Sin is ravaging the church today, but the old ways of
talking about sin clearly do not help us. We have to find new ways to talk
about it.
It’s an everyday observation now: Jesus was a friend to
sinners. I read or hear it nearly everywhere I turn—so much, in fact, I wonder
if we’ve thought it through completely.
Let’s give it a try today:
One of the most amazing (and challenging) things about
Jesus is he's a friend to sinners, but no friend to sin. Jesus is amazing because
of his great love for everyone; he lived, died, and rose again for everyone.
Jesus is challenging because he never once ignored the
dreadful impact of sin. Even so: sinners found Jesus attractive. They were
drawn to him.
Years ago I gave up on the phrase “Love the sinner, hate
the sin” because it was too easy to repeat the phrase and ignore the
instruction. In practice, this tired old phrase was more about hating the sin
and rarely about loving the sinner. I’ve never seen anyone attracted to a
church that proclaimed: “Love the sinner, hate the sin.” It’s like saying, “We
love you but we find your actions revolting and ugly.”
But now the cultural tide has shifted to “Love the sinner,
ignore the sin.” This doesn’t help either: ignoring sin is like ignoring
cancer. (Churches would never say this phrase out loud but it is frequently
lived out before our eyes.) Ignoring sin is like saying, “God loves you, and we
really don’t care whether you are headed for heartbreak or destruction.”
So then, how should we see—and talk about—sin? I have four
suggestions, not for churches, but for each student of Jesus:
First, every student of
Jesus must see sin as something serious: deadly serious. Jesus understood the
dangers of sin so acutely he sacrificed his very life to hold back the
consequences of sin. To ignore sin is to ignore the grave results of sin, not
only in the next life, but in this life as well.
Second, we must separate sin
from legalism. To the degree we see sin as “rule-breaking” we will see God as
merely a Judge. Make no mistake, God is a Judge, and God is the only proper
Judge—but he is far more than a Judge. He is nearly everything and everyone in
the courtroom: the judge, the jury, the witness, the attorney, and even the
accused. He is everything except the Accuser. God's courtroom is ultimately a
place of freedom. This is the transformation we need: to see the meaning of sin
more as "I'm in trouble" rather than "I'm in trouble with
God."
Third, we must see sin as a
sickness, a Pandora-virus loosed upon creation from nearly the very beginning.
Sin is a cancer of the soul, and obesity of the will, and a mental illness. Sin
is caught, and it is taught. It is the result of heredity and the result of
behavior. To the degree we see sin as sickness we will see Jesus the Physician,
and we will offer ourselves to him for his remedy. Jesus loves us fully,
completely, utterly: so much he will pay any price in order to help us avoid
the pain, cancer, and suffering of sin. If there is any hatred of sin, we
should hate sin the way a parent hates the cancer in a child.
And finally, we
must see sin as foolishness and vanity. Sin never satisfies; it only
intensifies. Sin is like drinking salt water: those who drink will thirst again
with a maddening thirst: greed leads to idolatry; rage leads to violence; and
sensuality leads to hopelessness.
The Book of Common Prayer instructs us to
pray, “Have mercy upon us miserable sinners.” The reason we are miserable
sinners is because sin makes us miserable. By contrast, a healthy
relationship with the Creator means drinking deep of God’s Spirit, which
satisfies and transforms us into a source of fresh
water for others.
Imagine Jesus, the friend of sinners, sitting at a feast
with tax collectors, drunkards, and prostitutes. He leans toward them all and
says, “It’s OK: because you’re my friends I give you permission to ruin your
life.”
What kind of friend would Jesus be?
Contributed by: Ray Hollenbach
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