Sin as rule-breaking

Sin as rule-breaking, defines sin primarily as disobedience to God’s laws or commandments. The focus is placed on violating prescribed rules rather than on the deeper condition of the human heart and humanity’s relationship with God. In the Gospels, Jesus repeatedly challenges this way of understanding sin.

In Mark 3:1–6, Jesus is criticized for healing a man on the Sabbath, an act seen by religious leaders as a violation of sacred law. In Luke 11:37–41, Jesus and His disciples are condemned for not washing their hands before a meal—not a matter of hygiene as understood today, but a failure to observe ceremonial purity regulations. In John 8:3–11, religious authorities bring before Jesus a woman caught in adultery, testing whether He will uphold the law’s demand that she be stoned. Jesus refuses to reduce justice to rule enforcement and instead exposes the shared sinfulness of all present, declaring that only one without sin may cast the first stone.

When sin is viewed primarily as rule-breaking, God is often perceived chiefly as a lawgiver and judge. The emphasis shifts to authority, obedience, and punishment, with holiness expressed through enforcement rather than compassion and mercy. This way of thinking has caused deep pastoral harm. For example, a young couple returned to church after the stillbirth of their child and were asked, “What sin did you commit to cause this?” In that same church, on Mother’s Day, roses were distributed to every mother except the woman who had given birth to a stillborn child. In another congregation, a woman was removed from the choir because she had borne a child out of wedlock many years earlier. In yet another case, a deacon opposed offering financial assistance to a family member because she did not attend church and was not living as a Christian “should.” Sadly, these are not isolated stories.

Scripture consistently warns against interpreting suffering as direct punishment for personal sin. Jesus explicitly rejects this logic in John 9:1–3, when He says that a man’s blindness was not caused by his sin or that of his parents. In Luke 13:1–5, Jesus denies that those who suffered tragic deaths were worse sinners than others. The book of Job stands as a powerful witness against the assumption that suffering can be explained by moral failure (Job 1–2; 42:7).

Sin understood solely as rule-breaking sees humanity primarily as lawbreakers and emphasizes individual actions. Moral failure is cataloged according to what is permitted and what is forbidden. In contrast, the broader witness of Christian theology understands sin as a condition of alienation from God, a distortion of God’s good creation, and a brokenness that affects individuals, communities, and systems (Genesis 3; Romans 3:23; Romans 8:20–22). From this perspective, sinful actions are symptoms of a deeper disorder rather than the root problem itself.

When sin is reduced to rule-breaking, faith can devolve into moral policing—monitoring behavior rather than nurturing repentance, healing, and transformation. This mindset appears in cultural slogans such as “Keep Christ in Christmas,” in efforts to impose religious symbols through law, and in claims that natural disasters—such as hurricanes striking New Orleans—are acts of divine judgment for perceived moral failings. Such interpretations ignore the biblical call to humility, compassion, and lament (Micah 6:8; Matthew 9:13; James 2:13).

The gospel calls the church not to enforce holiness through condemnation, but to participate in God’s work of reconciliation, restoration, and love (2 Corinthians 5:18–19; Colossians 1:19–20).

God’s Goodness, Our Sin, and the Gift of Gratitude

A Reflection by Roy Pearson

Scripture Focus:
“For everything created by God is good, and nothing is to be rejected if it is received with thanksgiving, for it is made holy by the word of God and prayer.” — 1 Timothy 4:4–5
“For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” — Romans 3:23


Seeing God’s Goodness in Creation

Paul reminds us in 1 Timothy 4:4–5 that everything God created is inherently good. This includes the food we eat, the relationships we cherish, and the world around us. False teachers in Timothy’s time were promoting abstinence and legalistic restrictions, claiming that avoiding certain things would make people more spiritual. Paul counters that spirituality is not about rejecting God’s creation, but about receiving it with thanksgiving and allowing it to be sanctified through prayer and God’s Word.


The Reality of Sin

Romans 3:23 brings balance to this perspective: “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” While creation itself is good, humankind has been tainted by sin. Sin does not make God’s gifts evil, but it distorts how we perceive and use them. Food, marriage, and our bodies remain good, but selfishness, greed, and lust twist them into something harmful.


