SIN-PROGRESSION
St. Augustine
teaches us that there is in each man a Serpent, an Eve, and an Adam. Our senses
and natural propensities are the Serpent; the excitable desire is the Eve; and
reason is the Adam. Our nature tempts us perpetually; criminal desire is often
excited; but sin is not completed till reason consents.
Blaise Pascal
First we
practice sin, then defend it, then boast of it.
A Puritan Golden Treasury,
compiled by I.D.E. Thomas, by permission of Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA. 2000, p. 264.
Our minds are
mental greenhouses where unlawful thoughts, once planted, are nurtured and
watered before being transplanted into the real world of unlawful actions… These
actions are savored in the mind long before they are enjoyed in reality. The
thought life, then, is our first line of defense in the battle of self-control.
Jerry Bridges
The Practice of Godliness, NavPress, 1996, p.
138. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com.
All rights reserved.
No matter where
it ends, sin always begins when an evil thought is sown in the mind and heart.
John MacArthur
Matthew 1-7, Moody, 1985, p. 303.
Familiarity
with vice does not produce disgust, it produces attachment.
John MacArthur
Sermon, The
Character of a Healthy Church - Part 5, Titus 2:6-8.
Sin in the
mind goes to work in the emotions. That incites the will, which yields the act.
John MacArthur
The Battle for the Beginning, 2001, p. 208.
Imagination
is the hotbed where…sin is too often hatched. Guard your thoughts, and there
will be little fear about your actions.
J.C. Ryle
Thoughts for Young Men.
Great illnesses seldom attack the body,
without a previous train of premonitory symptoms. Great falls seldom happen to
a saint, without a previous course of secret backsliding. The church and the
world are sometimes shocked by the sudden misconduct of some great professor of
religion. Believers are discouraged and stumbled by it. The enemies of God rejoice
and blaspheme. But if the truth could be known, the explanation of such cases
would generally be found to have been private departure from God. Men fall in
private, long before they fall in public. The tree falls with a great crash,
but the secret decay which accounts for it, is often not discovered until it is
down on the ground.
J.C. Ryle
Commentary, Matthew 26.
Your life as
a Christian is seemingly full of Christ and there is no room for self, but an
aggressive sin comes in and wiggles his way in, crowding out Christ just a
little bit. You give place to this sin and soon another does the same thing. Sin
by sin, error by error, selfishness by selfishness, the backsliding continues
until you are virtually empty of Christ and full of self.
Richard Owen Roberts
Backsliding, International Awakening
Ministries, 1982, p. 16.
The first
degree [of temptation] relates to the mind – it is dragged away from its duties
by the deceit of sin. The second aims at the affections – they are enticed and
entangled. The third overcomes the will – the consent of the will is the
conception of actual sin. The fourth degree disrupts our way of life as sin is
born into it. The fifth is the flesh’s goal, a hardened life of sin, which
leads to eternal death (James 1:14-15).
Kris Lundgaard
The Enemy Within, 1998, P&R Publishing,
p. 58, Used by Permission.
Imagination is
a God-given gift; but if it is fed dirt by the eye, it will be dirty. All sin,
not least sexual sin, begins with the imagination. Therefore what feeds the
imagination is of maximum importance in the pursuit of kingdom righteousness
(Phil. 4:8).
D.A. Carson
Matthew, The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Zondervan,
1984, p. 151.
Sin needs
darkness to grow – it needs isolation disguised as “privacy,” and prideful
self-sufficiency disguised as “strength.” Once these conditions prevail, sin is
watered with the acid of shame, which then makes darkness appear more
attractive to the sinner than light.
Mark Dever and Paul
Alexander
Doing
Church Discipline, taken from The Deliberate Church, © 2005, Crossway Books, a
division of Good News Publishers, Wheaton Illinois 60187, p. 68, www.crosswaybooks.org.
[The progression of Saul's sins from 1 Samuel 13 are easily
documented]: First comes the tyranny of the urgent, the encroaching pressure from
surrounding circumstances. This is followed by the insecurity and self-doubt
arising from a lack of total reliance on God. Finally, there
follows the rebellion itself – the pitiful human attempt to take matters into
our own hands, which is tantamount to usurping, or at least presuming upon, the
authority of God.
Bill T. Arnold
1 and 2 Samuel, Zondervan, 2003, p. 201.
Sin aims
always at the utmost; every time it rises up to tempt or entice, might it have
its own course, it would go out the utmost sin in that kind. Every unclean
thought or glance would be adultery if it could; every covetous desire would be
oppression, every thought of unbelief would be atheism, might it grow to its
head.
John Owen
Temptation and Sin.