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AbideWithMe
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Along with dronald’s posts, the middle paragraph here is a concise description of what Evangelicals typically have in mind if they talk about all sins being equal.Back in the day when I was an evangelical I would have quoted James 2:10: “For whoever keeps the whole law but fails in one point has become guilty of all of it.”
The underlying principle being that our sinful actions are just a symptom of a deeper problem–the sin nature. And the sin nature is the same in every person. Murder, lying, stealing, whatever–it all reveals the same basic heart problem–rebellion against God.
Or something like that. (It’s been a while since I’ve thought in these terms!)
Being a lifelong Evangelical myself, I’ve never come across any Evangelical who means to be saying that in all ways a sin such as stealing office supplies from an employer (which is indeed a sin against charity and a failure of consideration, and as such is a symptom of our deeper tendency towards selfishness) is as serious a sin as the premeditated murder of a robbery victim. Both sins are symptoms of a deeper sickness that, to an Evangelical, remind us that we need a Savior to heal and re-create us, and that we are not called to be self-made men when it comes to Christ-likeness. To borrow a line from an old CCM song, “In the Light”, as an Evangelical, my sins of whatever sort “only serve to confirm my suspicions that I’m still a man in need of a Savior.”
Although I don’t think I’d use the phrase “all sins are equal”, in the teaching I’ve heard as an Evangelical and from self reflection, there’s an Evangelical emphasis on all sins being connected and closely related, so that in seeing someone else’s gross sins we shouldn’t feel superior for not having committed flagrant sins. But rather we should realize our own darker temptations, though better hidden and more respectable-looking, are kith and kin to the grosser sins: “There but for the grace of God go I.”