I have a lot of issues with Christian education. Much truth
is lost to misguided opinion. Take for example the idea that all sin has
already been forgiven. That will be
taught in theory, but sharing how to actually live that out brings with it a
lot of fear. If your sins are already forgiven, won’t you just go out and sin
to your heart’s content? Perhaps. But
all that misses the point.
The Bible teaches that when Jesus died on the cross, he took
everyone’s sin upon him and paid the penalty once for all (“The wages of sin is
death” eternal death, separation from
God). All meaning all sin for all
people–past, present and future, therefore giving everyone the opportunity for
eternal life (“the gift of God”). If all
of my sins were in the future when Jesus died (and they were), then all of my
sins, and the punishment for them, were taken care of at that time.
We can take this gift or leave it. So when we look around at one another and see
behaviors we label “sin”, that sin has already been forgiven. It does not have
to be worked off. God never asks us to get rid of our own sin. We can’t. We
might (and should, as Christians) learn to sin less, but this side of heaven,
the Bible teaches that we will still have to deal with sin in our lives. Since
God never asks us to do the impossible, like take away our own sins, why on
earth would we ask it of others?
The other truth about sin, God sees no hierarchy. The Bible
always lists murder with anger, or sexual sins with envy, weighting them the
same. Sin is sin, missing the mark, the
standard God has set. So our persistent ranking of sins isn’t biblical. The sin
God hates is our persistence in refusing to acknowledge him and accept his very
costly gift.
That leads me to Kim Davis and her quest to end the newly
approved Gay marriage laws. Is
homosexuality listed as a sin in the Bible, yes. But right beside judging
others and not living up to our responsibilities. In her quest to speak out
against sin, why Gays? Because somewhere she has wrongfully been taught that
homosexuality is a “big” sin, a heinous crime against God, an abomination.
Maybe that’s how it’s viewed in the Old Testament, but that was before Jesus
came to “fulfill the law” through his death and resurrection. Homosexuality has been forgiven right along with
every other conceivable sin. And, for the record, the New Testament has a lot
more to say about judging others and being unforgiving than it does about
homosexuality.
Certainly if you feel you cannot follow a civil law you need
to take your stand. Civil disobedience
is a time honored American freedom. But
you take your stand knowing the consequences.
Greater people than Kim David have served time in jail for not obeying
what they believed to be an unjust law. So quit your job or suffer the
consequences. But making such an issue
of it, like signing those marriage licenses somehow paints her with an evil
stain, that’s just ignorance of the Bible.
Jesus spent most of his time walking, talking and eating
with people the religious leaders of the day saw as “sinners”. One such leader, a man names Simon, invited
Jesus to dinner to check him out. While there a woman entered the room and
knelt at Jesus’ feet. She poured oil
over his feet and began to weep. She dried his feet with her hair. Simon thought, “if he only knew who this
woman was, he wouldn’t let her touch him.” The Bible says that Jesus, knowing
Simon’s thoughts, told a story about a man who had been forgiven a huge debt by
his master, and a man who’d been forgiven a much smaller debt by the same
master. “Who loves the master more?”
Jesus asked Simon. “The one who’s been
forgiven the most.” Ah.
The reality is, we’ve all been forgiven the most, but too
many of us wrongfully believe that we’ve been better, cleaner, less sinful than
someone else we see sitting across the room. We may have committed some sins,
but they’ll never be as bad as homosexuality. Hmmm – hello Simon. To fully
grasp Christianity is to fully grasp how much we’ve been forgiven, how very
awful any sin is to God, how we all miss the mark of his holy standard. Sin is sin; it’s all the same to God. It was all forgiven on the cross. Now we make the decision to accept or reject
the gift.
It’s time for people who have accepted Jesus’ forgiveness to
get off their sinful high horse and realize the only difference between them
and that homosexual they are judging may be that they have accepted Jesus’ gift
and the gay person has not. Of course,
it could also be the other way around, the gay person may already know God’s
grace in their life, and the judgmental person may be judgmental because,
though religious, they have yet to realize it isn’t about clean living; it’s
about accepting that very costly free gift of God.
This is fantastic! This is a perfect example of why a scriptural based foundation is vital to the genuine and sincere spread of the gospel. Unfortunately, it seems word of mouth translations taken out of scriptural context are the main contributor of a lot of Christian's understanding of Christ's teachings. This seems to create almost a psuedo-christianity. These psuedo-christians, although meaning well, are constantly caught in hypocritical lifestyles and life events as they go about judging those around them, when if they had spent their time in the word and prayer, they might recognize that love, grace, mercy, and forgiveness are traits we should exemplify as representation of the body of Christ as well as understand that we have no business being the practicioner of the judgement Christ will bestow upon us individually.
ReplyDeleteAlternatively, I had a great experience in high school that reminds me of this. Late in my Junior year I had a test in a math class. The cover page had the directions on it. If you read it line by line you would end up doing all these mathematics we had covered over the year and at the end, the directions read "disregard all you have just read, put your name on the paper, leave it blank, and turn it in". This situation, and life lesson honestly, is a great parallel to this current event. Those kids that did all the math because they didn't read the directions worked extremely hard to complete that test, as Kim Davis has gone out on a limb to stand up for what she believes. However, if Kim had read the directions, she would understand that her stand isn't required, just as the math wasnt. All she had to do was out her name on the paper. Instead, she very publicly solved each and every math problem and looked like a fool for doing so, as everyone else was aware of what the directions were.
Mark
Thank you, Mark, for your comments. I love the illustration of the math test, it's the perfect example.
Delete