The only thing that stands between us and the refreshment of repentance is proper humility.
This idea stood out to me as I considered the nature of sin this morning on the drive into school with my four-year-old. It had been a challenging morning for him, and he was feeling sad. I suspected it may have had to do with shame he was holding over a few rebellious events that had taken place over the course of the morning. I said a prayer for God to expose the root of his heaviness and replace it with his the organic joy that comes from Jesus’ truth.
Coming off of a reading of Leviticus 4 the night before, the idea of intentional versus unintentional sin was ringing in my mind. While this topic—at surface value—may appear as one that would add to the heaviness of a situation, upon deeper consideration, there are a few truths that I believed would have the opposite impact: heart-lifting encouragement.
One of those most wonderful things about interacting with a young child is that it provides added incentive to highlight the bright and beautiful side of everyday spiritual truths. The varied nature of our sin is no different.
As I explained the dual-nature of our sin to my tear-stricken four-year-old, the cross remained in crucially-clear view. I let my little buddy know that there are two kinds of sin that Jesus forgives us for: intentional sin (like when a person might hit their brother for example, on purpose) and unintentional sin (like when a person is simply too weak in the faculties of emotional regulation to walk in immediate obedience). While intentional sin is more obvious to recognize and, perhaps, may seem simpler to repent of, the Bible makes no mistake that unintentional sin is just-as-much sin.
Cue the silver lining…