Pastor’s Post for the 19th of June!

Grace and peace to you and yours!

Many in our nation and world are continuing to try to come to terms with the horrendous act of violence that occurred in Orlando, Florida early last Sunday (June 12). The shooting of a hundred people for no good reason should give us all pause to stop and reflect on the kind of world we live in and the kind of people we are trying to be in that world.

Many people see the Bible as a source and guide for living life. But is that enough?  Perhaps deeper than seeing the Bible as one set of guidelines for living among others, as many people do, what we really need is to realize that the real problem with people is the problem of sin.  In his book The Road to Character (Random House, copyright 2015), David Brooks, a conservative columnist for the New York Times noted that the concept of sin has fallen out of use for many. “Today the word sin has lost its power and awesome intensity. It’s used most frequently in the context of fattening desserts. Most people in mainstream conversation don’t talk much about individual sin. If they talk about human evil at all, then that evil is most often located in the structures of society—in inequality, oppression, racism, and so on—not in the human breast.

He continues, “We’ve abandoned the concept of sin because we’ve left behind the depraved view of human nature. In the 18th and 19th century many people really did embrace the dark self-estimation expressed in the old Puritan prayer, ‘Yet I Sin: Eternal Father, Thou art good beyond all thought, but I am vile, wretched, miserable, blind. . . .’ That’s simply too much darkness for the modern mentality.

“But sin…is one of those words it’s impossible to do without. Sin is a necessary piece of our mental furniture because it reminds us that life is a moral drama. No matter how hard we try to reduce everything to deterministic brain chemistry, no matter how hard we strive to replace sin with non-moral words, like mistake or error or weakness, the most essential parts of life are matters of individual responsibility and moral choice: whether to be brave or cowardly, honest or deceitful, compassionate or callous, faithful or disloyal. The person struggling against sin understands that each day is filled with moral occasions. …the big sins, left unchallenged, would have had practical and disastrous effects. Sloth could lead to a failure of a farm; gluttony and inebriation to the destruction of a family; lust to the ruination of a young woman; vanity to excessive spending, debt, and bankruptcy…people not only had an awareness of different kinds of sin, but of the different remedies for each.

Some sins, like anger and lust, are like wild beasts. They have to be fought through habits of restraint. Some sins, like mockery and disrespect, are like stains. They can only be expunged by apology, remorse, restitution, and cleansing. Some sins, like stealing, are like a debt. They can only be rectified by repaying what you owe to society. Some sins, like adultery, bribery, and betrayal, are more like treason than crime; they are affronts to the social order. The social harmony can only be rewoven by slowly recommitting to relationships and rebuilding trust. Some sins, like arrogance and pride, are a perverse desire for status and superiority. They can only be addressed by those willing to humble themselves before others.

Brooks concludes, “When modern culture tries to replace sin with ideas like error or insensitivity, or tries to banish words like virtuecharacterevil, or vice altogether, that doesn’t make life any less moral. It just means we think and talk about these choices less clearly, and become increasingly blind to the moral stakes of everyday life…The concept of sin is necessary because it is radically true.”

That a human being could think it is acceptable to so wantonly destroy human lives is explicable only in terms of sin, the utter fallen-ness and depravity of our human nature. Which is why we so desperately need Christ and Him crucified.

In Him,
Pastor Joe Hughes
Voice & text: 217-898-9063
Email:  j_w_hughes@hotmail.com

WRITTEN BY: SVLC office