George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
December 11
The Necessity of Acknowledging Sin
If we say we have not sinned, we make
him a liar--1Jo 1:10
This text is just a little difficult to
understand, and the difficulty is of a peculiar kind because it is not quite so
easy to see what is the connection between the conclusion and the premises.
"If we say that we have not sinned," that is premise; and "we make
God a liar," that is the conclusion. There are some texts in Scripture a
little difficult to understand because the phraseology is difficult, and there
are some texts hard to understand because they seem to contradict our highest
moral sense; but this is one of those numerous texts where it is a little hard
to see the connection between the conclusion and the premises. If John had
said, for instance, "If we say we have not sinned, we are fools," or
"If we say we have not sinned, we know nothing whatever about
ourselves," you would have understood that at once. But John says,
"If we say we have not sinned, we make God--not ourselves--a liar,"
and to the thoughtful mind there is just a little difficulty in gathering the
connection.
Excusing Sin
But before we face that difficulty there is
one question I have got to ask and answer, and that is, How is it that people
say, "We have not sinned"? It is not just saying it with our lips;
but I want to ask in what peculiar ways do common people like you and me say in
their hearts, "We have not sinned"? Well, of course, everybody does
it in the first place who conceives that he is perfect, but that is such an
extraordinary state of mind and so uncommonly rare that I do not imagine I need
touch on it except for a moment. In the course of my long pastoral experience,
meeting with all types of men and women, I do not remember a single sane person
who ever thought he was perfect. I remember one poor man, but then he was
insane, and he also thought that he was Christ. Remember, perfection is your
ideal and mine--"Be ye perfect as your Father in heaven is perfect";
and I have never put any limits to what the Spirit of God can do for any man
who constantly yields himself up to it. I have never put any limits, no matter
what a man's past is, no matter how hard his heart is, no matter what his
circumstances are, to what the Spirit of God can do for anybody who opens his
heart to Him every morning; but at the same time this is the universal
Christian experience. The more you yield yourself, the more you hitch your
wagon to that star, the more you wrestle on toward heaven against storm and
wind and tide--the more you feel and know you are a sinner. Paul began by
saying about himself that he was less than the least of saints. When he got to
know Christ a great deal better he called himself "the chief of
sinners." Therefore I do not think one need say anything about that, for
who is the fool who for one moment conceives that he is perfect. If there is,
may God have mercy, not upon your soul, may God have mercy on your mind. But
then a far more common way than that is for people to deny that what they have
done is sin; that is to say, to make excuses for themselves that they would
never dream of making for anybody else. Of course, I am not talking about you,
I am talking about myself as well, for there is no man or woman, no matter how
God's grace has gripped him, who is not always prone to make excuses for his
own conduct that he would never dream of making for anybody else.
For instance, sometimes you read of a man
stealing money. Well now, if his neighbor did it, of course he would be a
thief, but the man is so earnest he is going to pay, but he wanted time, that
in him it is not sin; or perhaps he gets such a starvation wage that he says he
is just taking what he has a right to, and then he says, "I have not
sinned." Many of you are tempted to tell lies just because the truth would
cause such pain or discomfort to somebody you love, and you say you have not
sinned because you have done it out of human kindness. You would never admit
that in anybody else. Of course today, when people on every hand are breaking
the seventh commandment, dashing in pieces the covenant of honor and purity, of
course they all say that it is love; love is such a beautiful thing it
justifies anything, does it not? Or perhaps they say it is necessity, and
necessity knows no law. In a thousand ways like that today people are juggling
with their conscience, and just saying, Whatever be the case with others, of
course I have not sinned. Perhaps equally common among people who are led by
the cold light of intellect rather than by the flaming light of passion, is the
thought that sin does not exist; it is only a dream of fussy theologians, there
is no such thing. What is sin? Now sin, if it is anything, of course, is a
transgression of the law of God; sin is the free act of a free man. Sin is
something for which you--nobody else--are responsible; therefore if you are
liable, the punishment, that is the guilt, is a reality, and always with guilt
there comes fear. Now when anybody takes up a view of life that just denies the
reality of these things, robs them of what is essential in their meaning, don't
you see he says, "I have not sinned"? If sin is a necessity, a
necessary negative if you have got to get a positive, if sin is only
imperfection, not a fall down but a fall up, letting the ape and tiger die,
only a necessary stage in evolution, if everything is determined by heredity,
well, of course, you say you have not sinned; whatever you have done, that does
not exist. These things seem very
modem, but they were all present, mark you, with John at Ephesus, and John
says, "If any man says he has not sinned, he makes God a liar." Now don't
you see what it means? You know if I called a man a liar, what I imply is that
that man has been speaking, and probably speaking to me, and when you call God
a liar you imply that God has been speaking to you. And John's point is that
whenever and in whatsoever way God speaks, the basis of His speech is the fact
of sin. In every voice God uses he talks on the understanding, implied or
asserted, that sin is a reality, and therefore our duty is to try and examine
the various voices of God and see whether that is true or not.
