How easy is it for us to excuse our sin by calling it something else?
It is dangerously easy, and the current age in which we live bombards us with messages about tolerating, accepting, celebrating, and participating in sin. “YOLO!” shouts the world.
When I was first growing in my faith, yet still unaware of how much I needed to change, I would use the word mistake for things that I knew were wrong. ‘Mistake’ seems gentle, forgivable, and easy to admit to (most of the time). With a young child for which I needed to model admitting mistakes and apologizing for them, it made sense to use that word.
Made a mistake? That’s okay; admit it, apologize, and move on.
But then, when studying my Bible notes in James 4 about sin, I came across a sentence that convicted me of the truth. It called me out in a way I needed.
The sentence said, “Jesus didn’t die for mistakes; he died for sins.”
Whoa. This is the kind of bold statement I love, because it hits me upside the head and exposes a worldly idea that I didn’t even know I had accepted as truth.
If we can classify anything wrong we ever do as simply a ‘mistake,’ apologize, and go on our merry way, then Jesus wouldn’t have needed to die for us. That note in my Bible goes on to say, “To call sin anything else is a symptom of pride.” Precisely. We must humble ourselves to admit that we cannot be our own savior.
God, knowing our hearts, knows that sin is not skin-deep and able to be washed away with soap and a sorry. Sin is in our hearts, radiating out to every pore, limb, spoken word, and private thought we have. We don’t need a bandaid; we need a heart surgeon.
And God sent us one: The Great Physician. In Mark 2, when the disciples were questioned about why Jesus was eating with tax collectors and sinners, Jesus responded, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners” (Mark 2:17).
The self-righteous view Jesus as unneeded because they aren’t ready to examine their sin and turn from it. They prefer soap and a bandaid for their “mistakes.” This right here, used to be me. And I carried this untrue belief with me into my relationship with Jesus. But by His grace, I was confronted in my sinful thinking and had to turn from this and toward the righteousness of the actual Savior, which is not me.
I am a sinner at my very core, and Jesus is the only one who can save me from that.
I also had to recognize that I was raising a sinner. I know we like to think of our kids as perfect, angelic beings from birth, but they’re not. This is a hard truth that we need to accept in order to help our children see their need for a Savior. Once I did, it changed how I spoke about sin with my own child.
Now, we can have hard conversations about our own sin, why it’s there, and how gracious and patient God is with us. We can see how obedience to God helps wane our love of sin. We can more accurately label an actual mistake, like spilling a glass of milk, from a sin, like taking too much pride in ourselves.
We’ve also been able to learn about how sin can capture, confuse, and destroy people in our world. When we have a clear understanding of sin – a transgression of God’s law and rebellion against Him – it becomes easier to see how those who are far from God experience deep torment, even if they cover it with layers of pride or false gods.
Living in a depraved world that we can’t shield our child from forever, this knowledge has been a game changer in how my husband and I talk about the world with our daughter. It also lends itself well to explaining why we, as parents, have to say no to certain places, people, books, media, and ideas. My daughter knows how precious her mind and heart are, and how serious I take the mama bear role I’ve been assigned to protect her from wickedness. She doesn’t always like it, but she understands it.
Speaking of understanding, when we truly appreciate the sacrifice of Jesus coming to earth, living a sinless life, yet giving Himself over to be beaten, tortured, and crucified for us unworthy sinners, in order to reconcile us with God the Father, you begin to realize how crucial sin is to this redemption story.
We mustn’t downplay sin, “For the wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23). Death means eternal separation from God, which is darkness, depravity, and anguish. The rest of Romans 6:23 says, “but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
This free gift is ours for the taking, and it exists not for mere mistakes, but for deep, enduring sin, which we need to see, repent of, and turn away from.
No soap. No bandaids. Just Jesus.
“But if anyone does sin, we have an advocate with the Father – Jesus Christ the righteous one. He himself is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for ours, but also for those of the whole world.”
1 John 2:1-2