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Sin and the Saviour
By Dr. M. R.
DeHaan
“For
the wages of sin is death; but the gift
of God is eternal life through Jesus
Christ our Lord.”—Rom. 6:23.
Sin.
S-I-N. Just a little, three-letter word,
yet within those three letters we have
comprehended all the sorrow and grief of
the world and the reason for all the
suffering, pain, heartache, disease and
death from the beginning of human
history until now. Until there was sin,
there were no death and pain and tears.
And when sin is finally put away
forever, it is written:
“And
God shall wipe away all tears from their
eyes; and there shall be no more death,
neither sorrow, nor crying, neither
shall there be any more pain: for the
former things are passed away.”—Rev.
21:4.
Sin
is an extremely unpopular subject in
these days when men tell us that we are
slowly evolving into a better and better
race and that ultimately we will conquer
disease and finally even death. But the
Word of the Lord tells us that “the
wages of sin is death,” and as long as
there is sin in the world there will be
suffering and death. Pain, disease,
trouble and sorrow, sickness and death
are only symptoms. The real disease is
sin, and until the cause is removed, the
symptoms will never disappear.
The
Bible, therefore, is the only
authoritative and reliable textbook; for
man throughout all his history has never
yet been able to give a satisfactory
answer as to where death came from. What
is the cause of all this grief and pain?
Why do men get old? Why do we not always
stay young? Why do our bodies
deteriorate and after a few brief years
return to the dust from whence they
came? Only the Bible tells us the story
in the words of our text.
The Wages of Sin Is Death
To
understand the true nature of sin,
therefore, we are entirely confined to
the revelation of Scripture, and we
shall stick very closely to it.
To
understand the awfulness of sin and to
explain the severe penalty (death)
pronounced upon it, we must first
recognize the nature of God. The
awfulness of sin stems from the holiness
of God.
God
is so holy, so righteous and perfect in
all His attributes of justice and
righteousness and holiness that He
cannot condone the smallest sin. He
cannot overlook the least transgression
or iniquity. To do so, be it ever so
little, would prove Him unrighteous and
imperfect in His holiness.
But
the holiness and the righteousness of
God are absolute terms and therefore
cannot admit of the least flaw or sin.
Since this holy God has said, “The soul
that sinneth, it shall die,” and again,
“The wages of sin is death,” God must
punish even the smallest sin by death or
prove Himself untrue and unfaithful to
His Word.
This
is what makes sin awful. It is committed
against God, a holy and a righteous God,
who will in no wise clear the guilty.
Sin—Not Sins
God
therefore says the “wages of sin is
death.” One single sin is enough to
condemn a man or woman eternally in the
sight of God, for God is infinite in His
holiness; therefore, sin against an
infinite Being calls for infinite
punishment.
In
the record of the first human
transgression as given in the account of
the Fall in Genesis, we are told that
God said to Adam, the first man:
“For
in the day that thou eatest thereof thou
shalt surely die.”—Gen. 2:17.
And
that one sin, eating once of the
forbidden tree, was sufficient to call
forth the infinite judgment of God.
Though many sins were committed by Adam
afterwards, this one and only first sin
was sufficient to call down the judgment
pronounced in the words, “in the day
that thou eatest thereof thou shalt
surely die.”
Three Aspects of Sin
In
Scripture we have several words used to
describe sin, such as sin, iniquity,
transgression, evil, etc. The words in
the original Hebrew and Greek give us a
most comprehensive picture of sin as God
sees it.
Though we would not weary you with these
Hebrew and Greek words, we must mention
the six most prominent ones to give you
an idea of what sin is according to
Scripture. There are many sincere people
who think that sin is an evil act such
as immorality or theft or murder or
lying. While this is all true, it covers
only a fraction of the Bible picture of
sin. Sin is not so much an act as an
attitude. Too many people believe that
because they do not curse or steal or
get drunk or live in definite acts of
immorality that they are not guilty of
sin. But the Bible goes much deeper. In
Bible terms these acts are but the
result of the real sin which is in the
heart.
Before a man steals, he covets, and
covetousness is the real sin. The
stealing is but the natural fruit and
result, the outward expression of the
sin of lust.
The
same is true of murder. To murder your
fellowman is not the real sin. The real
sin is hate, and the murder is the
result of that hatred, so that the Bible
says, “Whosoever hateth his brother is a
murderer.” That makes murderers out of a
lot of folks who would seriously resent
being called murderers, but that is what
the Bible says.
The
same is true of immoral acts. Before
these acts are committed, there is lust;
and lust is the real sin, whether or not
it is ever translated into action. This
is the Bible picture of sin.
Sin in the Old Testament
Among the several words used in the Old
and the New Testaments for sin, there
are three Hebrew and three Greek words
that seem to sum up the whole Bible
picture of sin as God sees it, and these
three words agree with one another. The
three words to denote sin in the Old
Testament are:
Chata—missing the mark,
Avon—crookedness, and
Pesha—transgression.
