QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON SIN
QUESTION #276 -- If sin is
willful transgression of God's
law, and outbreaks of carnality
are against the will of the
converted person, should we say
the person who has had an
outbreak of carnality is
backslidden and must be
converted again?
ANSWER #276 -- When sin rises up
in a justified believer he
should not cast his confidence
away, but should immediately
seek a place of private prayer
and should confess his sin and
acknowledge his weakness and
definitely trust the blood of
Christ to cover all. And we
should instruct Christians just
this way. But upon the basis of
such outbreaks we should urge
all justified believers to go on
at once and get sanctified
wholly-that is the only cure for
carnal uprisings, and no
Christian can afford to tolerate
these in himself. But nothing
can be gained by our legalism by
which we make chronic seekers
out of faulty Christians. There
is a better way to help them on
into the grace of holiness.
* * *
QUESTION #277 -- What is the
meaning of the "second death"
(Revelation 21:8).
ANSWER #277 -- The first death
is condemnation for sin, the
second death is damnation for
sin The sinner dies in that he
is separated from fellowship
with God while in this world.
But his separation is final and
irreparable when he dies in his
sins and goes to "the bottomless
pit," and this is the "second
death" -- damnation, the
execution of the penalty of
guilt
* * *
QUESTION #278 -- Some of my
Sunday school scholars asked how
it can be that a lost sinner can
yet be rewarded in the future
for the good deeds he does in
this life. Please explain this
to us.
ANSWER #278 -- This question is
in substance the same as Jesus
asked, "what is a man profited
if he gain the world and lose
his soul?" and the answer to
that question evidently was
"nothing." One must save his
soul before he can save his
life. If he misses heaven he
misses all. It is like that in
this world. One must be alive
before he can own anything. A
dead man cannot hold titles.
Sinners will be rewarded in this
world for any kind deeds they
may done -- rewarded by the
inner glow of an approving
conscience, if not otherwise,
but they cannot be rewarded in
heaven, for they will not be
there to be rewarded, unless
they are saved in this world by
the free grace of God.
* * *
QUESTION #279 -- I John 5:18
says, "We know that whosoever is
born of God sinneth not." But
Ecclesiastes 7:20 says, "There
is not a just man upon the earth
that doeth good and sinneth
not." How do you reconcile these
two statements?
ANSWER #279 -- The passage from
Ecclesiastes and one of like
import in 2 Chronicles 6:36 are
given to enforce the liability
of all men to sin Hebrew
scholars, without exception, I
think, agree that the rendering
most consistent with the evident
meaning is, "There is not a just
man upon the earth that doeth
good and may not sin." This is a
fact beyond dispute. No man
alive has yet finished his
probation, and he is yet liable
to temptation and to sin "Let
him that thinketh he standeth
take heed lest he fall." As to
the text from I John: it is a
fact proved by universal
experience that no one can keep
his fellowship with God and
still commit known sin Either
his fellowship with God will
stop him from sinning or else
his sinning will break his
fellowship with God. A man must
live right if he would be right.
* * *
QUESTION #280 -- Please explain
I John 3:6, "Whosoever abideth
in him sinneth not: whosoever
sinneth hath not seen him,
neither known him." Does that
mean that anyone who sins after
he claims to have become a
Christian proves by his sinning
that he never really knew the
Lord?
ANSWER #280 -- I think the whole
difficulty arises from the
mixture of tenses. It would be
plainer for us if we read it,
"whosoever continually abides in
him sinneth not: whosoever
sinneth does not (at the same
time) see him or know him," and
that would be in keeping with
the real meaning. The statement
is just an affirmation of the
truth also stated in other
scriptures to the effect that
one cannot sin and at the same
time be saved and right with
God. It is a moral impossibility
for one to be a Christian and a
sinner at the same time, just as
it is impossible for one to be
truthful and a liar or honest
and a thief at the same time.
There is nothing here to
contradict the fact that a
sinner may repent and find
forgiveness, even though his
sinning may take place after he
has been regenerated, or that
other fact that we also know is
true -- a Christian may give up
his faith and drift into
backsliding and into final
apostasy.
* * *
QUESTION #281 -- Please explain
Hebrews 10:26. Does this mean
that once we have had a good
Christian experience and f all
there remains no sacrifice for
our sins? If so, how do you
explain I John 2:1, "If any man
sin, we: have an advocate with
the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous"?
ANSWER #281 -- The warning in
Hebrews means that the Jewish
sacrifices had lost their
efficacy and that one who
thought to turn from Christ back
to these would find no safety
there. The text from I John 2:1
is our faith and hope. "If any
man sin, we have an advocate
with the Father." Let us come to
God through this advocate and we
shall never have our petition
denied.
* * *
QUESTION #282 -- Many in my
community hold to what they call
"eternal security," but I
believe the Bible teaches it is
possible for Christians to
backslide, and that we should be
always on our guard lest we
fall. I have many scriptures
which I believe teach this. What
do you think about it?
ANSWER #282 -- I believe this
idea that one who has been born
again cannot be "unborn" or that
it is a reflection on the power
and goodness of God to suppose
one can backslide after having
been made a child of God, arises
from a too literal
interpretation of the symbols by
which the grace and power of God
are set forth in scripture and
Christian literature. The
opposite of "born" is not
"unborn," but "death," and
relationship with God is for the
whole course of human life on
earth based upon conditions. To
hold anything else is to hold
that probation ends at
conversion instead of at death.
