Monday, October 7, 2024

THE GREATEST SIN

All sins are not of equal seriousness; albeit even the tiniest sin without repentance results in eternal death; “For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God” (Rom 3:23).

One might ask, “How have I sinned?” especially an innocent child or the purest do-gooder.

Sin is inborn. Because of ancestral sin by repetition, sin is engrained within the nature of mankind; thusly the theological term, “original sin.” Because you are of the humankind makes you a sinner.

That does not seem fair, nor does it seem fair that the most faithful creatures — canines — have no hope of eternal life. Mankind was chosen before the foundation of the world, to wit: 

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ: According as He has chosen us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love: Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of His will. (Ephes 1:3-5) 

Now ask yourselves some questions: 

·         Who did God choose? Answer: He chose “us” — mankind. He could have chosen one of the other kinds or all the kinds. God made mankind alone in His Image (Gen 1:27), and mankind, both the male and the female, had dominion over the other kinds. (Gen 1:26). Mankind, not the other kinds, were supreme; only we were “children” of God in the beginning. Children in the sense that only mankind had the identity, or genome of God. We were chosen to be like God.

·         What was the “blessing”? Answer: He gave us a spiritual nature. The Image that God blessed mankind with was spiritual. His “Image” with which He blessed man was a “Shadow’ (Hebrew; Selem) of Himself. That “Shadow” was a phantom being (Strong 2006) which is called the “soul” within the body of our progenitors (Gen 2:7).

  The soul is a living spirit of God with flesh (ibid). Ancients called the souls of man identical to the body of man down to the fingers. Hence, the soul of man with which we were blessed is just like us only of a very different substance. We are three beings in one just like God: body, soul, and life. Like God, mankind is not just an image, but an animated being which can move of its own accord in any direction that it desires. Mankind moved away from God with original sin and their souls went with the bodies.

·         Where did the blessing occur? Answer: “In heavenly places.” Note that “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.” The first verses of Genesis 2 indicate that part one was done; the heaven was created and within the heaven, the souls of male and female Adam, respectively were created; “God created man in His own image, in the Image of God created He him; male and female created He them” (Gen 2:7). God did that before He put onto them bodies made of material (Gen 2:7 and Gen 2:22).

  Chapter one was the creation of the souls of the two Adams and chapter two was about the creation of the flesh of the two. If chapter one was about the creation of the heaven, indeed any animals that were in heaven would still be in heaven to this day because they did not sin. It is expected that they are living creatures without souls like man. In fact, there will be creatures in Paradise that were there from the beginning, but they too will be of a different substance. Since, we were the ones chosen (“the elect;” Mat 24:22), only mankind has souls like God’s; and the animals in Paradise would just be of a different substance than they are here.

·         When were we blessed? Answer: “Before the foundation of the world.” Genesis chapter one is about the creation of heaven, if my premise is right, and chapter two is about the creation of the earth, or firm things. Heaven is the non-firm things (lofty).

  The “election” was not an election. Nobody voted. It was a “divine selection” (ibid), not natural selection. The heavenly creatures were just made (Gen 1:25), but man was made in His Image (Gen 1:26). Man was made much different than the beasts and before the foundation of the world, or the firm things in Genesis chapter two when God created the earth; not the planet, but firm things.

·         When did that blessing occur in time? Answer: Before time even began. Like much of the Hebrew, the first mention of time is “in the process of time” (Gen 4:3). Literally, that is “the end of hotness” (ibid). It is a twisting from the cooling, in other words, a “process” just as translated.

  In like manner, the “days” of the creation use the same word, “yom” — a hotness. Darkness or night, God called “layil” — a twisting, obviously from the day. “Evening” is “’ereb” the dusk wherein cooling occurs. Hence, time did not exist during the creation at least in the same increments. Hence, the creation was a “cyclic process” made up not of increments of time but different thermodynamic processes.

  A process requires energy, activity, and cooling to reach equilibrium. The “days’ of creation are not time oriented, but process oriented just as Genesis 4:3 implies. 

  They could have occurred consecutively or simultaneously with each cyclic process becoming part of the whole. In other words, all seven of the processes could have been at once. Indeed, the theory now in vogue since the James Watt Space Telescope reported back, in the creation “time did not exist.” Appended to that, according to Michio Kaku is that “time is a construct of man.” The Bible somewhat confirms that if the Hebrew is taken literally.

