Friday, April 17, 2026

When sin is merely weakness. . .

The Bible is filled with strong words for sin but our modern mind does not hear them.  What passes for sin in private confession and public litany is an apology for our weakness more than it is an admission of our complicity with evil, our complete failure to do good, and our refusal to stop doing what is wrong.  It is tiresome to listen to but it is more of a problem than its sound in our ears.  When sin is merely weakness, our need for God is lessened and God is made smaller in the process.  When sin is merely weakness, we are no longer utterly dependent upon God but He is made a small nicety in a world with other niceties.  When sin is merely weakness, forgiveness is rendered even weaker and grace is made politeness rather than power.  When sin is merely weakness, mercy is impotent and the God of mercy is equally impotent.

In times gone by when I was hearing confession more regularly, a penitent once confessed a litany of things that could have or should have been done better.  These failings rightfully troubled the conscience of the penitent but were they really sins?  I prodded.  What did you do wrong?  The failing was never enlarged beyond what could have or should have been done more or better or differently.  These were sins of weakness and fragility.  They were the small mistakes of someone who knew better and who had succumbed in a moment to what that person now regretted.  It passed as sin in the mind and heart of the penitent but was it really sin in the way the Scriptures speak of sin?

The absolution being sought was more akin to understanding than mercy.  Of course, you could have and should have done better but we are all guilty of these inadequacies (and, therefore, if we are all guilty, none of us are really guilty!).  They were seeking not the powerful absolution that flows from the blood of Christ but the affirmation that they were merely human, like everyone else, and to be sent away with the dutiful expectation to try harder next time.  Is that what sin has become?  If so, it is certainly what absolution has become.  Not the strong Go and sin no more but the more reasonable Go but try harder next time to do better.  

I realized at the time what was happening and how I was also victim to the same minimization of what sin was and therefore the weakening of what grace was but I could have and should have handled it better.  When it did happen again, I stopped the person and turned them to the Ten Commandments to read them aloud and to frame their sin in the context of this Law and not the limited guilt or complicity of what might have been done better.  Perhaps the reader will suggest that this is the familiar path of those on the liberal or progressive side of Christianity but I think it is more likely the temptation of us all.  We want to minimize what sin is because then we do not need God or His grace so desperately but we want to make sin into weakness largely because it puts the ball back in our court instead of His.  It comes right back to us what we could and should do next time as opposed to what we actually did and how only the profound and powerful mercy of a crucified Savior can rescue us from what our sins have done.

Worse, when sin is merely weakness, we are largely victims instead of the perpetrators of evil.  The strong popularity of victimization in politics and culture has eroded the power of confession.  I am a sinner.  I have done the evil God condemns and have not done the good God requires.  I have loved myself above all, lived as if I mattered most, and failed to love God above all or my neighbor as myself.  It is not by weakness or fragility or accident but by will and deed I have sinned in thought, word, and act.  I am fully incapable of finding a way out of this mess of death or atoning for the evils in my mind, on my heart, or by my hand.  When we make a strong confession of real sin, God is not only enlarged in this act of confession but His mercy and grace are made great indeed.  Our appreciation for the cross is magnified.  Sin required a Savior and required a Savior to die.  Forgiveness is not some inconsequential word that understands our human frailty but the powerful blood that cleanses us from all our sin.  When we lose the idea that sin is more than weakness and fragility, we lose the idea that grace is powerful and mercy is a gift bigger than any other.   

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

After reading your thoughts on sin, I went to my New Strong’s Expanded, Exhausted Concordance of the Bible. By the grace of God, and by the guidance of the Holy Spirit, James Strong delivered this treasure house of reference material for our edification. Next to the Bible itself, it is a Pearl of great value, a guidepost to help believers on their spiritual journey to understand and comprehend the word of God and the relationships between verses of scripture. I would urge every believer to purchase a Strong’s Concordance. It is historically and undeniably the best reference to the Bible ever written. Do not let its weight, bulky size and almost 2000 pages preclude you from owning one. You will use it to look up words in the Bible like “sin” “grace” and “sanctification” and you will immediately see why this book is worth every nickel spent on it. In the topical index supplement, Page 188, Sin is outlined with references to verses in the Bible: Sin is thus defined as “disobedience of God’s Law.” It is further defined as transgression, unrighteousness, omission of known duty, not from faith, and thoughts of foolishness. The sources of sin are laid out: Satan, Man’s heart, Lust, Adam’s transgression, Natural Birth. Further on, consequences among the unregenerate, include blindness, servitude, death. But the most glaring subheading is that the regenerate believer must acknowledge, confess, be sorry for, not obey, subdue, lay aside, resist, keep from. The last subheading section H. - Helps against: Use God’s word, guard the tongue, walk in the Spirit, avoid evil companions, confess to the Lord, exercise love, go to the Advocate (Christ). Of the many references to sin, Strong doesn’t mention “weakness” in this outline. Yet, sin is decidedly a form of weakness, and each of us must deal with it. In my humble, suggestion, after one has read the applicable verses listed that refer to sin, go back a few pages. You must then turn to and explore the word “grace.”
Soli Deo Gloria

gamarquart said...

The last sentence in the blog, “When we lose the idea that sin is more than weakness and fragility, we lose the idea that grace is powerful and mercy is a gift bigger than any other.”
The question becomes, which end of this problem should the Church be working on? When we preach that grace is powerful and mercy is a gift bigger than any other is, then we are proclaiming the Gospel. The Gospel about which St. Paul says, Romans 1:16, “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.” With it we loose the idea that sin is mere weakness and fragility. But we do not despair in our total sinfulness. Otherwise, the sacrifice of Christ was in vain. We rejoice, because, 1John 3:2, Beloved, we are God’s children now, and what we will be has not yet appeared; but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, because we shall see him as he is.”
When we only preach about our sinfulness and total depravity, we drive people into a dead end.
Peace and Joy!
George A. Marquart