Sinning Like a Christian: A New Look at the 7 Deadly Sins
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Bishop William H. Willimon
Will Willimon is a preacher and teacher of preachers. He is a United Methodist bishop (retired) and serves as Professor of the Practice of Christian Ministry and Director of the Doctor of Ministry program at Duke Divinity School, Durham, North Carolina. For twenty years he was Dean of the Chapel at Duke University. A 1996 Baylor University study named him among the Twelve Most Effective Preachers in the English speaking world. The Pew Research Center found that Will was one of the most widely read authors among Protestant clergy in 2005. His quarterly Pulpit Resource is used by thousands of pastors throughout North America, Canada, and Australia. In 2021 he gave the prestigious Lyman Beecher Lectures on Preaching at Yale Divinity School. Those lectures became the book, Preachers Dare: Speaking for God which is the inspiration for his ninetieth book, Listeners Dare: Hearing God in the Sermon.
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Sinning Like a Christian - Bishop William H. Willimon
INTRODUCTION
Once there was One who came to us, who touched the untouchables, turned his back upon the world’s bright baubles, loved even unto death, and never turned his eyes away from God. And we hated him for it. He came to us with wide open hands in gracious invitation, seeking us, both patient with us and hotly pursuing us. And thereby he brought out the very worst in us.
We figured that things between us and God were not all that bad, but when he spoke to us of God, and ourselves, and rubbed our noses in the filthy rags of our presumed righteousness, well, we thought we were good until we met him. He called upon us to attempt great moral feats, and then watched as we fell flat on our faces. He invited us to join up with his Kingdom, then set that Kingdom’s demands so high that when it came time for us to stand up and show what we were made of, we fled, slithering into the darkness. He said, Come to me. Take on my yoke.
And we with one voice cried, Crucify him!
A recent study of young adults’ reaction to the church says that right up at the top of twenty-to thirty-somethings’ beefs with the church is that Christians are too judgmental.
That is, we talk too much about sin.
I do wonder if people are as dumb as much of mainline, progressive Protestantism—or for that matter, as self-deceptive as allegedly evangelical, biblical conservatism—takes them to be. As C. S. Lewis noted, It is the policy of the Devil to persuade us there is no Devil.
¹ It is a sure sign of a compromised church—a church that has retired from doing battle with the principalities and powers, a church without prophets—when one finds a church that has ceased dealing with sin.² Or as a character in one of Oscar Wilde’s plays says, One should believe evil of everyone, until, of course, people are found out to be good. But that requires a great deal of investigation nowadays
(A Woman of No Importance).
When I openly marveled at the success of TV’s Dr. Phil,
wondering why his Texas-direct, blunt-to-the-point-of-cruel talk got him such an audience, a psychotherapist in my congregation explained, People are ready to be told the truth about themselves, even when it hurts, because they know that without getting the truth, they won’t get life.
Even if we don’t enjoy having the truth told directly to us, we do enjoy listening in as Dr. Phil tells the truth to someone else.
Anton Chekov, in his Notebooks, said that a person will only become better when you make him see what he is like.
And you really haven’t told the truth about us until you have told us that down deep, when all is said and done, even at our very best, we sin.
We have even enlisted Jesus into our self-delusion project, reducing even wild-eyed, prophetic, judgmental Jesus into a quivering mass of affirmation and oozing graciousness. Odd, considering how frequently, unguardedly, and gleefully Jesus told us that we were sinners, forgiven to be sure, but still sinners. Anyone who thinks that Jesus was into inclusiveness, self-affirmation, and open-minded, heart-happy acceptance has then got to come up with a reason for why we responded to him by nailing him to a cross. Jesus got nailed not for urging us to consider the lilies,
but for calling us religious leaders whitewashed tombs,
and even worse.
Yet it is perhaps not such a mystery that we have attempted—scripture be damned—to produce a promiscuously permissive, user-friendly Jesus. After all, we are the folk who, having just lived through history’s most bloody century, kicked off a new one on a September morn by witnessing the killing scores of innocent civilians, then excusing another Bush war that slaughtered even more innocent civilians in Iraq, followed by a vigorous but ultimately futile Obama war in Afghanistan—all for the very best of democratic, national motives. Let’s simply say that we are not off to a particularly good start at presenting ourselves as good, kind, loving, progressive, and enlightened folk who have at last put all that primitive sin behind us.
