Thursday, March 9, 2017

Sin exists whether or not you acknowledge it and there's nothing you can do about it

Hieronymus Bosch's The Seven Deadly Sins and the Four Last Things

TRUE AND FALSE GUILT
Orestes Pursued by the Furies, by John Singer Sargent. 1921. The erinyes represent the guilt for murdering his mother.


Is this a rather morbid viewpoint? Christians have often been criticized (not least evangelical Christians) for continuously harping on sin, for becoming obsessed with it in our own lives and, particularly in our evangelism, for trying to induce in others a sense of their guilt. Nietzsche, for example, bitterly complained that 'Christianity needs sickness.... Making sick is the true hidden objective of the Church's whole system of salvation procedures.... One is not "converted" to Christianity - one must be sufficiently sick for it'. Nietzsche was partly correct, namely that Christianity is medicine for the sin-sick. After all, Jesus himself defended his concentration on 'tax collectors and sinners' by saying 'It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick'. 'I have not come to call the righteous,' he added, 'but sinners' (Mk, 2: 17). We vigorously deny, however, that it is the church's role to 'make' people sick in order to convert them. Instead, we have to make them aware of their sickness, so that they will turn to the Great Physician.


Conversion and the forgiveness of your unameable secret crimes
A Criminal Case 1865 painting Honore Daumier
From left to right: Jian Ghomeshi and Judge William Horkins look on as, far right, lawyer Marie Henein reads from a letter complainant Lucy DeCoutere sent to the accused in the days following the alleged sexual assault. (Pam Davies)


Yet the criticism persists that Christians are unhealthily preoccupied with sin. An eloquent contemporary spokesman of this viewpoint is the BBC's former Religious Affairs Correspondent, Gerald Priestland. One of his talks in the radio series Priestland's Progress was entitled 'Guilt-edged Religion'. He told us how at the age of ten he thought Christianity was about sin and that by the time he was fifteen he was having 'glimpses into the abyss of depression', accompanied by fears of divine vengeance for his 'unnameable secret crimes', fears which kept growing for the next thirty years. His Christianity gave him no help. 'When I looked at the Cross, with its suffering victim, its only message to me was: "You did this - and there is no health in you!".' His equivalent of a Damascus Road conversion came to him at last 'on the psychiatrist's couch', for that was where he learnt 'the missing element of forgiveness'. Since then he confesses to 'a fairly low level of personal guilt and relatively little interest in the matter of sin' (pp. 59-60).


Christianity is more about the forgiveness of sin and the glory of Christ than about sin
Rembrandt, The Return of the Prodigal Son, 1662–1669


That is not the whole of Gerald Priestland's story, but it is enough to illustrate the grievous damage done by half-truths. How could anyone imagine that Christianity is about sin rather than about the forgiveness of sin? How could anyone look at the cross and see only the shame of what we did to Christ, rather than the glory of what he did for us? The prodigal son had to 'come to himself' (acknowledge his self-centredness) before he could 'come to his father'. The humiliation of penitence was necessary before the joy of reconciliation. There would have been no ring, no robe, no kiss, no feast if he had remained in the far country or returned impenitent. A guilty conscience is a great blessing, but only if it drives us to come home.


Sometimes our conscience and feeling of guilt are right and sometimes our conscience and feeling of guilt are wrong

Illustration of François Chifflart (1825–1901) for La Conscience (by Victor Hugo)


This does not mean that our conscience is always a reliable guide. There is such a thing as a morbid, overscrupulous conscience and it would be mischievous to seek deliberately to create one. Not all guilt feelings are pathological, however. On the contrary, those who declare themselves sinless and guiltless are suffering from an even worse sickness. For to manipulate, smother and even 'cauterize' (1 Tim. 4:2) the conscience, in order to escape the pain of its accusations, renders us impervious to our need for salvation.


Why is it healthy to view people as sinners?  Do not underestimate the seriousness of sin
The Holy Spirit and the Seven Deadly Sins. Folio from Walters manuscript W.171 (15th century)


Is it, then, healthy or unhealthy to insist on the gravity of sin and the necessity of atonement, to hold people responsible for their actions, to warn them of the peril of divine judgment, and to urge them to confess, repent and turn to Christ? It is healthy. For if there is 'false guilt' (feeling bad about evil we have not done) there is also 'false innocence' (feeling good about the evil we have done). If false contrition is unhealthy (an ungrounded weeping over guilt), so is false assurance (an ungrounded rejoicing over forgiveness). It may be, therefore, that it is not we who exaggerate, when we stress the senousness of sin, but our critics, who underestimate it. God said of the false prophets in Old Testament days: 'They dress the wound of my people as though it were not serious. "Peace, peace," they say, when there is no peace.' Superficial remedies are always due to a faulty diagnosis. Those who prescribe them have fallen victim to the deceiving spirit of modernity which denies the gravity of sin. To make a true diagnosis of our condition, however, grave as it is, could never be unhealthy, provided that we go on immediately to the remedy. So the law which condemns us is nevertheless God's good gift, because it sends us to Christ to be justified. And the Holy Spirit came 'to convict the world of guilt', but only in order that he might more effectively bear witness to Christ as the Saviour from guilt (Jn. 16:8; 15:26-27). There is no joy comparable to the joy of the forgiven.


