES FROM GOD, instead in hypocrisy they are bringing deceiving doctrines from demons!  THEY HAVE NO SENSE THAT THIS IS WRONG, because their naturally sensitive conscience has long been rendered insensitive.

 

Many repeat offenders can easily lie about their illegal actions without even a tinge of guilt that they’re lying – because they’ve done it for so long.

 

This leads to another thing about sin I want to bring out. 

 

Unattended to, sin always increases and blinds as it continues.  1 John 2:9-11 brings this out.  In this text, the commandment of God to love our brothers is the issue.

 

9 He who says he is in the light, (which is to claim he’s walking in a right relationship with God through Christ) AND HATES (literally - regularly, continuously hates) HIS BROTHER, IS IN DARKNESS UNTIL NOW.

10 He who loves his brother abides (remains and continues) in the light, and there is no cause of stumbling in him.

11 But he who (literally, continually) hates his brother IS IN DARKNESS AND (literally - continually) WALKS IN DARKNESS, AND DOES NOT KNOW WHERE HE IS GOING, because the darkness HAS (once and for all) BLINDED HIS EYES.

 

That’s a powerful statement.  One of the tests of true discipleship and salvation is whether or not the professing Christian REALLY LOVES their brothers.  The pattern of the actual life is being looked at. 

 

Anyone continually sinning by not loving proves they are a fake.  Such a one yet needs God’s true salvation to change them.  They still need to truly come to Christ and be united to Him, by faith.  If they had been truly born of God, they would as a result regularly love their brethren. 

 

This text is not talking about an angry hateful expression or a specific time of a lack of love that is here or there.  It’s talking about continual sin.  To do this is to continually walk in darkness, and the text says that darkness gets TO A POINT WHERE IT FINALLY, ONCE AND FOR ALL, BLINDS THE SINNER!

 

Sin’s promises are all lies.  Temptation to sin appears to say “Do this and you will have fun, or fulfillment, or satisfaction.”  In the end, sin really only brings sorrow, confusion and death.  Death is separation from God or from the physical body

 

Teach all these things from the Bible to the inmates and residents:

 

Sin is a breaking of God’s law.

Sin is an attitude of rebellion against God.

Sin is linked to pride and seeks to un-god God and deify man.

Sin is commitment to self and is therefore a form of idolatry.

Sin is an internal heart issue.

Sin can become brazen and be committed guiltlessly.

Sin renders the conscience ineffective.

Sin blinds and kills as it continues unabated.

 

As you explain these things about sin, you should always plan to end with God’s solution to our personal sin.  It’s always and ONLY in the Lord Jesus Christ.

 

1 John 2:1,2 – written to believers, Literally, “born ones.”

 

1 My little children, these things I write to you, so that you may not sin.  And if anyone sins, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous (One).

2 And He himself is the propitiation for our sins, …

 

Explain “Advocate” and “Propitiation” to your inmates and residents. 

 

The word translated advocate literally is “one called alongside to help.”  It was also a technical term for an attorney for the defense.  But Jesus is not like a slick high paid lying attorney that finds some loophole in the law to get his client off.  There are no loopholes in God’s law.  He gets the true believer “off” because He served their sentence FOR THEM, IN THEIR PLACE.

 

In doing so, He and He alone PROPITIATED God.  To propitiate is to appease and satisfy the wrath of the offended party so that the offended one is soothed.  God’s holy righteous wrath against sin is fully satisfied by the one sacrifice of Jesus Christ.  He and He alone is the Propitiator.  Since God’s wrath against the believing sinner is thus appeased, He then can show righteous mercy and forgive the guilty sinner WHO BELIEVES. 

 

In human terms there is no way to reconcile the fairness of Jesus, the Sinless One, bearing the sins of guilty, wicked, sinful rebels and thereby propitiating God’s righteous wrath.  The only explanation God ever gives is that it was due to His love for sinners.

 

1 John 4:9,10

 

9 In this the love of God was manifested toward us, that God has sent His only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through Him.

10 In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins.

 

1 John 3:5,8,16

 

5 And you know that He (Jesus Christ) was manifested (appeared) to take away our sins, and in Him there is no sin.

 

8 … For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of the devil.  (the works of the devil - Satan, are connected to our sinning)

 

16 By this we know love, because He (Jesus Christ) laid down His life for us.

 

As you explain it was the love of God that caused Christ to become the believing sinner’s propitiation, also stress His SUBSTITUTIONARY death.  It’s the heart of the Gospel.

 

Rich Hines

Aurora Ministries’ - Minister To Chaplains