I asked a recovering alcoholic in my congregation, Sam, why have you stopped coming to church?
He replied, Preacher, after you have been to AA, and taken the cure, and stared your demons in the face, and have to stand naked in front of twenty other drunks and tell every bad thing you have done or thought, and had to ask God and them to forgive you for being you, well, church just seems like such a trivial waste of time.
Church is about more than sin, but, by the grace of God, it ought not to be less than this.
It is of the prophetic ministry of the church to teach people that we are sinners. Think of church as lifelong learning in how to be a sinner. We may be conceived in sin, but we have no means of being cognizant of sin without the grace of God. The sins
of non-Christians tend to be rather paltry. For Christians, sin is not so much inherent in the human condition, though it is that; rather, sin is the problem we have between us and God. It is rebellion against our true Sovereign, an offense against the way the Creator has created us to be. The gospel story that we are forgiven-being-redeemed sinners is the means whereby we are able to be honest about the reality, complexity, persistence, and perversity of our sin.
Many sensitive and thoughtful people are aware of a general disease and disorder in human existence. Read this morning’s news, take a course in the history of Western civilization, focus upon the lifestyle of your brother-in-law, sit through a meeting of the United Methodist General Conference, and it will take little imagination to believe that we sin, whether or not you believe Jesus Christ is Lord. This generalized awareness of human finitude has little to do with the Christian notion of sin. Sin is more than taboo, dread, or shame. The Septuagint Bible’s translation of sin
by hamartia or missing the mark
only compounds the confusion. Sin is more than simply not quite living up to our human potential, stumbling, making mistakes, or being off the mark by a notch or two. When Christians refer to sin, we are describing more than the universal cultural phenomenon that human beings screw up and occasionally live as we ought not. Reinhold Niebuhr, citing Herbert Butterfield, is well known for his remark that the doctrine of original sin is the only empirically verifiable Christian doctrine. Even those who do not know that Jesus Christ is Lord know sin.
Niebuhr was wrong. Christian sin results not from our unhappiness with the limits of human existence and our inappropriate response to our discontented finitude (Niebuhr).³ Rather, Christian sin is derivative of and dependent upon what Christians know about God as revealed in Jesus Christ. We thought we were good people until we met Jesus. Jesus became for us not only a window into the heart of God, but also a mirror held up to us to show us the hard truth about ourselves.
One of the things that impressed me in my reading of the church’s classical accounts of the Seven Deadly Sins is the lack of biblical, theological grounding for these accounts, even when they are devised by so great a theologian as St. Thomas Aquinas. I believe that the best reasons why Christians should care about sin are theological rather than anthropological. Something is there in this God who came to us as Jesus Christ that makes us care about an otherwise rather commonplace and all-too-human inclination such as Lust, enables us to name sin’s peculiar offense, and enables us to regard that very inclination that contributes to the conception of human life as a matter that is deadly.
The church’s notion of sin, like that of Israel before it, is peculiar. It is derived not from speculation about the universal or general state of humanity, but rather from a peculiar, quite specific account of what God is up to in the world. What God is up to is named as Covenant, Torah, or, for Christians, the Cross of Jesus. If we attempt to begin in Genesis, with Adam and Eve and their alleged fall,
we will be mistaken, as Niebuhr was, into thinking of sin as some innate, indelible glitch in human nature. We must start with Exodus rather than Genesis, with Sinai rather than the Garden of Eden, with Calvary.
Only by getting the story straight—God’s story of redemption—are we able to tell our stories truthfully. Christians believe that the only means of understanding our sin with appropriate seriousness and without despair is our knowledge of a God who manages to be both gracious and truthful. Our human situation is not that we are all dressed up with a will to power and lust for transcendence with nowhere to go but frustrating finitude and failure. Our situation is that we view our lives through a set of lies about ourselves, false stories of who we are and who we are meant to be, never getting an accurate picture of ourselves. Through the lens
of the story of Jesus we are able to see ourselves truthfully and call things by their proper names. Only through the story of the cross of Christ do we see the utter depth and seriousness of our sin. Only through this story that combines cross and resurrection do we see the utter resourcefulness and love of a God who is determined to save sinners (Romans 3:21-25). Thus Barth could claim that There is no knowledge of sin except in the light of Christ’s cross.
