A sin is a sin is a sin... is a lie
Have you ever heard someone say "a sin is a sin" or "all sin is the same to God?"
I remember a conversation I had last semester about homosexuality. We were talking about how the Church should be dealing with the issue and weather or not it’s a “sin.” At one point in the conversation my friend said something like: “well, it’s not a special sin. I see it like any other sin—like lying or murder.” Now essentially what my friend said is that being gay is no different from being a murderer.
All sin is sin… it that sense, yes, it is all the same to God. Nothing is overlooked by God as unimportant. All sin has a profound effect on the world but when we go around talking as if lying and murder are one in the same we’re going to do one of two things. 1) We’re placing the guilt of a murderer onto a liar. 2) We’re downplaying murder in the eyes of a liar. One could say “I lie all the time and my life is going pretty well, if murder is the same thing then I guess in the end it’ not that bad unless you get caught.”
We must make distinctions and not just about weather lying is worse than or better than murder but we must also distinguish lying from lying and murder from murder. Not all murder is the same and not all lies are the same. Our ethics depend on these distinctions. One thing must be more important to us than another.
Jesus felt that it was more important to preserve life than to keep that Sabbath. “I have a question for you. Is it legal to do good deeds on the Sabbath, or is it a day for doing harm? Is this a day to save life or to destroy it?” (Luke 6:9). For Jesus, life and people were more important than some of the laws which he himself taught.
The Church wastes so much energy and so many resources because it has become obsessed with the wrong problems. Should I spend more time worrying about cuss words than genocide? Unless you see a distinction between these two, you’ll have trouble answering this question.
A sin is a sin is a sin… is a lie!
What’s more important to you? What’s more worth preserving? Maybe that is where you should be using your energy.
I remember a conversation I had last semester about homosexuality. We were talking about how the Church should be dealing with the issue and weather or not it’s a “sin.” At one point in the conversation my friend said something like: “well, it’s not a special sin. I see it like any other sin—like lying or murder.” Now essentially what my friend said is that being gay is no different from being a murderer.
All sin is sin… it that sense, yes, it is all the same to God. Nothing is overlooked by God as unimportant. All sin has a profound effect on the world but when we go around talking as if lying and murder are one in the same we’re going to do one of two things. 1) We’re placing the guilt of a murderer onto a liar. 2) We’re downplaying murder in the eyes of a liar. One could say “I lie all the time and my life is going pretty well, if murder is the same thing then I guess in the end it’ not that bad unless you get caught.”
We must make distinctions and not just about weather lying is worse than or better than murder but we must also distinguish lying from lying and murder from murder. Not all murder is the same and not all lies are the same. Our ethics depend on these distinctions. One thing must be more important to us than another.
Jesus felt that it was more important to preserve life than to keep that Sabbath. “I have a question for you. Is it legal to do good deeds on the Sabbath, or is it a day for doing harm? Is this a day to save life or to destroy it?” (Luke 6:9). For Jesus, life and people were more important than some of the laws which he himself taught.
The Church wastes so much energy and so many resources because it has become obsessed with the wrong problems. Should I spend more time worrying about cuss words than genocide? Unless you see a distinction between these two, you’ll have trouble answering this question.
A sin is a sin is a sin… is a lie!
What’s more important to you? What’s more worth preserving? Maybe that is where you should be using your energy.
Comments
It certainly does depend on context and I mean only to approach it in my particular context. I just think we'd be mistaken if we decided to equate all sin on the same level. This will vastly change the way we treat people and how we use our energy.
For what it's worth.