Overview:
The notion of sin is considered intolerant in our society. In fact, it’s often replaced with words like error, mistake, or addiction . . . and our culture tends to blame sin on someone other than ourselves. Today Chuck Swindoll reminds us that although our salvation assures us that the curse of sin has been removed from us, sin never really went away!
Message Summary:
Message Key Facts:
- The Vanishing Word: Swindoll notes that "sin" has become politically incorrect. He cites research suggesting Dwight D. Eisenhower (1953) was the last U.S. President to explicitly call the nation to confess "sins and transgressions" in a formal address, quoting Abraham Lincoln.
- The Psychiatric Folk Song: To illustrate the modern tendency to blame circumstances rather than take responsibility, Swindoll quotes Anna Russell’s satire, "Jolly Old Sigmund Freud." The song humorously attributes bad behavior to childhood trauma, concluding, "Everything I do that's wrong is someone else's fault".
- Adam vs. Christ: Drawing from Romans 5:17–19, Swindoll presents a "tale of two columns." On the left is Adam (transgression, condemnation, disobedience). On the right is Jesus Christ (gift of righteousness, justification, obedience). He emphasizes that justification is God declaring the believing sinner righteous while they are still in a sinning state [11–12].
- Defining "Practice": A crucial interpretive key for 1 John 3 is the concept of "practicing" sin. Swindoll defines this as a continual, persistent, habitual sinful lifestyle. This characterizes the lost, whereas the believer may stumble but does not settle there [18–19].
- Gnosticism: Swindoll explains that John was refuting a heresy known as Gnosticism (from the Greek ginosko, "to know"). These elite teachers claimed that intellectual knowledge made one superior to the body, implying that physical sin didn't matter—a teaching Swindoll likens to modern cults that emphasize intellect over godly living [22–23].
- The "Seed" of God: In verse 9, John writes that God’s "seed" abides in the believer. Swindoll interprets this seed (sperma) as the Holy Spirit, who restrains the believer from habitual sin and brings conviction.
- Coming to Your Senses: Swindoll uses the Prodigal Son (Luke 15) to describe the believer’s relationship with sin. The Prodigal left home but eventually "came to his senses" and returned to his father. Swindoll argues that lost people do not come to their senses on their own; they remain in the "pig sty" because it is their nature [30–31].
- The Devil’s Strategy: Swindoll asserts that the devil confuses both groups: "If you're a lost sinner, he wants to convince you you're saved. If you're a saved sinner, he wants to convince you you're lost" [36–37].
Message References:
- 1 John 3:4–10: The primary text contrasting the children of God and the children of the devil, and defining sin as lawlessness.
- Romans 5:12: "Through one man sin entered into the world, and death through sin".
- Romans 5:17–19: The contrast between Adam’s disobedience and Christ’s obedience [11–13].
- Romans 7:15–19: Paul’s admission of the internal struggle: "For the good that I want, I do not do, but I practice the very evil I do not want" [14–16].
- Luke 15:17: The turning point of the Prodigal Son: "But when he came to his senses..." [29–30].
- 2 Corinthians 5:21: "He who knew no sin was made sin on our behalf".
- 1 Corinthians 11:30: Referenced regarding divine discipline ("For this cause many are weak and sick, and some have died").