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Our Sin Problem

Man has a sin problem. Our sins separate us from God.

Isaiah 59:2, "But your iniquities have separated you from your God; and your sins have hidden His face from you, so that he will not hear". It is our sins that have caused the separation.

In Romans 3:23, we are told, "For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God".
There is not an accountable person living or who has ever lived (except our Lord), who can say that he has never sinned.  We are all in need of salvation.

1 John 1:8 says, "If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us".  The easiest person to deceive is ourselves.  We rationalize away what God says when we say we have not sinned.  God says that man has a sin problem, but man says that he does not.  Who is right and what are we doing to God when we say that we have no sin?  Continuing our reading in 1 John 1:10, "If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us."  God is always right when He tells us that we have all sinned.

In Romans 6:23 we read, "For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life in Jesus Christ our Lord".  Death is a separation.  When we die physically, our body is placed into the grave, but our spirit is separated from our dead body and goes back to God, who gave it.  We are told in Ecclesiastes 12:7, "Then the dust will return to the earth as it was, and the spirit will return to God who gave it".  In physical death, there is a separation between our body and our soul.

In Romans 6:23, we saw that, "For the wages of sin is death".  This is a spiritual death, which is eternal separation from God for those who are lost.  The majority of people will experience spiritual death and be separated from God.  They cannot go and be with God in Heaven.  This leaves only one place for them to go, Hell.  We see Hell spoken of as the second death in Revelation 21:8, "the lake which burns with fire and brimstone: which is the second death"The second death is eternal separation from God.

Questions

Our Sin Problem
(click on the button of the answer of your choice)

1)  (Isaiah 59:2) What separates us from God?

       A great space.

       Our goodness.

       Our sins and iniquities.


2) If we stay in our sins, God will still hear us.


3)  (1 John 1:8) If we say we have no sin

       We are deceiving ourselves.

       We are correct.

       We don't really know for sure.


4) If we say we have never sinned we are telling the truth.


5)  (Romans 3:23) How many accountable people have sinned?

       Few.

       Many.

       All.


6) God knows when we sin.


7)  (Ecclesiastes 12:7) In physical death

       Our soul is separated from the body.

       Both our soul and body go into the grave.

       Both our soul and body cease to exist.


8) In death our soul ceases to exist.


9)  (Romans 6:23) If we die with our sins

       We will have a second chance in purgatory.

       We will be eternally separated from God (spiritual death).

      We will cease to exist.


10) If we are separated from God, we are lost.


11)  (Revelation 21:8) The second death

       Is when we die physically.

       Will never happen.

       Is Hell which is the lake of fire and brimstone.


12) If we do not go to Heaven we will go to Hell.

The Great Commission

Acts Of The Apostles

After the death of Christ the disciples were well-nigh overcome by discouragement. Their Master had been rejected, condemned, and crucified. The priests and rulers had declared scornfully, "He saved others; Himself He cannot save. If He be the King of Israel, let Him now come down from the cross, and we will believe Him." Matthew 27:42. The sun of the disciples' hope had set, and night settled down upon their hearts. Often they repeated the words, "We trusted that it had been He which should have redeemed Israel." Luke 24:21. Lonely and sick at heart, they remembered His words, "If they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the dry?" Luke 23:31.

Jesus had several times attempted to open the future to His disciples, but they had not cared to think about what He said. Because of this His death had come to them as a surprise; and afterward, as they reviewed the past and saw the result of their unbelief, they were filled with sorrow.

When Christ was crucified, they did not believe that He would rise. He had stated plainly that He was to rise on the third day, but they were perplexed to know what He meant. This lack of comprehension left them at the time of His death in utter hopelessness. They were bitterly disappointed. Their faith did not penetrate beyond the shadow that Satan had cast athwart their horizon. All seemed vague and mysterious to them. If they had believed the Saviour's words, how much sorrow they might have been spared!

Crushed by despondency, grief, and despair, the disciples met together in the upper chamber, and closed and fastened the doors, fearing that the fate of their beloved Teacher might be theirs. It was here that the Saviour, after His resurrection, appeared to them.

For forty days Christ remained on the earth, preparing the disciples for the work before them and explaining that which heretofore they had been unable to comprehend. He spoke of the prophecies concerning His advent, His rejection by the Jews, and His death, showing that every specification of these prophecies had been fulfilled. He told them that they were to regard this fulfillment of prophecy as an assurance of the power that would attend them in their future labors. "Then opened He their understanding," we read, "that they might understand the Scriptures, and said unto them, Thus it is written, and thus it behooved Christ to suffer, and to rise from the dead the third day: and that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem."

And He added, "Ye are witnesses of these things." Luke 24:45-48.

During these days that Christ spent with His disciples, they gained a new experience. As they heard their beloved Master explaining the Scriptures in the light of all that had happened, their faith in Him was fully established. They reached the place where they could say, "I know whom I have believed." 2 Timothy 1:12. They began to realize the nature and extent of their work, to see that they were to proclaim to the world the truths entrusted to them. The events of Christ's life, His death and resurrection, the prophecies pointing to these events, the mysteries of the plan of salvation, the power of Jesus for the remission of sins--to all these things they had been witnesses, and they were to make them known to the world. They were to proclaim the gospel of peace and salvation through repentance and the power of the Saviour.

Before ascending to heaven, Christ gave His disciples their commission. He told them that they were to be the executors of the will in which He bequeathed to the world the treasures of eternal life. You have been witnesses of My life of sacrifice in behalf of the world, He said to them. You have seen My labors for Israel. And although My people would not come to Me that they might have life, although priests and rulers have done unto Me as they listed, although they have rejected Me, they shall have still another opportunity of accepting the Son of God. You have seen that all who come to Me confessing their sins, I freely receive.

"Acts Of The Apostles, pages 25 - 28"