Notes from tonight’s lesson:
What is Sin?
UMC believes it is:
Separation from God
Sin is breaking the covenant, separating ourselves from the One who is our origin and destiny. It’s trying to go it alone, to be out of touch with the God who is the center of life. Based on the story in Genesis 3, the church has described this break in dramatic terms: the Fall.
Separation from other people
In our sin we distance ourselves from others. We put ourselves at the center of many relationships, exploiting others for our own advantage. Instead of loving people and using things, we love things and use people. When confronted with human need, we may respond with token acts of kindness or with lip service or perhaps not at all. Toward some people and some groups, we’re totally indifferent or actively hostile. Sin is a denial of our common humanity and our common destiny on this one small planet.
Separation from the created order
In our sin we separate ourselves from the natural environment. Greedily we turn upon it, consuming it, destroying it, befouling it. As natural resources dwindle, as possibilities increase for long-term damage to the atmosphere and seas, we pause to wonder. But our chief concern is for our own survival, not for the beauty and unity of all God’s creation.
Separation from ourselves
We turn even from our own center, from the goodness, happiness, and holiness that is our divinely created potential. Sometimes it seems that there are two wills warring within us. As Paul put it, “I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate” (Romans 7:15).
Paul continues: “Wretched man that I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death?” (Romans 7:24). Like Paul, we discover that we are powerless to extricate ourselves from sin. Though we work ever so earnestly at various means of saving ourselves—being good, going to church, reading the Bible—these in themselves cannot save us. Sin is not a problem to be solved. It’s our radical estrangement from God, a separation that only God can heal by a radical act of love. We yearn for this reunion, this reconciliation, this redemption, this salvation.
—From United Methodist Member’s Handbook, Revised by George Koehler (Discipleship Resources, 2006), pp. 74-75. Used by permission.
What are some sins?
Verses:
Isaiah 59:2
1 John 5:17
Matthew 5:21-28
James 4:17
Proverbs 6:16-19
Seven deadly: 1) Lust 2) Gluttony – over-consumption 3) Greed 4) Acedia – Sloth, apathy, inactivity 5) Wrath – anger or rage (sometimes to the point of murder) 6) Envy [those who commit the sin of envy resent that another person has something they perceive themselves as lacking, and wish the other person to be deprived of it.] 7) Pride – excessive love of self
Situation:
- My cousin just moved to town and now goes to the same school that I do. He has no friends yet and I know he is lonely. He dresses kind of funny and is not into sports like my friends and I are. My friends think he is weird. How do I decide who to hang with, my friends or my cousin?