·         Who is God in scripture? Answer: He and him are not in scripture. They were added to indicate that God is paternal, albeit “He” is neither male nor female, but was a source of our genetics in both males and females. God would have supplied the nuclear genetics that makes humans, human. “God” is the theos and is the “father” (pater) of the Lord Jesus. Theos is the “Godhead” — the Holy Trinity — Yahweh, the Progenitor, His Image, and His Progeny.” Yahweh is the Creator God, the “Dynamis” aspect of the Godhead. His Dynamic is Virtue, according to the Greek. Hence, “God is Good” (Psalm 73:1). God in all three aspects, or substances.

·         What is “adoption”? Answer: It is necessary because of sin wherein children of God emancipated themselves. Time began for mankind with sin because sin was the advent of death. The two Adams could have lived for eons before sin in an economy wherein time did not exist. The plant and animal kingdom could have come and gone, or even existed all along with mankind.

  The animals of chapter one of Genesis would not have been subject to decay until mankind sinned. Perhaps they went extinct when mankind sinned, and that God carried so many of them through the advent of sin and many were driven out of the Garden of Eden with man (Gen 3:24).

  They would have been expatriated from one economy to another. In other words, they were renounced by God because they were then of the Wicked One like Cain (1 John 3:12). In expatriated, the “ex” means “out of” and “patria” comes from the Latin meaning “father” (Douglas Harper 2001-2023). Hence, God removed His own genetics from the man and the woman. They were not necessarily cast out of anyplace but were emancipated from the good Genes of Father God. Of course, without the Genome of God in them, they would indeed be aliens to Paradise, and God had made a place for them in this world wherein tribulation exists.

Because they were emancipated from the paternity of God, then to be “born again” (John 3:7) means that God would engender them (Strong 2006) from above. Lost sinners would then be adopted sons of God, not biologically, but by regenning. It would be interesting to test whether the genetics of a Christian is any different than before he or she was born again.

·         How did God “predestine” us? Answer: He determined beforehand. He decreed from eternity. Well, that goes back to before time again. When was eternity? Before time began. What happened before time began with the advent of sin? Adam’s kind was selected as the favored kind, having dominion over the other kinds. It was everyone, the “whosoever” in John 3:16, that was predestined; at least everyone who trusted in Him to regenerate; that God had the power, mercy, and genetics as the “Father” to do so. Jesus was the only Person with the Genome of God in Him. Hence, Jesus is the Way. God predestined anyone who would trust Him. Anyone else He would not. He wanted everyone to trust Him, knowing full-well that many would not. The predestination was that all would sin. The choice was that some preferred not to sin. That independence comes from good kings. Their allegiance is not forced but goodwill comes from their own will.    

The commentary is about exhausted, but the point is made that every word in “The Word” must be analyzed. Take nothing for granted. The English versions are not literal, but the Greek and Hebrew are more so. When Jesus spoke, He spoke in the Greek. Some words are not exact between languages, so context and the ingenuity of the translators is important.  

If you are alive, you have sinned. That is the answer to the original question in the first paragraph. You have sinned because you are human. It is in your genetics and has been since the original sin. It is not your fault that you are a sinner, but it is your fault if you remain so!

Death commenced with sin, did it not? We all shall die because we “all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God” (Rom 3:23).

How do babies sin? There are types of sin: inbred, accidental, by omission, and by commission. They are not equal sins, but anyone of them is coming short of God’s Will — His “Glory,” or nature.

Accidental sins are those we do without understanding that they are sins. An example may be working on the Sabbath or the Lord’s Day when the exact time may not be known, or another; tripping because we think that we can carry our own load. It is with good intentions but bad performances. Accidental sins are endeavoring to do every Law of God, albeit it is impossible.

Sins of commission are knowingly usurping God. We might know His Will but proceed anyway with things against His Will.

Sins of omission are knowing His Will but having apathy for His Will, or just being too lazy to perform as expected. The most common sin of omission is the failure to commune with God, especially the failure to pray, or to pray with vanity, as if it has no effect.

Which is the greater category of sin? Accidental ones? No. Sins of commission; things we do knowing they are wrong.

Now examine the crucifixion? The accidental sin was, believe it or not, the ones who nailed and the one who pierced the side of Jesus. To them, He was just another malefactor, and they were only doing their job. They had no hatred for Jesus; They were only doing mechanical things like hammering and piercing. Jesus said, “They know not what they do” (Luke 23:34).

