Sin's True ColoursThis article was published in Issue No. 39, July-September 2005.FALLEN
allen man does not see his sins as God sees them. Even those sins that
he does acknowledge he refuses to estimate as God does. Yet the
Righteous God has purer eyes than to behold evil and He can not look
upon iniquity. He will by no means clear the guilty. All who remain in
their sins shall die; and this ultimately means that they shall suffer
an everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord in Hell
— because they have sinned against God Himself (Hab.1:13;
Exod.34:7; Rev.20:6; 21:8; 2Thess.1:9; Ezek.8:4). In the Word of
God man’s sins are painted in the most vivid colours –
scarlet and crimson (Isa.1:18). But the entrance of sin into the human
race did more than cause an open, blood-red wound. It brought death
(Gen.2:17). This Divinely administered judgment against sin spread
throughout the souls of our first parents, first killing off their
spirits and then later their physical bodies. And in his original sin,
Adam broke the Covenant of Works both for himself and for us. That is
why we are all born “dead in trespasses and in sins”
(Eph.2:1; Rom.5:12). Adam did not pass on to his offspring his
original sinless nature, but a condition of spiritual deadness and
rebellion against God. The human race thus became totally depraved. For
Adam it was originally possible for him to live a life of perfect
obedience to the revealed will of God; consequent to his original sin
came the threatened curse of a manifold death on mankind, in which this
ability not to sin was lost. And now it can truly be said of all,
Christ alone excepted (for in Him was no sin), “They altogether
filthy are, they all are backward gone; And there is none that doeth
good, no, not so much as one” (Psalm 53:3, Scottish Metrical
Version). A Hopeless CaseFallen man’s spiritual
case is worse than the physical case of a leper. Whereas leprosy
penetrates all of a man’s members and slowly kills him, sin
struck at the root of the human family and killed the original sinner
and all who were in covenant with him. And while a leper may have
looked unto Jesus during His earthly ministry and called upon Him for
bodily healing, fallen man does not will to call upon Him for the
healing of his sin-slain soul; neither indeed can he will for such a
healing, nor even seek after God (John 5:40; Rom.3:11). Fallen
man has no hope of recovery (or rather, of regeneration) while he
remains without God in the world and dies in that state (Eph.2:1,12).
He is a willing slave of sin, captivated by the “lust of the
eyes, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life” (John 8:34;
1John 2:16; cf. Mark 4:19), and he refuses to come unto Christ that he
might have true life (John 5:40). He does not see his need of the
Divine Physician (Mark 2:17). No matter how much a man may seek
to justify his sins, whether by claiming the expediency of mitigating
circumstances (i.e., situation ethics) or the influence of hormones or
alcohol or drugs (or lack of them), or even by attempting to blame God
like those who claim “genetic predisposition” try to do,
his sins are still sins against God, and God shall call him to account
for every one of them (Rom.14:12). As the Lord Jesus Christ Himself
affirms: no matter how white the sinner washes the outside of his tomb,
inside he is full of dead bones and all uncleanness, and from within
come those things which defile a man (Matt.23:27; Mark 7:21-23). Behold
sin in its true colours; do what so many around us fail to do: see your
sins as God sees them. Then you will not be amazed that sin brings the
deserved judgment of a manifold death. “The Lord looked down from
heaven upon the children of men, to see if there were any that did
understand, and seek God. They are all gone aside, they are all
together become filthy: there is none that doeth good, no, not
one” (Psa.14:2,3). A New HeartSin has entered the
world and wrought a great slaughter. Agreat temporal judgement has
taken place. All mankind is fallen, and all are lost. The question is,
can the dead, stony heart of a man be plucked out and a heart of flesh
be pressed into its place? Can a fallen, totally depraved person be
restored in soul, and made to walk in paths of righteousness? Or as
Christ’s disciples asked Him, “Who then can be
saved?” With men this is impossible, but not with God. All things
are possible with God (Ezek.37:3; 36:26; Psa.23:3; Matt.19:26).
The Righteous God wills to make his power and mercy known in the
salvation of sinners. That is why He sent his Son into the world.