The
three corresponding words in the New
Testament are:
Hamartano—a missing of the mark,
Parabasis—transgression, and
Adikia—perverseness or crookedness.
In
these words we have God’s revelation
concerning the true nature of sin, and
we shall see that this involves far more
than the actual committing of sin.
Let
us first examine the three aspects in a
little more detail. First, we have the
word chata in the Hebrew and the word
hamartano in the Greek, and they mean
the missing of the mark.
Now
it makes no difference how far a man may
miss the mark as long as he misses it.
We have a saying: “An inch is as good as
a mile.” To miss the mark by a
hairbreadth is missing the mark.
When
I shot at a crow in my backyard and
missed him by a split hair, I missed him
as completely as though I had been
shooting in the opposite direction. I
have missed the mark.
Now
God has put up a mark in the Old
Testament. That mark was the law. Israel
was delivered from Egypt’s bondage by
grace, but they were not satisfied by
grace. They wanted to do something
themselves to have a part in making
themselves worthy of God’s favor and
blessings.
And
so God gave them the law, the perfect
expression of His holy and perfect will.
And so God, in essence, says, “You think
you can be perfect; you think you can
meet My standards by your own works.
Well, here is My standard.”
He
gave them the perfect Law of God written
on tables of stone, and said, “Do this
and live.” But the least infraction of
the law was missing the mark and was
sin. They did not have to break all the
commandments or even most of them. If
they missed one by a hair, they were
guilty before God. James tells us:
“For
whosoever shall keep the whole law, and
yet offend in one point, he is guilty of
all.”—Jas. 2:10.
The Negative Side of Sin
This
missing of the mark is the negative
aspect of sin. It is failing to do that
which is commanded, and because all have
sinned and failed, all are condemned by
the law of God.
We
need to emphasize this aspect of sin in
these days of false holiness when men
think they are perfect just because they
do not commit outward overt acts of sin.
Just because they do not steal and lie
and murder and live immoral lives, they
think they are without sin.
But
this first definition of sin throws
quite a different light on the subject.
If you have failed to do all that is
required, you are guilty. If you have
had one unclean thought, if you have
spoken when you should be silent, if you
have been silent when you should have
spoken, if you have failed to help
someone when he needed help, you are
guilty.
If
for one second in your life you have not
loved God above all and your neighbor as
yourself, you are guilty. If you have
not loved your enemies (for God also
commanded this), then you are guilty.
The Law Condemns
You
see, then, that the Law was never given
to save a man. It was given to condemn
us that we might flee to God for grace
and mercy. No Adam’s son ever can keep
the law of God. Yea, moreover, God never
expected that a depraved sinner, born
and conceived in sin, would ever keep
the Law. He gave it only that men might
see how far they come short of God’s
perfect standard, how far they missed
the mark, and flee to Him for mercy.
“For
by the works of the law shall no flesh
be justified.”—Gal. 2:16.
“By
the law is the knowledge of sin” (Rom.
3:20) but not salvation from sin. For
the “law worketh wrath” (Rom. 4:15).
In the New Testament
Now
the Law, of course, was fulfilled in
Christ; so, after the cross, God gives
us another standard whereby to measure
ourselves.
Until the children of Israel came out of
Egypt, there was no Law of Moses. They
were under the law of conscience. In the
giving of the Law, we have an added
revelation of God’s standard which
conscience alone could not give. But
after Calvary, God gave a still clearer
revelation in the Person of Christ.
The
standard of perfection now is not only
the Law but the Person of the Son of
God. He is the divine standard of divine
perfection. Failure to measure up to the
standards of perfection found in Christ
is to miss the mark and makes you a
sinner.
Until you are as perfect and flawless
and sinless in thought and act and word
as Jesus was, you still miss the mark,
and so the New Testament word for sin,
hamartano, emphasizes once more this
much disregarded aspect of sin. For this
reason Paul sums up the definition of
sin in Romans 3:22,23:
“For
there is no difference:
“For
all have sinned, and come short of the
glory of God.”
Paul
says that sin is coming short of the
glory of God. And none else but the Lord
Jesus Christ Himself is the “glory of
God.”
To
come short of the perfection of Jesus
Christ is missing the mark. Dare anyone
stand before this standard of God and
claim, “I am as perfect and holy in
thought and word and deed as the blessed
Son of God”?
That, my friend, is God’s first
definition of sin—missing the mark and
coming short of the glory of God. Before
God can save you, you must acknowledge
this estimate of yourself as the true
and correct one. Until you are willing
to do this, God cannot save you, for He
died for sinners, not good folks.
“This is a faithful saying, and worthy
of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus
came into the world to save sinners; of
whom I am chief.”—
I
Tim. 1:15.
