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Specific Sin

Posted on April 10, 2014 Written by savage Leave a Comment

A person I know recently did something that turned out to be pretty tragic for his family. I’m not going to go into the specific nature of the event, but let’s say it was rooted in dishonesty – perhaps investing in the stock market, using money he and his wife had earmarked for their children, or something of that nature.

I’d like to wander through the progression of realizations about the event. He approves; I’m not using any names, and I’m not describing the actual act he committed – although the sin is fair game.

Look, the stock market thing is contrived. It wasn’t a stock market deal. It was something similar; slightly more severe and relevant, but nothing like an affair or anything like that. He didn’t steal from anyone else, and no-one was harmed. The stock market is used as an analog to the actual issue, and it doesn’t quite map perfectly.

The circumstances: his deed was revealed, fairly clearly. Not completely. The act was not directly harmful – in fact, using the stock market example above, he might have broken even or even made some money. The problem was that the act took from his family – the money was used and not immediately accessible when it was desired – and he was not honest with his wife about the use of the money.

He admitted his fault when pressed about it by his wife. However, her trust was broken. He’s got to deal with that, and it’ll take him some time because he’s had issues like this before. This isn’t his first rodeo with this particular problem.

But why? How does he go from a decent fellow, to doing something like this – which turns out to be far more poisonous than it otherwise might be?

Here’s his thought process, as I understand it.

His first act was denial; he denied his sin to his wife, directly. “Nope, didn’t have any chocolate, not me, why would you think that?” — with chocolate smeared on his hands and face.

After he got over that — “Well, okay, maybe I did have some chocolate” — he denied it again. To himself.

In fact, my father did the exact same thing, when it comes down to it – so I was familiar with the general idea.

That second denial was the interesting bit about the whole problem. He said that he thought his wife was overreacting; okay, the trust issue was sincere, but really? Nobody was hurt, they didn’t lose any money, and no police were involved. In a lot of peoples’ eyes, it would have been nothing – people do this sort of thing all the time, and it’s fine. No harm, no foul.

But as he thought further about it, he realized how wrong he was. He was following a sort of Egyptian Book of the Dead recital: “I have not murdered; I have not stolen; I have not coveted; I have not cursed the Name; I have borne false witness, but that is the extent of my sin.”

But he was wrong.

For all intents and purposes, he did murder, he did steal, he did covet, he did profane the Name. He sinned; James 2:10 says, “For whoever keeps the whole law but fails in one point has become accountable for all of it.” Failure in one point brings the weight of all of it – and Romans 6:23 says that the weight is death, eternal separation from God.

That’s why we need Jesus; if sins were not equal when it came to our salvific relationship with God, then we might not need Jesus at all – maybe we’d just commit tiny little sins here and there, and we wouldn’t quite get the sin-o-meter to read “unsaved.” So we’d sort of slide into heaven.

But that’s not the way it works. Sin is sin; James says clearly that if we sin in any point, we are committed to Hell in ourselves; Romans 3:23 says, “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”

Now, some would argue that there are greater and lesser sins. In a way, they’re right. Paul often refers to sexual sins as being more awful than others; the Torah also refers to “high sins” and “low sins,” such that the restitution for trespass is different. (One sin might lead to the sacrifice of a dove; another, a ram; another, a bull. Different “levels of sin,” if you like.)

However, we have to remember that there are (at least) two perspectives at work here. one is God’s perspective: how does He see sin? The other is our perspective: how do we see the sin?

A “high” and “low” sin is our perspective. If we see limited actual harm in an act, that’s a “low sin,” if you like. That’s sort of like a misdemeanor versus a felony; stealing $15 might be a misdemeanor, but stealing $15,000 is a felony.

God, however, sees either “sin” or “no sin,” and therefore all sin is “high sin.” You either trespass or you don’t. How far you trespass isn’t important; it’s like being a little bit pregnant.

I’m still using the stock market example.

So this fellow had sinned, and all sins are grievous. But he still didn’t actually murder, or steal, did he? After all, it was his money. His sin might be equivalent, according to James 2:10, but not so much according to other verses, right?

Well, the core realization he had was that the “not so much” was incorrect.

He did murder. He did steal. Perhaps it was abstract – he “murdered” his wife’s trust in him, but Jesus said that one who sinned in his heart has committed the deed.

But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lustful intent has already committed adultery with her in his heart. (Matthew 5:28 ESV)

His denial was part of that: by saying “But it really wasn’t that bad,” he diminishes the actual sin. He demeans his wife’s feelings, and the impact his acts had on his family.

So… what now? He’s sinned. He’s guilty. He’s wrestling with that guilt, which is part of how I know about it; he’s struggling to give his guilt to God.

The reason is the impact it has on his life; he said he feels like he needs to hold on to that guilt in part as a natural consequence of his action. The truth is, his sin is forgotten as soon as he repents and gives it to God – but at the same time, for us, his sin might never go away, because the consequences of that sin leave a scar that may or may not heal, in God’s time and Will.

It’s a tough problem, and he’ll have to pray about it, as I will pray for him.

Filed Under: Bible Study, Lifestyle

Take Care for Yourself

Posted on April 9, 2014 Written by savage Leave a Comment

I’ve been doing a Bible-in-a-Year project, thanks to Logos. I’m actually just now getting to D’varim (Deuteronomy), despite the schedule saying that I should be most of the way through Shmu’el (II Samuel, specifically; Samuel isn’t really supposed to be broken up into two books, but often is for convenience’ sake).