God in Nature
For instance, for I never like to leave
this out, I suppose most of us would say that God talked to them in nature. In
this beautiful world, I hope you have all got enough of a receiving set within
you to hear God talk to you in nature. Of course, without that we never would
have any science. If I can take up a book and read it and understand it, it
means that behind that book there is a mind kindred to my own. And if science
can read the book of nature--that is exactly what it does, we dwell not in a
chaos but in a cosmos--if science can read the book of nature, then there is a
mind behind it cognate and kindred to our own. I wonder why it is, if you were
out in a great storm and in peril of shipwreck, you would immediately feel you
were a sinner. I wonder why it is when you walk over the moors of Arran every
bird and every beast flies from you in dread; the game birds and the rabbits
and the deer fly from you in dread. Is not something wrong? Has not some
harmony been broken? Do you think God ever intended that? Now I do not say
anything about the pain you feel when you are confronted with perfect beauty. I
do not say anything of the song of birds that, as Burns says, "Ye'll brak
my heart"; but what I do say is, even in the dim voices of nature God does
not only say, "Child, am not I beautiful?" but God says, "Child,
you have broken something, you are a sinner."
God in Conscience
Then does not God talk to you in
conscience? Don't you believe that in the still small voice of conscience God
is talking to you? I beg of you never to give up that faith. If your conscience
is not dead, and it is dead in some people, seared with a hot iron, what does
it say to you? Does it say, "Child, your temptation was too strong for
you, therefore you are not guilty"? Does it say, "Child, these are
dreadful circumstances you live in, therefore you are not guilty"? Does it
say, "Child, it is all heredity, and the blame rests on your
grandfather"? It says, "Child, you are guilty." It says to you,
"Whatever your temptation or heredity, you are guilty; nobody else."
And if you say you have not sinned, that you could not help it, that things
were too strong for you, that you were in the hands of a determined fate, don't
you see you make God a liar whenever He talks to you in conscience?
God in the Bible
Then I hope everybody agrees with me that
God speaks to us in the Old Testament. Well now, if you do, that whole
utterance is based upon the reality of sin and nothing else, except God Himself
willing to forgive it. Take the story of the fall: what is at the back of it?
That sin is real, that guilt is real, that the fear that follows guilt is real,
and that is the very meaning. Then you have the sacrifices of smoke at the
Jewish altars, the forty years' wandering in the wilderness, the seventy years'
exile in Babylon, and the anguish of the Psalmist, and you have the trumpet cry
of the Prophet that he is the Lord God who forgiveth sin. Then you say sin is
not a reality; it does not exist; it is only a negative. You make God a liar in
the whole utterance of the Old Testament. Don't you see?
Then far above the Old Testament, we have
the New Testament, and I who know a little about Plato and Dante and
Shakespeare never hesitate a moment to call the New Testament the most
wonderful book in the world. Written by men of strong individuality, each of
them with his own angle and his own outlook, each with his own aspect of the
Lord, and yet all of them banded together as with a band of steel in this one
conviction, that man needs redemption and that God in His mercy is willing to
give it now. You get so tired of books whose only parrot-cry is, Educate,
educate, educate; books that tell you that give time to our human race and it
will evolve into a kind of superman. The New Testament comes to you and me and
says, "Child, first of all there is a barrier between you and God, and
that barrier has got to be taken out of the way." In other words, you do
not want to be reformed, you need to be born again and then you can start
educating and evolving. The whole New Testament is based on this, that you and
I are guilty sinful creatures, and if you come along and say, "We have not
sinned," you are making God a liar as He speaks to us in the new
Testament.
God in Christ Jesus
And then, of course, the whole argument
comes to its height in this: God in His infinite mercy has talked and spoken to
you and me in our blessed Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. "In the beginning
was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the word (the expression of the
thought--the Oratio against the Ratio) became flesh and dwelt among us."
"His name shall be called Jesus." Why? Because He is a beautiful
teacher, because He is our example, because He is a great social leader?
"His name thou shalt call Jesus: for He shall save His people from their
sins." There were things that our blessed Lord made very light of, things
that He did not care a straw for, and sometimes they mean everything to us; but
there was one thing our Lord never made light of; rather He deepened it,
intensified it all the time, and that was the fact of human sin. It was that
which brought Him here; it was that which sent Him among the publicans and
sinners; it was that that nailed Him to the cross. And if you venture to say,
"I have not sinned;" "It was not sin at all;" "Sin
does not exist;" don't you make Him just a liar when he talks to us in the
Lord Jesus Christ? I beg of you not to do it. Life is far too serious for that.
To wrap yourself up in excuses is to be naked before the great white throne. It
is far better just to say however humbling it is, "God be merciful to me,
a sinner." "Seek ye the Lord while He may be found, call ye upon Him
while He is near. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his
thought, and let him return unto the Lord, and He will have mercy upon him, and
to our God, for He will abundantly pardon."
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