“And he saw that there was no man, and wondered that there was no
intercessor: therefore his arm brought salvation unto him; and his
righteousness, it sustained him” (Isa.59:16; cf. Isa.49:6; 52:10;
Matt.1:21; Acts 13:47; Rom.9:22-24). From amidst sin-slain,
Hell-deserving mankind, God redeems and calls a people to Himself.
These chosen and saved ones will arise from every tongue, tribe and
nation — a vast multitude that no man can number (Rev.7:9). It
was only the Lord Jesus Christ Who was born without this spiritual
death. His Father was God (Luke 1:26-35). Therefore Adam did not
represent Christ as he did us; Christ stood as a “Second
Adam.” Christ stood as the Head of those whom He represented in
another covenant — the Covenant of Grace. In that covenant Christ
bestows salvation upon as many as will receive him by faith and He
makes them to be children of God (John 1:12). These people believe
because the have been given to do so in the providence of God (Acts
13:48). They are the elect whom God gives to His Son in the Covenant of
Redemption (John 6:37; John 17:9,11,24; Col.1:12,13; Heb.2:13;
Isa.53:10, 11). The Blind Shall SeeIn this great
salvation the Law has its work to do. The Great Physician sends forth
the Holy Spirit, Who applies the Word of God to sinners among mankind.
By it He opens their dead spiritual eyes and restores their sight. Thus
they come to appreciate their awful predicament as beings that have
been slain by sin, who are worthy of Hell. Whereas before they may have
thought that they were full of life and hope, the Law came to them and
slew their false hope and their trust in their own ability to save
themselves. When the Law was brought into their minds and they became
sensible of their sins, they found that the sin within them to rose up
against God all the more (Rom.7:11). These sinners begin to see
their sin in its true colours, and they fear to see God looking upon
them with those “purer eyes” of His — and what this
must mean for them if He marks their iniquities (Hab.1:13; Psa.130:3).
They are thus overcome, and they admit that they are actually fallen,
slain, dead in their sins; and that they can do nothing at all to help
themselves. Now in their estimation they see that they are as a corpse
covered in “wounds, and bruises, and purtifying sores,” and
that their sins have become a foul stench in their own nostrils –
and how much more must they be in God’s nostrils? for this is no
mere physical disease that we are talking about (Isa.1:6; Psa.38:4-8;
Jon.1:2). “Woe is me, for I am undone!” they then cry out.
“Who can save me from the body of this death? Where can I find
salvation? What must I do to be saved?” (Isa.6:5; Rom.7:24; Luke
2:30; Acts 16:30). The Lord Jesus Christ healed a leper by
touching him (see Mark 1:40-42). Such miraculous bodily healings were
signs of the Messiah, and they witness to the fact that the Son of Man
had authority to forgive sins (Luke 5:17-26). This power He still
retains! All who call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved from
their sins (Acts 2:21). Christians are those who look to the Lord and
say unfeignedly, “Lord, if thou wilt, thou canst make me
clean.” And He does will to receive and to save all who call on
Him in truth. He says to them, “I am willing: be thou made whole.
I breathe new spiritual life into your nostrils. Thou art born again.
Get up and walk — in newness of life.” And as He speaks so
it is done, for He is God and the Word of God is all-powerful. He will
do all His good pleasure and He makes them both to will and to do of
His good pleasure (Eph.1:5,9; Phil.2:13). Consider how the virtue
that flows out of Christ for the healing of His people is in His own
blood that was poured out for them. “He was wounded for our
transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of
our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed”
(Isa.53:5). Consider that it required the Divine Physician to die
– and rise again – for the very sins of those whom He
cured. “His own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree,
that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness: by whose
stripes ye were healed” (1Pet.2:24). Because of this so great
salvation accomplished and applied by this Great Saviour, there arises
from among the sinslain a people who are called, justified, sanctified,
glorified (Rom.8:29,30). “I am the resurrection, and the
life,” says the Lord Jesus Christ to one and all. “He that
believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: And whosoever
liveth and believeth in me shall never die. Believest thou this?”
(John 11:25-27). |