Way, way behind. I’m here because I got sick in late February; came down with a set of killer migraines. (Obviously, not killer enough; I’m not dead yet.) Then my family went through some stressful situations; it’s great having teenagers!

And along the way, my Bible reading dropped off. And with it, my prayer life. And with it… me. I felt alone, lost.

Time to fix that, I think. It’s past time, always, really.

I don’t know what book of the Bible would be my favorite. Interesting thought.

So I’ve been pushing myself to read a few days’ worth each day, to catch up again. Yesterday I finished Bamidbar, Numbers; if I had to say that I had a “favorite book of the Bible,” Bamidbar wouldn’t be it.

Today’s reading – well, actually, March 1’s reading – was D’varim 3-5. This is the Covenant, restated; Moshe is saying “here’s the history, here’s the stipulation, here’s the requirement.” (See Covenant Treaty Format for Near Eastern Kingdoms for what looks like a decent walkthrough on the forms of covenants.)

Along the way, D’varim 4:9 stood out like a sore thumb:

9 “Only take care, and keep your soul diligently, lest you forget the things that your eyes have seen, and lest they depart from your heart all the days of your life. Make them known to your children and your children’s children— (Deuteronomy 4:9 ESV)

It was being addressed to Israel, but it’s pierced my heart. I’ve not done that. And it shows.

Pray for me, if you would.

Filed Under: Bible Study

Hey, it’s been a while!

Posted on April 8, 2014 Written by savage Leave a Comment

Wow, it’s been… almost eight months. (I say “almost” like it’s not actually eight months. Yeesh.)

Sorry about that, folks; my fault. I’ve been busy.

Filed Under: General

The Challenge of the Pardes

Posted on July 24, 2013 Written by savage Leave a Comment

There are reactions we’re all called to make, in every occurrence in our lives. Those reactions determine, and are determined by, who we are, and tell us much of what we are – and, thankfully, we have some measure of control and determination.

The Talmud, in the Mishnah, refers to the legend of the Pardes. In this, four eminent rabbis traveled to Paradise, and encountered Holiness there.

They had four different reactions: one went insane, one lost his faith, one died, and one came and went in peace.

These reactions mirror ours. When we are presented with… anything, a situation, a question, an experience, we reflect that experience and channel it in some variations of these.

Insanity

When we integrate the experience without context or understanding, we are “mad,” in a way. Imagine those who think the Easter Bunny is somehow a canonical Christian image, or that Santa Claus hung around with Jesus. Imagine those who can’t tolerate that Jesus is the Way and the Life, and think that a good Buddhist is as deserving of Heaven as a good Christian.

“Orthodox” here means “biblical,” and is not indicative of any association with a specific church or organization.

(Meanwhile, orthodox theology says that none of us deserve Heaven, period, but are considered co-heirs with Christ through acceptance of His death on the Cross in our stead [Romans 8:12-17]. Anyone who refuses that sacrifice, no matter how wonderful a person they are, is unsaved.)

Death

We might also endure an experience, neither adding to it nor subtracting from it. We become static, unchanging, fixed in position. This lack of growth is “dying,” in a sense.

Loss of Faith

When we reject an experience and its implications of the glory of God, we lose our faith… maybe not literally or wholly, but we might simply become jaded, or refuse to acknowledge God’s role in that experience. (Or, of course, we might literally lose faith entirely.)

The rabbi who lost faith was Elisha ben Abuyah, and he’s referred to as Acher, אחר, “the other.”

While accounts are not mechanically literal (and therefore we don’t know for sure), it seems he rejected the idea of the afterlife; one story has it that he saw a child do a good deed, and lose his life, while a man who sinned suffered no consequences.

He then became a self-declared outsider, one who rejected the teachings that he himself possessed.

It’s tragic, really, to think about.

Peace

The rabbi who “survived,” Rabbi Akiva, “came in peace and went in peace.” This suggests that he was the only one who went to the Orchard knowing who and what he was, and let that inform his actions and reactions. He preserved his faith, he extended his experience of the Holy, he grew.


The Holocaust – referring to the Nazi extermination of groups such as Jews, Gypsies, and other such ethnicities and subcultures – stands alongside the Exodus and the destruction of the Second Temple in Jewish life as hallmark events. (There are more, but for me, these are the three most impactful.)

Jews had a chance to react to the Holocaust, after its ending — and those reactions mirrored the reactions of the rabbis to the Pardes. Some Jews lost faith, rejecting God; some Jews went mad, embracing hatred. Many, many, many Jews obviously died. Some endured, retaining their faith and their essential character despite the horror.

This is me. This is us. This is everyone, to every experience.

Through Christ, we are able to achieve peace, and with His grace and mercy, we are able to go in peace, if we listen to Him and not to the chaos of our own hearts in our agonies and ecstasies.

And our reactions can tell us who we are in Him, too; if we have not His peace, then we know what we lack. We know then that we must attempt to invite Him to be nearer to us, to reach out for His Hand in our lives.

Have peace.

Filed Under: Bible Study, Lifestyle Tagged With: holocaust, pardes, peace

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