Others knew what they were doing. Pilate understood that Jesus was who He said He was and washed his own hands of the activity. He was not a religious man, but seemed to be a student of philosophism with his question, “What is truth?”  However, he knew that he was doing wrong because he was a sensitive man. He committed the act by his orders. His was an act of commission. However, Jesus understood his situation and expressed it: “You could have no power at all against Me, except it were given thee from above: therefore, he that delivered me unto you has the greater sin” (John 9:11).

Of whom was Jesus speaking? At first glance, it seems to be the chief priest Caiaphas. Caiphas did in fact deliver Jesus to His death, and indeed, Caiphas did not have good will for the Person of God. However, Caiaphas did not know that Jesus is God! He thought Jesus was only a pretender to the throne of Judea which was empty. He may have wanted the regime of Annas to continue with himself as king in the manner of John Hyrcanus who was priest and king before. If Caiphas had known that Jesus was God, then would he have killed God? It was incumbent on himself to learn the truth. He failed that. Neither did he know what he was doing! His was a sin of omission.

Who killed Jesus, then if not Pilate, the executioners, nor the chief priests? The Jews did not kill Jesus, either. The Jewish leaders were not the guiltiest just as Jesus said.

Well, the One who killed Jesus was Father God. Jesus implied that when he answered Pilate. It was God who sacrificed His only Son. Of course, Jesus was no more the literal “Son of God” than He was the literal “son of  David,” although He was called both.

Peter had said, “You are the Christ, the Son (huios) of the living God” (Mat 16:16). Jesus was not born of God; He always existed (John 1:1-14). Jesus was the posterity of God. He was God in the flesh. He was not a born Being, but God borne there from above, as in “transported” or “translated.” In a sense, Mary was just the “Ark” wherein Yahweh was transported from another realm to this one and given flesh so that He could be seen.

The best guess is that the Spirit in Jesus was the very Image of God. As the “Son” that would have been the genetics of Yahweh and the “Glory of God” would have been the Genome of God. When we are glorified, then we are engendered somehow with the genetics of God to become in Christ, or actually, Yahweh in us.

I have written before that the Yahweh in Jesus is the very Genome of God within Him — that the genetics of Jesus was God’s, possibly the YY-chromosome.

The greater sin was that God took on the sins of mankind, as Paul wrote, “For He has made Him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him” (2 Cor 5:21). For the first time ever, God sinned. He had to know our sin to comprehend sin.

To be blunt, Yahweh suicided Himself just as Satan did himself with Judas. Judas endeavored to propitiate his own blood to rid himself of Satan. He became “god” for a few moments. He was the Antichrist of that day who had Satan in himself. He tried to sacrifice himself for his own sin, but that was not efficacious. Judas was under control of Satan. Satan was guilty of killing Judas.

On the other hand, God (Yahweh) killed Jesus as He sacrificed His only “Son;” not His offspring, but His own Identity for the Ghost within the man, Jesus, was God Himself. God was in every nuclear cell of the flesh of the man, Jesus. His Genome might very well be the Holy Ghost that left the Body of God upon dying.

The greatest sin was God’s suicide of Himself. It was a sin of commission that He did, but for right reasons; Jesus had to die so that we could live forever. He did what any good king would do!

What about the apostles? They too killed Jesus. What was their sins? They stood silently by while Jesus was dying. They could have picked up their own crosses and die instead of Him, but they did not. Their sins were sins of omission. When we stand idly by while God is diminished, we too are silent killers.

Sins of commission kill God even more effectively. Each sin is as if hammering a nail into the appendages of God.

It is easy for us to sacrifice ourselves for Jesus. Picking up our own crosses and following Him is just a matter of dying to the will of our fleshes. It is not even painful; we need not even sacrifice our foreskins but only the hardness of our hearts. The greatest sin for us is that so many fail to sacrifice our flesh, even Christians, who still continually subject themselves to the ways of the world. Maybe it is doing things contrary to God, but worse yet, it is omitting God from our lives. Do that often enough and we have again emancipated ourselves from God. That is apostasy — once having affection for God, some  Christians defecting.

You may not be as secure as you think, or it would not be written, “Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the Devil, as a roaring lion, walks about, seeking whom he may devour” (1 Pet 5:8).

So, who killed Jesus? We all did! Even His disciples who stood idly by. Yahweh God did the “bloody deed,” as Moses wife would say, but He did it because us all, for all have sinned.



 

 

 

 

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