Cardinal Sins

No, not those ones!

When a church member was at my house last Saturday, he remarked upon the birds gathered at the feeder in my backyard and asked if we had ever had a cardinal.  Male cardinals are a vibrant crimson that stands out against the snow and are very territorial.  If there’s anything to the old wives tale that a cardinal is a visitor from beyond the grave, then we were terrorized by a red demon all last winter.

Believing his reflection was another male cardinal, he would repeatedly attack our windows all around our house, banging and flapping against the glass for hours on end, every day, all season long.  As I told this story, my brain, as it often does, went to the spiritual application:

We are indeed our own worst enemies!

I.  James 1:13-15.  No, the devil does not make you do it!  Satan certainly exploits each person’s weaknesses, but the evil desires we act on come from within us–and we choose to sin.  We wanted the cardinal to stop hitting our windows, and God wants us to stop sinning.

II.  Psalm 51:10-12.  Sin robs us of purity, steadfastness, God’s presence, and joy.  The cardinal could not have been that happy striking the windows over and over, and yet he never stopped.  God, who wants us to have life to the full (John 10:10) must think that of us when we fall repeatedly into the same sins.

III.  Romans 8:37-39.  Nothing outside of ourselves can separate us from God’s love.  That is for certain.  But, we can choose to turn away from that love (Hebrews 10:26-31).  While the male did his daily routine, never learning and never quite knocking himself out, the female cardinal would often watch from the branch of a nearby tree.  I couldn’t help but wonder what she must think of him.

They did not return with the snow, and although we do not miss the insistent thumps, I wonder if he has given up his cardinal sins or is just repeating them against someone else’s windows.

How about us?

 

 

 

God forgive our failure

God forgive our failure to speak to every person we meet about the gospel.

God forgive our lack of godliness and holiness and our love for the present world.

God forgive our selfish ambition and our pursuit of carnal passions.

God forgive our brotherly love grown cold.

God forgive our neglect of prayer and the Word.

God forgive our erratic discipleship, wobbling back and forth between submission to the Lord and our own stubborn wills.

God give us repentance from our willful ways, faith to follow in the darkest days, discipline to forge ahead, courage to speak truth and challenge error, love and fear for your holy name, devotion to the way of life eternal.

Israel and Judah’s Fall

  1. They Turned Away in Apostasy: Jeremiah 8:4-5
  2. They Turned Away from God’s Word: Jeremiah 8:9
  3. They Turned to Greed and Gain: Jeremiah 8:10
  4. They Turned to Deceit: Jeremiah 8:10-12

—John Henson, Dibrell Church of Christ, McMinnville, TN

The effects of sin and of holiness

  1. Sin wastes time. Holiness redeems the time, Eph 5.7-15; 1 Pet 1.14-17; 4.1-2, 7.
  2. Sin ruins relationships. Holiness establishes loving relationships, Col 3.12-13; 1 Pet 1.22; Jude 19-21.
  3. Sin leads to a frustrated life. Holiness leads to a life of peace, Phil 4.7-9; 1 Tim 2.2; Heb 12.14.
  4. Sin separates from God eternally. Holiness sees God, Rom 3.23; 6.23; Heb 12.14.
  5. Sin brings sadness, sooner or later. Holiness causes joy, from start to finish, Rom 14.17; 15.13; Jude 24.

Lord, show me the beam in my eye

Lord, show me the beam in my eye. Hold my tongue until I remove the shadow of sin. Show me my hypocrisy. Let me embrace the pain of repentance and feel the relief of confession. Make me fit to be your servant and my brother’s friend.