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Sin
is bad but covering sin is even worse. If deliberate sin is like putting
oneself in jail then covering such sin is like throwing away the key.
The covered sin, the one a man attempts to hide and refuses to confess,
shuts one off from spiritual prosperity and divine mercy. “He that
covereth his sin shall not prosper, but whoso confesseth and forsaketh
sin shall have mercy” (Prov. 28:13). There can be no trading on God’s
mercy because it does not ignore sin. It is not a question of whether
His mercy saves the sinner; but whether the sinner will allow it
by confessing and forsaking his sins. In covering sins the sinner spurns
the mercy through which forgiveness and salvation are possible. If a
merciful God provides the feast, sets the table, and invites all to
partake, then how can He be faulted by those who choose to starve
themselves? No, “the Lord’s hand is not shortened, that it cannot
save”, neither can limitations be placed on his mercy —except by the
rebellious sinner w h o refuses it. What sin could be more pernicious
than the one a man will not acknowledge nor repent of? Little wonder God
says such an one “shall not prosper.”
But
not only does the covering of sin preclude forgiveness, it easily
becomes the launching-pad for yet other sins. Nothing encourages sin
like sin. Lies and deceitfulness are popular camouflage for hiding evil.
This in turn leads to the development of a compromising attitude toward
all sin, both in self and others. The unwholesome attitude that permits
one sin will soon permit another. Why? Because it involves more than one’s
disposition toward a certain unlawful act; it involves his attitude
toward God
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Himself —the One whose law is violated! When tempted
by Potiphar’s wife Joseph reminds her of his obligations to his master
then asks, “how then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against
God?” (Gen. 39:9) To wrong his master was bad; to wrong God was worse.
How men need Joseph’s perspective of sin —and regard for God.
Ungodliness (Gr.asebeia) is essentially a wrong attitude toward God, the
expression of which is lawlessness (Gr. anomia) which is sin, 2 Jn. 3:4.
(See Vine’s on “ungodliness”) In view of this, no sin can be
considered as isolated or insignificant. (Notice carefully Jas. 2:10-11
in this connection, especially “For He that said...“, v.11) One just
as well talk about the size of God as to make distinctions in “sizes”
of sins for the deliberate practice of sin constitutes a rejection of
Him and His law (1 Jn. 3:4; 1 Thess. 4:8). It is not difficult to
understand why no man can prosper while perpetuating disrespect for God
in the covering of sins.
Finally,
and logically, the practice of covering sins has the effect of hardening
the heart (Heb. 3:13). How could it be otherwise when one persists in
violating a truth-trained conscience? Who could court such ungodliness
without a corresponding adverse effect on the inner man? “Can a man
take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burned?” (Prov. 6:27)
Surely anything that can so harden a man’s heart while causing him to
dishonor God and shun His mercy is a dangerous sin. It may be that the
worst sin is to hide sin. Dan S. Shipley
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