Religious sin is the only sin Jesus publicly confronted. The religious
variety of the forbidden fruit is the most addictive and deceptive variety.
Instead of acknowledging that judging others is prohibited, religious idolatry
embraces the knowledge of good and evil as divinely sanctioned and mandated. It
gives the illusion of being on God’s side even while it destroys life and
hardens people in direct opposition to God.
Religious sin is the most destructive kind of sickness, for it masquerades as
and feeds off the illusion of health. Far from being open to a cure, this kind
of sickness thrives on the illusion that it is the epitome of health. By its
very nature it resists soft correction. Indeed, because it gets life from the
rightness of its beliefs and behavior rather than from love, religious sin tends
to construe all compassion, accommodation, and unconditional acceptance as
compromise. People afflicted with religious sin thus tend to disdain
compassionate love, even if it is extended toward them. Hence, Jesus’ approach
to leaders who fed off this illusion could not be to gently offer them a cure.
Rather, for their sake and the sake of those who blindly followed them, he had
to publicly expose their sickness.
What does this mean for the church? The church is called to be the corporate
body of Christ that unconditionally loves and embraces all people, regardless of
their sin. The only exception to this otherwise unconditional embrace is the sin
Jesus confronted in the religious leadership of his day. While all sin is equal
in the sense that it separates us from God, sins differ in terms of their impact
on people and thus differ in how they need to be dealt with. Religious sin is
unique in that it is the only sin that can keep a community from fulfilling the
commission to unconditionally love and embrace everyone.
When religious sin infects people, they feed off their judgment rather than
love. Where this diabolic delusion is in place in leadership, the kingdom of God
is resisted. God’s will can’t be done “on earth as it is in heaven” (Matt.
6:10), for those enslaved to this delusion think they are bringing the kingdom
in the very act of preaching their delusion. They preach the fall and think it
is salvation. In the name of opening the kingdom, they “lock people out of the
kingdom” (Matt. 23:13).
For this reason, religious sin sabotages the whole enterprise of the church
when it is found in leadership. It prevents the church from manifesting the
loving unity of the Trinity, which is God’s main witness to the world. When a
people—especially leaders—gets life from the rightness of their belief and
behavior, they will invariably get life by attacking and/or separating from
others who don’t see things exactly as they do.
Moreover, since idols never satisfy the hunger that drives us to them,
leaders who serve an idol of religion tend to believe they are serving the
interest of the kingdom by splitting into increasingly well-defined and
ever-shrinking groups.
Hence, while most of the time love requires that we hide the sins of others,
the sin of leaders who get life from their religion at the expense of others
must sometimes be confronted and exposed. It may be the only hope those who are
enslaved to this sin have of recognizing it as sin. It may also be the only way
of protecting people who would follow these leaders as well as others who might
be harmed by these leaders. Precisely to ensure that it remains a community
where outrageous love flows, the church must in love be willing to aggressively
confront leaders who are enslaved and enslave others to religious idolatry.
—Adapted from Repenting of Religion, pages 203-205
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