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Engage exists to provide perspective on culture through the eyes of a Biblical worldview, showing how that worldview intersects with culture and engages it.

We are a team of 20-somethings brought together by a common faith in Jesus Christ and employment in our parent organization American Family Association.

What does God call sin?

09/26/2018

For years I struggled with the concept of a holy God and how He seemed to be different in the Old Testament and the New Testament. The most frightening thing about God seemed to be a lack of consistency, and somehow I felt His holiness held the key.

When I would ask clergy what holy meant, I usually got “to be separated from” as an answer. “Set apart” and “consecrated to God” were others. It seems, however, they were describing more of the process of sanctification or becoming more like God as we surrender more completely as a “living sacrifice.” (Romans 12:1-2). 

So their explanations didn’t help much. There’s something missing in that description. To find it let’s take “to be separate from” and think about it as we ask “separate from what?”

Sin.

With God, there are no tiny sins, no misdemeanors, and no peccadillos, because any sin is a flaw and it simply doesn't exist in the realm of holiness. Please don’t think it is a flaw fixable by purely human effort, because if that were the case we would not have needed Jesus on the cross.

Interpreting the Bible’s standards and examples of sin correctly is challenging, but doable. Your soul is at stake; so don’t just take my word or anyone else’s word. Start working to properly divide God’s Word so it can multiply your faith (2 Timothy 2:15). 

Understanding the Bible is only complicated when we see churches disagreeing about what is a sin. Rather than resting on the promises of God, it is tempting to take the side we like and agree with those which fit our comfort zone.

Scripture’s authority has never been about us staying within our comfort zones. It is about a holy God who loves us and desires an eternal relationship with us even when we cannot attain it by ourselves. We have sinned (Romans 3:23). 

God’s holiness is frightening because it is so different than the sin we may have grown accustomed to living. Hebrews 10:31 tells us, “It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.”

This fear is the fear of the Lord that Proverbs 14:27 describes by saying, “The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life that one may turn away from the snares of death.” Many verses talk about the fear of the Lord in the Bible and might be worth visiting.

Regardless, there are the wages of sin again, death, and God uses His holiness and justice to move us away from sin and toward His love. It’s not a trip that can be halfway done. You cannot have one aspect of God without these others.

Remember that it isn’t true that God plus one makes a majority. Nor is it God plus a group of people defining what God means. The Pharisees thought they had God figured out. God’s thoughts are not our thoughts and His ways are not our ways (Isaiah 55:8-9), which is another reason to be in His word regularly.

God is the majority. He is unchanging and His holiness won’t change the rules for anyone.

Not even His Son got a pass when all the sins of man were placed on Him at the cross. But Jesus was undeserving of that punishment thus breaking the need for what the Jewish people used to do, a blood sacrifice of animals. Why else do you think Jesus is called the Lamb of God? 

When it comes to what Jesus really did, I’d like you to consider this, something I wrote years ago. The first line was actually a chapter title in Zig Ziglar’s book Over the Top and somehow I went from the secular to a spiritual view of it.

Discipline + Courage + Commitment = Freedom.

It was once said the best freedom is freedom from bad habits. And what habits do we want to develop in ourselves? Choose Discipline because it weighs ounces compared to the tons of regret. Choose Courage because a coward dies a thousand deaths. Choose Commitment because the person who won’t stand for the right thing will fall for anything. Choose Character because it is the ability to carry out worthy decisions after the emotions of the decisions are gone. Choose Humility before God and men in that order because God hates the proud and honors the humble.

Combine Humility with Commitment, Courage, Discipline, and Character then the end product is love that stands firm even if it is not always easy.

How am I sure about this?

Jesus had the courage to die one death for the wages of sin, knowing His discipline would prevent tons of regret, using His commitment because only He could stand pure in front of God, using His character He denied himself the right to call down an army of angels to pull him from the cross, using His humility He allowed His crucifixion to occur and then He forgave them for what they were doing. For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son. We love Him because He first loved us. God honored His son’s humbleness and because He was without sin, Death had no right to hold Jesus in the grave. We serve a risen Savoir. It is through him only that we can have freedom. Choose Jesus because He is our freedom. Read 2 Corinthians 3:16-18.

When we fully surrender to Jesus’ calling upon us and defining what is right and wrong in our world by God’s standards, then we can say like the old hymn, “My hope is built on nothing less than Jesus blood and righteousness.”

When we think of God as holy, loving and just, it becomes easier to see how John 3:16-18 shows the fullness of His love for us. We are redeemed and free indeed (John 8:31-32; 36).

So every time we think of God as loving it is necessary to also remember He is holy and just. His holiness condemns sin in His presence, requires punishment of those sins which represents Him being just and bringing justice, yet it is His love which shows mercy to those who seek Him because He desires that none should suffer.

Jesus “was wounded for our transgressions” and “by His stripes we are healed” (Isaiah 53:5).

That can bring a soul to salvation where Jesus’ righteousness is granted. It is the biggest decision this side of death that should not be ignored. “Jesus said to him, ‘I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6). 

And the next biggest decision is to fully surrender to the Holy Spirit's prompts by agreeing with God on those other comfort zones we didn’t like calling sin, repenting, and finally going all in—“Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; In all your ways acknowledge Him, And He shall direct your paths” (Proverbs 3:5-6).

Without this trust, without this willingness to divide the Word properly to multiply faith, without the submission, repentance, and obedience to what God defines as sin, then each of us faces a horrible possibility, a frightening surprise, that at the end of our lives we may hear from God “I never knew you, depart from me, you workers of lawlessness” (Matthew 7:21-23).

 

This article originally appeared on The Stand.

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