Matthew 18:6-9

            A universal truism of this world is that sin exists.  Greed, envy, gluttony, sloth, anger, lust, and pride abound no matter where one goes on this planet.  And it is terrible.  Sin causes people to stumble, and, when unchecked, leads to personal and corporate destruction.  When sin is viewed as merely a character flaw, or simply part of the fabric of organizations and institutions, then hellfire is not far off.  Hell exists because of sin. 
 
            Jesus took sin quite serious.  He considers sin so awful that he used the height of hyperbole to communicate that radical, drastic, decisive action must be taken unequivocally to get rid of it.  Our Lord wanted there to be no mistake in his communication:  sin is not something to dabble in or take a shallow approach; sin must be eradicated at all costs.  The language is severe:  if your hand, foot, or eye causes you to sin, cut it off.  It is better to enter life crippled or blind rather than be thrown into hell.
 
            Temptations will come.  What we do with them is of eternal significance.  We must get to the root of the sin, which is succumbing to temptation, and re-arrange our lives or alter our schedules in a radical way in order to remove putting ourselves in a position to sin.  Solid daily spiritual habits of Scripture reading and prayer; time for sleep and rest; attention to Sabbath; and, a regular exercise regimen are all ways to help ensure that temptation will not win the day.
            Holy God, you sent your Son to this earth to deal decisively with the world’s sin.  I choose today to walk in the forgiveness you offer through Jesus, and to avail myself of the Spirit’s power to forsake temptation in all its forms.  Amen.

Psalm 51:1-12

            Sin is pervasive.  It is constantly present.  Sin lurks in the shadows of the heart, drips from the tongue of the wicked, and lingers in the actions of the selfish and proud.  Sin is not something to trifle with, dabble in, or even manage.  No, sin at its core is a rebellion against God, a stiff-arm to the Lord that claims we know better than he about how to run our lives.  Sin will eventually break us.  It may initially look good and meet a quick emotional need, but in the end it is like a poisonous snake bite that will kill unless treated.
 
            When we come to the realization that we are in dire straits, then it is high time we blurt out a prayer of confession along with David.  The book of Psalms is the Christian’s prayer book, and there is no better prayer to pray when we come to the end of ourselves than David’s in Psalm 51.  “Have mercy on me, O God, according to your steadfast love; according to your abundant mercy blot out my transgressions.  Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin!”
 
            A genuine prayer of confession asks for mercy based upon God’s character and ability to heal, rather than trusting in the attempted quality of our petition.  In other words, neither the eloquence nor the sheer word structure itself is the proper basis for confession; utterances of a broken and contrite heart, submitted to God, trusting solely in his grace to transform are the only kind of words appropriate for approaching God with our sin.  Such prayers are not to be few and far between; they are to be a regular regimen, engaged on a daily basis.  Just as we take pills each day for all that ails us, so we need to take in the mercy of God through prayers of confession that link us to the only true healing power that will bring health and life.
            Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me.  Cast me not away from your presence, and take not your Holy Spirit from me.  Restore to me the joy of your salvation, and uphold me with a willing spirit.  Amen.

Exposing Sin

 
 
            Sin is a reality.  It exists.  We all do it.  Everyone invokes the displeasure of God at various times or events in life.  The bald reality of church ministry is that it must deal with the presence of sin in both its members and its systems.  Even David, described as a man who was like God in the way he operated toward others, sinned egregiously at points in his life.  Undeniably, the biggest example of a fall in David’s life came in his adultery with Bathsheba, and the events that came afterward (2 Samuel 11).
 
            At the time of year when David should have been doing the work of a king, which was to protect and serve the nation of Israel as the military leader, he stayed in Jerusalem.  He was not doing his kingly duty (2 Samuel 11:1).  David was at the pinnacle of success.  There was relative peace.  There were no major threats to the nation.  The kingdom was generally happy and prosperous.  David had fought all his major military wars with great success and was securely in power.  At this point, he was a middle-aged man, not as vigorous as he once was with perhaps a bit of a paunch that comes with age.  And this is what set David up for a major fall:  he was content and resting on his laurels, walking around on the roof of his palace instead of in the trenches with his men.
 
            The word “sent” is used five times in the first six verses.  This is significant.  David sent people to do his bidding.  The portrayal here is not of the gracious king who is seeking to use his power for loving purposes in the kingdom; it is the picture of an earthly king doing what typical earthly kings did by ordering others around and using his authority to get what he wants.  We are meant to see the reversal in David’s disposition from outwardly gracious to inwardly selfish.  He set himself up for a big hairy audacious fall.  None of us are immune from falling into sin.
 