Psychologists and psychiatrists only go half-way
Dr. Philippe Pinel at the Salpêtrière, 1795 by Tony Robert-Fleury. Pinel ordering the removal of chains from patients at the Paris Asylum for insane women.


It is here that some recent American psychologists and psychiatrists go wrong, for they go only half-way. They start right, however, even some who make no Christian profession, for they insist that we must take sin, responsibility and guilt seriously. This is certainly great gain, but to diagnose well without being able to prescribe well is to embrace a dangerous and disillusioning halfmeasure.


The Crisis in Psychiatry and Religion by Hobard Mowrer
Orval Hobart Mowrer (January 23, 1907 – June 20, 1982) was an American psychologist and professor of psychology at the University of Illinois from 1948 to 1975 known for his research on behaviour therapy.
Dr Hobart Mowrer, who was Research Professor of Psychology at the University of Illinois when his critique of Freudian psychoanalysis The Crisis in Psychiatry and Religion was published (1961), rejected the notion that 'psychoneurosis implies no moral responsibility'. For 'just so long as we deny the reality of sin, we cut ourselves off . . . from the possibility of radical redemption ("recovery")' (p, 40). Dr Mowrer created quite a stir within his profession by his use of the word 'sin'. But he persisted in teaching the fact of sin and the need for an acknowledgment of it.


Guilt exists even if unacknowledged.  Accept your guilt.

Sorrowing Old Man ('At Eternity's Gate'), Vincent van Gogh, 1890.


Just so long as a person lives under the shadow of real, unacknowledged, and unexpiated guilt, he cannot . . . 'accept himself'.... He will continue to hate himself and to suffer the inevitable consequences of self-hatred. But the moment he ... begins to accept his guilt and his sinfulness, the possibility of radical reformation opens up, and with this ... a new freedom of self-respect and peace (p. 54).


Guilt is not pathological.  It is "Reality Therapy".

William Glasser (May 11, 1925 – August 23, 2013) was an American psychiatrist.  Glasser was the developer of reality therapy and choice theory.
A few years later, also rebelling against the Freudian insistence that guilt is pathological, Dr William Glasser began in Los Angeles to develop a different approach in treating juvenile delinquents and others which he called 'Reality Therapy'. His thesis was that a person who is 'unable to fulfil his essential needs', especially love and self-worth, denies the reality of the world around him and acts irresponsibly. So the therapist seeks 'to make him face a truth he has spent his life trying to avoid: he is responsible for his behauiour': Dr Mowrer in his Foreword sums up the essence of Dr Glasser's therapeutic method as 'a psychiatric version of the three R's, namely reality, responsibility and right-and-wrong' (p. xii).


Only God can atone for our sins
Two souls have atoned and are about to reach Paradise, detail of the Monument to Dante in Trento, Cesare Zocchi, 1893.


Similarly, 'sin must be dealt with in the private courts of the human heart', writes Karl Menninger. Well and good. But how? Especially, he goes on, by 'repentance, reparation, restitution and atonement'. Karl Menninger here betrays his very partial grasp of the gospel. For those four words cannot be bracketed in this way. The first three do indeed belong together. Reparation (a general word for making amends) and restitution (the more particular restoration of what has been stolen) are both necessary to signify the genuineness of repentance. But 'atonment' is not something we can do; only God can atone for our sins, and indeed has done so through Christ.


The acknowledging of faults and wrongdoing and the making of restitution without forgiveness is not effective
Sir Edward Burne Jones - The tree of forgiveness


It is true that Dr Menninger mentions the forgiveness of God once or twice in passing (though without any basis in Christ's cross). Dr Hobart Mowrer, however, studiously avoids both the word and the concept. Like Karl Menninger he concentrates on the acknowledging of faults and the making of restitution. He calls his therapy groups 'integrity groups' because their foundation is personal integrity in the acknowledgment of wrongdoing. Initiation into a group is by means of 'a complete unqualified self-disclosure' which he calls exomologesis. When, during a personal conversation with Dr Mowrer at the University of Illinois in 1970, I mentioned that exomologesis is the Greek word for 'confession', and that in the Christian tradition the purpose of confession is to receive forgiveness from the injured party, he immediately responded, 'Oh, we never talk about forgiveness.' His concept of sin is that in each case it is the breach of a contractual obligation for which the guilty person must make restitution. Forgiveness is therefore unnecessary, either by the injured person or even by God.