I think you are just right in
your judgment, and that your
position is in agreement with
the Word of God. I Corinthians
10:12, I think covers every
possible case and is a warning
no one can afford to ignore.
* * *
QUESTION #283 -- What is the
line between the human and the
carnal emotions? Is a wounded
spirit or hurt feelings a sign
of carnality? If so, what are
the scriptural proofs? Is an
emotion of anger possible to the
sanctified? Please explain, "Be
ye angry and sin not. Let not
the sun go down upon your wrath"
(Ephesians 4:26).
ANSWER #283 -- The line between
the human and carnal emotions is
the point at which ethical
content becomes involved. Let us
take covetousness as an example:
it certainly is legitimate for a
Christian to desire money and
goods -- even to some degree
beyond the creature requirements
of the moment and the day, and
beyond the measure of that which
will sustain life on its lowest
plane. And desire for such
things is the basis of industry,
economy, and many other virtues,
so that we cannot define
covetousness -- the sinful kind
which Paul says is idolatry --
just as "desire for things we do
not actually possess." Rather,
we must come to think of
covetousness as excessive desire
for that which belongs to
another." And notice: it is not
simply excessive desire, but
excessive desire for that which
belongs to another. Things
belong to people who earn them,
and when I reach the place where
I desire to possess that which I
do not earn, ethical content has
entered into my desire, and the
desire is sinful and carnal. But
the man who desires, even
excessively desires, an
opportunity to earn what he
would possess, is not sinfully
covetous or carnal. The same
principle enters into other
emotions. It is no indication of
carnality for one to be wounded
and hurt -- only if he bears it
patiently. Christianity is not
stoicism. It refines the
feelings, but does not destroy
them. A sanctified wife is hurt
by the brutishness of an
unthinking husband. A sanctified
parent is wounded and deeply
hurt by the choices of a wayward
child. In fact a sanctified
Christian is capable of the
deepest hurt the human heart can
know. But ethical content is
involved when there is present a
desire for revenge. Take the
case of our own Master: in the
synagogue, among the cold,
legalistic Pharisees, when He
was about to heal the man with
the withered arm, it is said,
"He looked about upon them with
anger, being grieved at the
hardness of their hearts." But
there was here no emotion of
revenge. It was the hurt and
anger of insulted justice and
mercy, but this was mixed with a
deep desire to do good to those
who sinned against themselves.
And on the text which you
mention: Anger is a thing of
degrees. Yesterday I saw some
coarse boys tormenting a weak,
incompetent little fellow, and I
resented the unfairness to the
point where I was compelled to
espouse the cause of the
unfortunate. I felt I would be a
coward and a partaker of their
sin if I did not interfere. But
I went just far enough to rescue
the boy, and not far enough to
take vengeance into my own
hands, and when it was over I
was ready and anxious to do any
favor I could to the offenders.
Even justifiable resentment
against evil must not be
cherished, lest it become an
obsession, and take on the
qualities of carnal wrath. I
think it is much better and much
safer for us all to remember
that the human may quickly
become the carnal, and that we
are never safe except when we
are on guard. The idea that some
bestowal of grace will work
automatically, and that we have
no further need of care and
restraint and the purposeful
practice of temperance, has, I
think, caused much spiritual
disaster. This grace will work,
only we have to work it by
observing its conditions.
* * *
QUESTION #284 -- What is the
meaning of I John 1:9, "If we
confess our sins, he is faithful
and just to forgive us our sins,
and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness."
ANSWER #284 -- The whole
question along here is how to
get rid of sin. John says that
if we deny we have sinned, we
make God a liar, for God has
said, "All have sinned."
Further, John says that if we
say we have no sin principle
(inbred sin) we deceive
ourselves, and sin still
remains. We cannot get rid of
the guilt of sin by refusing to
admit we have sinned, and we
cannot get rid of inbred sin by
denying we have it. What then
shall we do? Why, says John,
confess your sins, God will
forgive you; confess your
depravity, God will cleanse and
sanctify you. Sin exists in two
forms: guilt and pollution, and
it takes two works of grace to
rid us of it, and those two
works of grace are forgiveness
and cleansing, justification and
sanctification.
* * *
QUESTION #285 -- If sin is a
voluntary act, involving choice
and intention, is it not
possible for a child to be
brought to Christ before he has
committed any actual sin? I know
the Bible says, "All have
sinned," but does that prove
that all must sin?
ANSWER #285 -- As your thesis
suggests, it is theoretically
possible for the innocent
child-that is innocent of
knowing transgression -- to be
brought to Christ and saved. But
in this connection, it might be
well to remember that the basis
of the need of the new birth is
in the fallen state and not in
the guilt of actual
transgression. Therefore the
child, if brought in, as you
suggest, would at the time of
his faith in Christ have the
same inward moral change wrought
as adults have when they are
regenerated and born of the
Spirit.
* * *
QUESTION #286 -- In Psalm 19:17
David prays to be kept from
"presumptuous sins." What are
presumptuous sins? I have been
told that it is judging other
people by putting our
construction on their deeds and
words, and that we should not do
this.
ANSWER #286 -- Matthew Henry
says presumptuous sins are those
sins in which men sin against
the habitual convictions of
their own conscience, in
contempt and defiance of law and
its sanctions. It is high-handed
sin, and for this reason is
called "the great
transgression." The distinction
here is as between the sins
which men commit in uncertainty
-- not being sure whether the
course is right or wrong-and the
sins they commit against clear
light. And David prays
especially to be saved from sins
which have no possible
cover-these are the presumptuous
sins.
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