3. ALL
CHRISTIANS COMMIT SIN
ALL
CHRISTIANS COMMIT SIN
WHAT DOES
IT MEAN TO COMMIT SIN?
When a person
breaks the law of God (the Ten Commandments) he
has sinned. However, the Scriptures distinguish between sins of
ignorance and sins of presumption.
When a person
breaks the law unknowingly the Bible calls it
a sin of ignorance. (This person
does not "COMMIT" sin).
When a person
breaks the law deliberately it is called a
presumptuous sin. (This person does
"COMMIT" sin).
The word COMMIT means:
"to do; perpetrate, as a crime". In the
Greek it is poieo which means: to make. To commit sin means to
make sin; it is a deliberate act such as God making the universe.
Therefore, one who sins in ignorance never commits sin. On the
other hand, one who sins presumptuously always commits sin. It is
vital to understand what it means to commit sin because the apostle
John said:
"HE THAT COMMITTETH SIN IS OF THE DEVIL;
WHOSOEVER IS BORN OF GOD DOTH NOT COMMIT
SIN."
1 JOHN 3:8-9
One of the greatest
deceptions being taught today is that the phrase
"to commit sin" really means "to practice sin" or "to sin habitually".
Those who teach that
perversion say that if one deliberately breaks
God's law only "occasionally" he is not really committing (practicing)
sin. Recently a minister told me that if he were to commit adultery
a few years
down the road he would not be practicing sin. I asked him how often
could he do it and not be "practicing sin"? He said "...about every
eight years or so".
According to that
theory, every person becomes his own judge of
how many sins must be committed before he is guilty of practicing
sin.
Human nature
being what it is, a person would always find a way to
convince himself that he is sining just below the point of
"practicing" sin. For example, one person thinks he is guilty if
he commits
adultery every eight years or so, another every five years, and for
another perhaps once a year, etc. Those who teach that abominable
theory say that because a person does not have a "lifestyle" of sin or
does not sin
habitually (whatever that means) he is not really "committing" sin.
To say that
to commit sin means "to practice sin or to sin
habitually" is simply the devil's device to keep the guilty sinner from
feeling
condemned. The reality is that if a person knowingly breaks God's
law even once, he is committing sin. How many sins did Adam
commit before he was guilty?
The Greek word used
for "to commit" is in itself absolute proof that
commit does not mean practice. In the Greek NT there are two
words that are commonly used to express the idea of doing
something.
The first is "poieo",
the second is "prasso". Please listen to what
Strong's Greek Dictionary Of The New Testament has to say about
those two words.
4160 poieo, poy-eh'o; appar. a prol. form of an obsol.
prim.; to make or do (in a very wide application)
4238 prasso, pru'-so; a prim. verb; to "practice", i.e.
perform repeatedly or habitually (thus differing
from 4160
[poieo] which properly refers to a single act).
When John said "Whosoever
is born of God doth not COMMIT sin
he used the word "poieo", (to make or do sin with the idea of a single
act).
If he had meant
to say "practice" sin he would have used "prasso".
This device of the devil about practicing sin is not something
new, it is the same old trick he has used for hundreds of years.
Please
take a moment to read what John Wesley (leader of the greatest revival
known in modern times) had to say about "habitual sin":
"But some men will say, 'True: whosoever is born of God doth
not commit sin habitually.' Habitually! Whence
is that? I read it not.
It is not written in the Book. God plainly saith, 'He doth not commit
sin'; and thou addest, habitually! Who art thou that
mendest the
oracles of God?-that 'addest to the words of this book'? Beware
I beseech thee, lest God "add to thee all the plagues that are written
therein'!
John Wesley's Fifty Three Sermons
"The Marks of the New Birth" April 3, 1741
I ask you how many
deliberate sins must a person commit before he
is committing sin? How many murders must one commit before he is
a murderer? How often must one commit adultery before he is an
adulterer?
At this point, we
must be careful to distinguish between sins of
ignorance and sins committed presumptuously because the sins done
in ignorance can be forgiven but presumptuous sin will not be
forgiven.
For example, in the
book of Numbers, we find those two types of sin
compared:
SINS OF IGNORANCE (These were forgiven)
Numbers 15:27
And if any soul sin through IGNORANCE, then he
shall bring a she goat of the first year for a sin offering.
15:28 An the
priest shall make an atonement for the soul that
SINNETH IGNORANTLY, when he sinneth by ignorance before the
Lord, to make an atonement for him; and it shall be forgiven him.
SINS OF PRESUMPTION (Not forgiven)
Numbers 15:30
BUT the soul that doeth aught
PRESUMPTUOUSLY, whether he be born in the land, or a stranger,
the same reproacheth [blasphemeth] the Lord; and that soul shall be
cut off from among his people.
15:31 Because he
hath despised the word of the Lord, and hath
broken his commandment, that soul shall be utterly cut off; his
iniquity shall be upon him."
Those Israelites
who deliberately broke God's commandments were
not forgiven! Today, many people think that things are different since
the resurrection
of our Lord Jesus. They say that their WILLFUL
sins are "under the blood of Christ" and therefore forgiven. Are
they correct?
- The apostle John said sins were cleansed only "IF" we walk in
the light:
1 John 1:7
"But IF we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we
have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Christ His Son
cleanseth us from all sin."
Are we cleansed from
both sins of ignorance and presumptuous sin?
