Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Sins, However Great and Detestable, Seem Trivial When We are Accustomed to Them. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
80.—Sins, However Great and Detestable, Seem Trivial When We are
Accustomed to Them.
Add to this, that sins, however
great and detestable they may be, are looked upon as trivial, or as
not sins at all, when men get accustomed to them; and so far does
this go, that such sins are not only not concealed, but are boasted
of, and published far and wide; and thus, as it is written, “The
wicked boasteth of his heart’s desire, and blesseth the covetous,
whom the Lord abhorreth.”1260 Iniquity of this kind is in
Scripture called a cry. You have an instance in the prophet
Isaiah, in the case of the evil vineyard: “He looked for
judgment, but behold oppression; for righteousness, but behold a
cry.”1261 Whence
also the expression in Genesis: “The cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is
great,”1262 because in
these cities crimes were not only not punished, but were openly
committed, as if under the protection of the law. And so in our own
times: many forms of sin, though not just the sameas those of Sodom
and Gomorrah, are now so openly and habitually practised, that not
only dare we not excommunicate a layman, we dare not even degrade a
clergyman, for the commission of them. So that when, a few years
ago, I was expounding the Epistle to the Galatians, in commenting
on that very place where the apostle says, “I am afraid of you,
lest I have bestowed labor upon you in vain,” I was compelled to
exclaim, “Woe to the sins of men! for it is only when we are not
accustomed to them that we shrink from them: when once we are
accustomed to them, though the blood of the Son of God was poured
out to wash them away, though they are so great that the kingdom of
God is wholly shut against them, constant familiarity leads to the
toleration of them all, and habitual toleration leads to the
practice of many of them. And grant, O Lord, that we may not come
to practise all that we have not the power to hinder.” But I
shall see whether the extravagance of grief did not betray me into
rashness of speech.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|