⁴
In Hieronymus Bosch’s painting in the Prado, Madrid, painted around 1485, the Seven are depicted as spokes in a wheel, or rays of the sun. At the center is a large eye, the all-seeing God who knows all our secrets. Yet this is also the God whose nature is holiness and light, who makes the otherwise typical human inclinations to be called sin.
This book, and its reception by the church, has shown me that there is a willingness among many to face the truth about ourselves. While Sinning Like a Christian is a work of Christian anthropology—that is, an exploration of who we are as people—in order to be a faithful, peculiarly Christian account, it will need to be theological. We can honestly speak of sin only from the starting point of our redemption, otherwise our talk of sin will either lack seriousness or lead us into idle, perverse curiosity. I therefore agree with Baptist theologian James McClendon when he says that, in order to think rightly about the church’s received doctrine of sin,
it will be necessary to make a starting point, not in Adam’s (or Eve’s!) alleged act of sin on behalf of innocent babes and faithful believers born an æon later, but rather in the full faithfulness of Jesus of Nazareth, who resisted the temptation that confronted him all the way to his cross, who overcame the principalities and the powers of his day at the price of his life, and who, risen from the dead, summoned followers to abandon every sin and to follow in good faith the pioneer of their salvation. A doctrine of sin linked to this central narrative . . . [will not only show] the dark shadow sin casts . . . [but will also] hold up this divine faithfulness as the measure of every life, and it must confess that whatever falls short of, denies, or contradicts Christ’s faithfulness is sin."⁵
To witness to that peculiar story is to keep asking for forgiveness for the sin against God that we know and that we do not know. It is to beg, Sunday upon Sunday, for absolution from the sin that is the result of our insidious evil intent, and the sin that is the result simply of our being humans who sometimes screw up. It is to keep living in the faith that Jesus really does intend finally to have the world through the inept ministrations of a bunch of sinners like us.⁶ It is to sit lightly on our meager moral triumphs, knowing that they are tinged with more than a touch of sin, and at the same time to be gentle with our and our neighbor’s failures, not expecting too much from people like us. It is to have a sense of humor that is born out of our amazement that Jesus Christ died, not for national glory, or a two-car garage, or a fat pension (all those ideals to which we give our lives), but to save sinners, that is, people like us. Because of God’s peculiar thing for sinners, it is possible for us to confess our sin and still live in faith, hope, and love, knowing that even in our sin we are able to believe that we are more than conquerors through him who loved us
(Romans 8:37).
So consideration of sin, from a Christian point of view, ought always to begin with, and ought always to keep itself tethered to, the Christ who comes to seek and to save, to share meals with and to redeem, sinners. We also ought to keep in mind that consideration of sin puts us on risky turf. Theologian Karl Barth says that we must take care not to take sin too seriously. Satan must not be honored in any way, especially not honored with our sustained intellectual fascination. Sin is real, pervasive, deadly but finally defeated, says Barth. Christ’s Adversary still roams, and yet, after the Adversary’s defeat on Good Friday and Easter, the Adversary’s doom is sure. Thus Barth speaks of sin as Das Nichtige—nothingness, pointlessness. It would be theologically perverse to become more captivated and impressed with human sin than we are with divine redemption of our sin.
Self-deceit takes many forms. That I have even taken the trouble to contemplate the Seven Deadly Sins may be an indication that I am attempting to cover my own complicity in sin by taking the initiative, going on the offensive, in a perverse attempt to cover my own sins. I get the jump on you by so honestly naming your sin in order to deflect attention from mine. By naming your sloth, I protect my greed. I will attempt eloquently to argue that my sin in writing this book for money is not as morally meaningful as your failure to get out of bed, sit down at the computer, and write this book. The moral crusader is, at least in literature, frequently the notorious closet pervert.
As noted, Karl Barth warns us against becoming too fascinated with evil and giving evil too much consideration. My fascination with some forms of moral perversity could be, in itself, perverse. My focus on your lust enables me to be a profligate by proxy. Why should not the British have one of the lowest murder rates in the world? They have Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, P. D. James, and all the