The answer is obvious: we are cleansed only from sins of ignorance.
The condition for cleansing is that we must "walk in the light". If a
believer is deliberately doing what he knows to be sin, he is not
walking in the light. Therefore, the blood of Christ does not cleanse
from willful
sin.
BLOOD COVERS ERRORS
ONLY
The precepts of God do not change. In the Old Testament, the
blood sacrifice of animals was a type looking forward to the blood
sacrifice of Christ. In the New Testament, the apostle Paul confirmed
that the blood sacrifice covered only the ERRORS of the people
never the presumptuous or willful sin.
Paul said this:
Hebrews 9:7
"But into the second [tabernacle] went the high
priest alone once every year, not without blood, which he offered for
himself, and for the ERRORS of the people."
The word "error"
is from the Greek: agnoema, which means: "a sin,
(strictly, that committed through ignorance or thoughtlessness)".
Thayer's Greek Lexicon (Strong's # 51) Many people believe that
the
blood sacrifice covered all the deliberate sins of the people of
Israel, but as you can see, it covered only ERRORS (i.e. the sins of
ignorance). It is the same with the blood of Christ.
When we are truly
"born of God" the blood of Christ covers all past
sins and all future sins of ignorance. But those who deliberately
transgress the law of God are committing presumptuous sin and the
blood of Jesus Christ does not cover their willful disobedience.
Paul carefully warned
Christians that the sacrifice of Jesus would not cover
willful sin.
He wrote:
Hebrews 10:26 "For if we SIN WILFULLY after that
we have
received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth NO MORE
SACRIFICE FOR SINS.
10:27 BUT a certain fearful looking for of judgement and fiery indignation
which shall devour the adversaries."
The adversaries are
those who rebel against God. They are believers
who have "come to the knowledge of the truth" and have been set
free from the power of sin. They have the law of God written in
their hearts
by the Holy Spirit and yet break it with a high hand. By theirrebellion,
they become the enemy of God and will be punished with Satan and his angels.
In response to this,
many will point to King David and his affair with Bathsheba
and the murder of Uriah. They will say that David sinned presumptuously
and God forgave him! That is indeed a good question which demands
an answer. The simplest response is to let the Scriptures decide
why David was forgiven. The answer is that David had not yet grown
to the point where God considered him to
be a "righteous man" as defined by the Lord in the book of Ezekiel.
Ezekiel 18:21
"But if the WICKED turn away from all his sins that he hath committed,
and keep all my statutes, and do that which is lawful and right, he shall
surely live, he shall not die.
18:24 "But
when the RIGHTEOUS turneth away from his
righteousness, and committeth iniquity, and doeth according to all
the abominations that the wicked man doeth, shall he live?
All his
righteousness that he hath done shall not be mentioned: in his
trespass that he hath trespassed, and in his sin that he hath sinned,
in them
shall he die."
The Lord says that
if a WICKED man (as David proved himself to
be) turned way from all his sins he would live, [verse 21] but if the
RIGHTEOUS man turned back to his wicked ways he would die.
[verse 24]
If, in fact, David
had fully repented and turned from his wickedness
before his sin with Bathsheba, he would have been a righteous man
who had turned away from his righteousness and therefore
condemned to death. However, since we know that David was not
condemned, we also know that he could not have been a "righteous"
man when he committed sin with Bathsheba.
It is the same today, if a wicked man turns away from his
wickedness he will be forgiven, but the believer who has been
delivered from his sin and then turns back to it (like the dog
returning to his vomit) (2 Peter 2:21) he will be condemned to death on
Judgement Day.
Christians who think
they can commit willful sin and still be saved
from God's wrath because their sin will be covered by the blood of
Christ have been deceived by the same Great Serpent who seduced
Eve into disobeying God's law by saying: "Ye shall not surely die."
Please do not listen to that liar or his modern day helpers. Listen
instead to the apostle John:
"HE THAT COMMITTETH
SIN IS OF THE DEVIL"
"WHOSOEVER IS
BORN OF GOD DOTH NOT COMMIT SIN"
1 JOHN 3:8-9
In order to have eternal life, the Christian must come to the
point where he has ceased from willful sin completely and forever.
No
matter what one has been told by his church, the Bible says that
anyone who finds himself still committing willful sin is not born of
God.
We are not
truly born of God until we have totally committed
ourselves to obey God's law and surrendered our own will completely
to His will. At that stage of growth, we do not yet understand the
sin nature that is buried deep within our souls. We often break
God's
law without knowing it.
Since the sin is
done in ignorance, the atoning death of Jesus covers
it. But once we recognize that what we are doing is sin and confess
it, we MUST stop doing it. If we refuse to stop, we are guilty of
rebellion and will be condemned on Judgement Day because we
refused to accept Jesus as our Lord.
Think about it...If
we do not obey Jesus, He is not our Lord! Jesus
asked:
"And why call ye me, Lord, Lord and do not the things I say?"
Luke 6:46
Remember, John said:
"...whosoever is born of God SINNETH
NOT". (1 John 5:18) As sin is revealed by the Holy Spirit those
who
really are born of God quit doing it. Eventually all sin is revealed
and thus they quit doing all sin. On the other hand, the Christian who
continues to disobey even one of God's Ten Commandments
(including the Sabbath) is in rebellion. There will be no rebels
in God's kingdom.
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