Theological Commentary: Click Here
I think we
would be wise to spend a considerable amount of time processing the opening few
verses of Leviticus 6. These verses go a
long way in countering the human desire to rationalize his own sinfulness away.
Notice that
the sin being spoken about in these opening verses are sins committed in
community. God is talking about
deceiving a neighbor, or robbing another person, or oppression another person,
or lying, or swearing falsely. Many of
these examples hearken back to the Ten Commandments. All of these are examples of things that
human beings do against one another.
Notice the
words that this chapter uses to set up this list: “commits a breach of faith
against the Lord.” Leviticus 6:2 is
awfully clear about the sin being committed here. These are certainly sins that are done to one
another. These are certainly sins that
affect our relationships with each other.
But they are classified as breaches of faith against the Lord.
I believe
most human beings who believe in God try to set up two categories of
sinfulness. We like to think that there
is a large list of sins that we do against one another. We also like to think that there is a small
list of really awful things that we would never do because it is against God
directly. So long as we don’t do any of
these really horrible acts directly against God, we feel pretty good about
ourselves.
This simply
is a fallacy, however. All sin is a
breach against the Lord. When we lie to
another human, we sin against God. When
we steal or even covet what our neighbor has, we sin against God. When we cheat, we sin against God. There are no two categories of sin. There is simply living in God’s ways and
living in sin. If we are not living in
righteousness, we are sinning. If we are
sinning – sin of any kind – God is taking our action seriously.
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