All Have Sinned
Let
me repeat that you cannot be saved
unless you are a sinner. Jesus said,
“They that are whole need not a
physician; but they that are sick” (Luke
5:31), and again, “I came not to call
the righteous, but sinners to
repentance” (vs. 32).
I
have dwelt at length on this aspect of
sin because so few realize this
definition of Scripture concerning
coming short and missing the mark. There
are left the two other words describing
sin from another angle: the word meaning
“crookedness” and the word translated
“transgression.” The word avon in the
Hebrew and the word adikia in the Greek
both emphasize in a different way the
same nature of sin.
God
has made a straight line. First He
revealed it in the law and then later
gave it to us in the Person of Christ.
To deviate in the minutest detail from
this straight line, to depart from it
one iota, to step aside from this
straight line of God’s perfect standard
is to make the line crooked, so you have
again missed the mark.
The
line need not be badly twisted with many
curves and defections; all you need to
do is make one little deviation from the
straight course, and you are guilty. You
are a sinner, and you need a Saviour.
That is what Paul refers to when he
says, “All have sinned, and come short
of the glory of God” (Rom. 3:23), and
“There is none righteous, no, not one”
(vs. 10), and “There is none that doeth
good” (vs. 12).
The Positive Angle
In
addition to these two words in the
Hebrew and the Greek, there is another
word translated “transgression” which
gives us the positive aspect of sin. We
do not have time to take it up
thoroughly in this message, but, to be
sure, while sin is a transgression of
the law positively, to miss the mark is
to sin as surely as to transgress the
law.
But
now comes the personal question. Do you
realize from what we have covered that
you are a sinner? Will you acknowledge
that according to God’s standard you are
a sinner and under the sentence of God?
He
said, “The wages of sin is death”—the
“wages of sin”; not sins, but sin. If
you have failed but once, you are
guilty. The sin of Adam, transmitted to
the race, was taken care of on the
cross, but how about your personal
coming short? Your only hope is to
measure yourself by God’s standard.
According to the standards of men and
morals and the standards of the church,
you may be blameless and yet be lost.
Before men, even in your own home, no
one may be able to lay upon you a finger
of accusation; but unless you have
measured yourself by God’s standard and
confessed that you have missed the mark,
you are as surely lost as though you had
been the worst sinner in the world. Paul
learned this. Listen to him:
“If
any other man thinketh that he hath
whereof he might trust in the flesh, I
more:
“Circumcised the eighth day, of the
stock of Israel, of the tribe of
Benjamin, an Hebrew of the Hebrews; as
touching the law, a Pharisee;
“Concerning zeal, persecuting the
church; touching the righteousness which
is in the law, blameless.
“But
what things were gain to me, those I
counted loss for Christ.”—Phil. 3:4–7.
Yet
this moral, law-abiding, religious
zealot, when he measured himself by
God’s perfect standard, had to cry out,
‘I am the chief of sinners’ (I Tim.
1:15).
Ah,
friend, face the issue; admit you have
missed the mark and flee to Christ.
Christ died for sinners—only for
sinners. Come as a sinner, cast away
your filthy self-righteous rags of
religion and accept salvation through
the righteousness of Christ.
Editor Exhorts You to Come to Christ
In
this very informative sermon “Sin and
the Saviour,” Dr. M. R. DeHaan has
explained clearly from the Bible God’s
view of sin, and we have seen that it is
certainly far different from man’s view!
Since God is the final Judge, it is only
His view that counts for eternity.
Since God is perfectly holy, even one
deviation from His way is an offense to
His nature. Therefore, one who refuses
to be cleansed from his sin will not be
allowed to pollute God’s environment by
being with Him in Heaven.
God’s love is as perfect as His
holiness, however, and He will not
simply let all perish without providing
the help they need. That is why Jesus
came to die on the cross—God’s holiness
had to punish all sin; God’s love bore
all that punishment in the Person of His
own sinless Son. So now, while “the
wages of sin is death…the gift of God is
eternal life through Jesus Christ our
Lord” (Rom. 6:23). If you will, by
faith, receive Christ as your Saviour
and trust His work on the cross and
resurrection from the dead instead of
trusting your own works or goodness, God
will give you eternal life as a free
gift—paid for by Jesus! Will you do it
now? If so, then please send me the
decision form below so that I may write
you a letter of encouragement and
instruction.
Decision Form
Dr.
Shelton Smith
Sword of the Lord
P. O. Box 1099
Murfreesboro, TN 37133-1099
Dear
Dr. Smith,
The
sermon by Dr. M. R. DeHaan, “Sin and the
Saviour,” has shown me the nature of sin
and that I am a lost sinner separated
from God. I believe that Christ’s death
on the cross was payment for my sin and
that His resurrection was God’s
guarantee that He had accepted that
payment. I have today trusted Christ.
Now testifying that He has saved me, I
would like to hear from you and learn
more about how I can live for my Saviour
here and now. Thank you.
Date _________________
Name ________________________
Address ______________________
_____________________________
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