            This is not just how individuals fall; this is how institutions as well as churches plummet.  When any church begins to be concerned only for itself and what it can inwardly accomplish for its own and does not outwardly seek to be gracious to those not in the church, that church has set itself up for a collapse which will end in the displeasure of God.
 
            Stories of people who topple into sin are all pretty much the same.  Having some power, people use it to assert control over another person or group to get what they want.  We must call it what it is:  sin.  It is evil.  It is a violation of God.  There cannot be any turning away from sin if we do not call it sin to start with.  If we deny there is a problem, the problem will never be solved.  David committed adultery.  He lied.  He manipulated.  He covered-up.  David murdered not only Uriah, but other men in the regiment to ensure that he would be dead.  This was not a mistake.  It wasn’t a lapse in judgment.  It was sin in all its foulness and degradation.  And the way to deal with it would not be to say something like “I did it, but it wasn’t really me; I’m not really like that!”  Well, apparently, you are.  Maybe David thought he was above all this and believed it wasn’t really something he could ever do.  But he did.
 
            What is more:  sin causes us to sell-out our principles.  Sin only begets more sin until we deal with it.  Sin will always distort the truth so that we minimize the impact of our words and actions.  The opposite of repentance is cover-up.  Truth celebrates openness and honesty; sin seeks the shadows and prizes secrecy.  Many people have fallen into awful sin.  The first step is not to minimize it, ignore it, or pretend it isn’t that big of a deal.  The first step is to agree with God that this is sin and to admit that it displeases him.  If we do not go down this path of truth, then we will be forever encrusting our lives with ways of ensuring that no one ever knows.  In fact, much of religious legalism is nothing more than a person piling on the rules in order for others to not see the sin that hides deep within.  Turning from the sin and receiving the grace of forgiveness of Jesus Christ is the only true and real path to spiritual wholeness and happiness in life.
 
            Results that satisfy us do not necessarily satisfy God.  David accomplished what he wanted:  he covered up his sin and got the woman he wanted.  But God saw the whole thing and was not okay with any of it.  We cannot simply assume that because we do something and there was no immediate lightning strike that it was okay.  It does not matter if it happened yesterday, last month, or twenty years ago.  If we did not deal with the sin, God is not satisfied because he wants to dispense grace and he cannot give love and see a flourishing of the soul if we keep putting things out-of-sight out-of-mind.  To only satisfy ourselves is being a spiritual cannibal who eats other people alive.
 

 

            Outward success means little to God if the inward state of the church leadership and its members is a vacuous soul, bereft of the authentic spiritual connection of determining God’s intentions for a particular course of action.  Sin is not something to simply be managed; it is to be put to death through the cross of Christ and applied to life through intentional spiritual practices meant to genuinely connect with God.  To do less is to wander into a morass of consequences that damage people.  So, let us do the work of soul care so that the church will thrive in the grace of God in Christ.

Psalm 119:113-128

            Some people try to avoid sin.  Others sin with impunity.  Most try to steer clear of the biggie sins while indulging in so-called minor ones.  Sin is messy business.  But no matter the form or the attempt at dealing with or without sin, the bottom line is that we all sin because we like it.  We might not like the consequences of sin, but it tastes good while doing it.
 
            That is why we need a complete re-orienting of our hearts to hate every way that is contrary to God.  The psalmist proclaimed: “I consider all your precepts to be right; I hate every false way.”  If we sin because we like it, the way to avoid sin is to learn to hate it – to loathe it so badly that it is like a nasty stench in our nostrils.  Hating sin comes from the acquired taste of loving God’s commandments.  When we come around to cherish and desire God’s Word above everything else, then sin gradually becomes so odious to us that we want nothing to do with it.
 
            The reason the psalmist could proclaim such an extended love song to the commands of God is that he tasted how good they were.  And it caused him to forsake every false path to human enjoyment.  The reason I constantly encourage myself and others to read Scripture every single day with a solid plan is that it really does have the power to change our taste buds.  Sustained, consistent, daily eating of the psalms will teach us to want God and his ways while forsaking the dark path of insolence and oppression.
            God Almighty, I pray that you will deal with me according to your steadfast love, and teach me your statutes.  I am your servant; give me understanding so that I might know and live by your commands and forsake the evil of the world.  Amen.