Secular experts do not regard the cross as the only and sufficient ground on which God forgives sins
Christ on the Cross, Rembrandt, 1631.


Although, as has been pointed out, Dr Menninger does not share Dr Mowrer's inhibition about mentioning forgiveness, neither of them ever refers to the cross, let alone regards it as the only and sufficient ground on which God forgives sins. To recover the concepts of human sin, responsibility, guilt and restitution, without simultaneously recovering confidence in the divine work of atonement, is tragically lopsided. It is diagnosis without prescription, the futility of self-salvation in place of the salvation of God, and the rousing of hope only to dash it to the ground again.

Do not make excuses for your poor performance. Apathy is the key form of sin in today's world
Harvey Gallagher Cox, Jr. (born May 19, 1929 in Malvern, Pennsylvania) is an American theologian who served as the Hollis Professor of Divinity at the Harvard Divinity School, until his retirement in October 2009. Cox's research and teaching focus on theological developments in world Christianity, including liberation theology and the role of Christianity in Latin America.



A full acknowledgment of human responsibility and therefore guilt, far from diminishing the dignity of human beings, actually enhances it. It presupposes that men and women, unlike the animals, are morally responsible beings, who know what they are, could be and should be, and do not make excuses for their poor performance. This is the thesis of Harvey Cox in his book On Not Leaving it to the Snake. Eve's sin in the Garden of Eden, he urges, was not so much her disobedience in eating the forbidden fruit as her feeble surrender of responsibility which preceded it, not her pride but her sloth. Although Dr Cox is surely mistaken in his refusal to accept the biblical view of sin as essentially pride, and is tainted with the 'man come-of-age' misconception, he nevertheless makes an important point when he says that 'apathy is the key form of sin in today's world .... For Adam and Eve apathy meant letting a snake tell them what to do. It meant abdicating .... the exercise of dominion and control of the world." But decision-making belongs to the essence of our humanness. Sin is not only the attempt to be God; it is also the refusal to be human by shuffling off responsibility for our actions. "Let's not let any snake tell us what to do." The common defense of the Nazi war criminals was that they were merely following orders. But the court held them responsible all the same.

Diminished responsibility always entails diminished humanity.  The Bible takes sin seriously because it takes man seriously.
"Duty" by Edmund Leighton


The Bible takes sin seriously because it takes man (male and female) seriously. As we have seen, Christians do not deny the fact - in some circumstances - of diminished responsibility, but we affirm that diminished responsibility always entails diminished humanity. To say that somebody 'is not responsible for his actions' is to demean him or her as a human being. It is part of the glory of being human that we are held responsible for our actions. Then, when we also acknowledge our sin and guilt, we receive God's forgiveness, enter into the joy of his salvation, and so become yet more completely human and healthy. What is unhealthy is every wallowing in guilt which does not lead to confession, repentance, faith in Jesus Christ and so forgiveness.


Do not abandon the notion of just retribution and replace it with humanitarian concerns
Punishment of an offender in Hungary, 1793
In his justly famous essay 'The Humanitarian Theory of Punishment', C. S. Lewis bemoans the modern tendency to abandon the notion of just retribution and replace it with humanitarian concerns both for the criminal (reform) and for society as a whole (deterrence).  For this means, he argues, that every lawbreaker 'is deprived of the rights of a human being. The reason is this. The Humanitarian theory removes from punishment the concept of desert. But the concept of desert is the only connecting link between punishment and justice. It is only as deserved or undeserved that a sentence can be just or unjust.' Again, 'when we cease to consider what the criminal deserves and consider only what will cure him or deter others, we have tacitly removed him from the sphere of justice altogether; instead of a person, a subject of rights, we now have a mere object, a patient, a "case".' By what right may we use force to impose treatment on a criminal, either to cure him or to protect society, unless he deserves it?


Stop treating humans like babies or animals
1936 poster promoting planned housing as a method to deter juvenile delinquency, showing silhouettes of a child stealing a piece of fruit and the older child involved in armed robbery.  Produced by the New York City Housing Authority.


To be 'cured' against one's will, and cured of states which we may not regard as disease, is to be put on a level with those who have not yet reached the age of reason or those who never will; to be classed with infants, imbeciles, and domestic animals. But to be punished, however severely, because we have deserved it, because we 'ought to have known better', is to be treated as a human person made in God's image.




Stott, John R. W. The Cross of Christ. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1986; reprint, 2006, pages 99-104.

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