Thirty
years ago the Exxon Valdez did the inexplicable. The huge tanker
grounded on a reef, spilling 11 million gallons of crude oil into
Alaska’s Prince William Sound. The effect on the animals, water, and
plants was catastrophic and recovery continues to this day. How
could a supertanker with all that navigational technology possibly
ram head-on into a well-marked reef?
Last
week, a friend asked me if I had heard the heartbreaking news that
two Christians I knew had left their spouses and run off into
adultery together. How is that possible? How could strong, faithful
disciples ram head-on into scandalous, obvious sin? It certainly
isn’t a knowledge problem. No one is saying “Oh, I didn’t know what
the Bible said about adultery!” They know better and we know they
know better. Why then do Christians keep hitting the big rocks of
sin anyway? A few possibilities…
First,
we fail to take all our sins seriously.
Proverbs 28:13
tells
us “Whoever conceals his transgressions will not prosper, but he who
confesses and forsakes them will obtain mercy.” Do you see the
Biblical way to deal with sin? Confession and forsaking. Not some
sin, not just large scandalous sins, but all sin. All sin is the
same to God. The truth is, talking about the “big rocks of sin” is
risky because I don’t mean to imply some sins are worse than others.
I’m just trying to say there are some behaviors so clearly
legislated against in Scripture, so definitively marked out, looming
so LARGE in the Bible with so many repeated warnings and admonitions
that no Christian should ever get involved in them.
But do
I see all sin as an affront to God and His holiness? Isn’t it true
that one of the ways to run aground on the rocks of big “monster”
sins is to pretend that when we got involved in “smaller” sins, it
wasn’t really a big deal? Nothing much to be concerned about?
Nothing I needed to confess and forsake? Isn’t the mindset that
says, “I can ignore the Bible on this ‘small’ one” the same mindset
that may eventually decide, “I can ignore the Bible on this ‘big’
sin” too?
Secondly, we let “little” sins lead us farther and deeper. Want to
see how someone commits adultery?
Proverbs
7
describes a young man making a series of small mistakes that lead to
a tragic, final disaster. He’s in the wrong part of town
(v. 12).
Prostitutes frequent a certain part of town, so what’s he doing over
there? He becomes physically familiar with the immoral woman
(v. 13).
Can’t you just hear him say, “Show me in the Bible where it says I
can’t kiss someone”? Then he listens to her lies
(v. 14).
The devil may know that we won’t smash ourselves against “big” sin
today, but he is pleased if he can navigate us just a little closer
to those rocks, one small step at a time. That’s how the young
couple who spent time alone one evening got carried away and a
little kissing became sexual immorality. That’s how someone who had
an occasional drink … that got less occasional all the time … became
an alcoholic. We started the day far away from the rocks and then
suddenly, we find ourselves nearly upon them, battling mightily to
keep from being broken on them. But some Christians battling in the
surging tide of sin aren’t victorious. To change metaphors, when we
don’t see sin as a roaring lion and we get close enough to pet it,
we very well may get eaten
(1 Pet 5:8).
Thirdly, we aren’t as strong as we thought. When something terrible
happens, we all say, “How can such a strong Christian get involved
in that?” We’re mystified because all the outward behaviors of a
good disciple were in place. Then we’re stunned when they leave the
Lord because we thought they were so strong. The reality is, of
course, that person wasn’t that strong. They just looked that way.
It was all outward appearance. Perhaps that is why Jesus was so
concerned with the Pharisees and their empty religion
(Matt 23).
I consider framing someone and having the state murder them to be a
“big rock,” don’t you? And yet, the Pharisees had no reservations
about doing that very thing to Jesus
(John 11:49-50).
I get
it. No one thinks, “If I miss my daily Bible reading today I’ll
probably become a heroin addict.” However, the reality is, as we
neglect core disciplines like prayer and Bible reading and genuine
worship (not just being there!), the inner man gets weaker and
weaker. As we renew ourselves day by day, as we consistently listen
to God and allow His word to permeate us, we develop His eyes to see
things in His way. We adopt the eternal perspective that exposes
temptation and sin as so empty and vain, and as something we want
nothing to do with. Always remember: looking strong isn’t the same
as being strong. It takes daily effort to become and stay strong.
How
does a giant supertanker hit the most famous and well-marked rock in
Prince Williams Sound? The government investigation found a bunch of
stuff that was wrong, broken, neglected, and inadequate—a bunch of
little stuff that led to a big disaster. How does a preacher or
elder or Bible class teacher or good disciple get involved in
big-time sin? We ignore a bunch of little stuff … and it leads to a
big disaster. Let’s take some spiritual inventory and do what it
takes to be sure we’re sailing closer and closer to Christlikeness
and further and further away from all God-dishonoring sin.
Other Articles by Mark Roberts
Teaching Children About Fornication
Enjoying the Bible
I Am Bill's Ears
Four Flaws in the Four Spiritual Laws
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