Christ Restores and Redeems

The good news is that through Jesus, what sin has distorted can be restored. Romans 3:24 reminds us that all who trust in Christ are justified freely by His grace. Through Him, we are empowered to receive God’s gifts rightly, transforming ordinary life into acts of worship. Gratitude and prayer become tools that sanctify our daily lives.


Living in Gratitude

Paul’s message is simple but profound:

  • Reject legalism, embrace gratitude. Do not see God’s creation as inherently evil or lesser; it is a reflection of His goodness.
  • Sanctify the everyday. Meals, relationships, and work can all become holy when dedicated to God in prayer.
  • Trust Christ for restoration. Sin may have distorted our hearts, but His grace restores our capacity to enjoy and honor God’s gifts.

Reflection Prayer

Lord, You made everything good, yet my sin has often kept me from seeing and using Your gifts rightly. Forgive me for the ways I have fallen short. Through Jesus, restore my heart so that I may receive all things with gratitude and holiness. Let my life reflect Your goodness and grace. Amen.

Empathy Is Not a Sin: A Biblical Response

In recent years, a curious argument has emerged in certain Christian circles: that empathy itself may be a kind of sin. Voices like Allie Beth Stuckey, Joe Rigney, Pete Hegseth, and J. D. Vance warn that empathy can cloud our judgment, compromise our convictions, and even lead us into affirming sin. They argue that empathy must be subordinated to truth and law, lest it pull us away from obedience to God.

But is empathy really the problem? Or have we misunderstood how sin, law, and grace actually work in the Christian life?


Sin, Law, and Grace

The critics of empathy define sin primarily as a failure to obey God’s law. By that reasoning, even sympathizing with someone’s struggle could become sinful if it risks validating their choices. The law becomes the unbending measure of truth, and grace is allowed only insofar as it calls people back to that law.

Yet when we turn to Scripture, we see something richer. The law itself is summed up in love: “Love your neighbor as yourself” (Lev. 19:18, Gal. 5:14). Sin, in biblical terms, is not just rule-breaking—it is hardness of heart, a failure to love God and neighbor. And grace is God’s unmerited love, which meets us in our weakness and transforms us.

Empathy—truly entering another’s joys and sorrows—is not opposed to law or truth. It is one of the ways grace takes on flesh in human life.


Jesus and Empathy

Jesus did not fear empathy. He wept at the tomb of Lazarus (John 11:35). He felt compassion on the crowds who were hungry and lost (Mark 6:34). He told the parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25–37), showing that true obedience to God’s commands is found not in avoiding the broken, but in drawing near with compassion. On the cross, He entered fully into human suffering—the ultimate act of empathy.

When Jesus said to the woman caught in adultery, “Neither do I condemn you. Go and sin no more” (John 8:11), He offered both empathy and truth. Grace came first; the call to transformation followed.


Paul and the Early Church

Paul commands Christians: “Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep” (Rom. 12:15). “Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ” (Gal. 6:2). The law of Christ is not detached from empathy—it is fulfilled through it. Truth matters, yes, but Paul insists it must always be spoken “in love” (Eph. 4:15).


The Prophets and Compassion

The prophets consistently warn against legalism without compassion. Amos thundered: “I hate, I despise your feasts … let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream” (Amos 5:21, 24). Micah sums it up: “Do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with your God” (Mic. 6:8). Empathy is written into the DNA of biblical justice.


Where the Critics Go Wrong

The modern fear of empathy rests on a half-truth: yes, compassion can be manipulated if it is divorced from discernment. But to brand empathy itself as sinful is to cut the heart out of the gospel. It risks making us like the Pharisees—so protective of the law that we miss the law’s fulfillment in love.

Jesus shows us that empathy is not indulgence; it is incarnation. It is how grace meets sin, how law is fulfilled in love, how truth is spoken in tears as well as words.


Conclusion: The Power of Christlike Empathy

Empathy is not a sin. It is the way of Christ. It is how we live out the command to love our neighbors, how we embody grace, and how we witness to the world that God’s truth is never cold and distant but always warm with compassion.

As Paul reminds us: “The entire law is fulfilled in keeping this one command: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’” (Gal. 5:14). To love as Jesus loved is to enter into the lives of others with empathy, grace, and truth held together.


Pilgrim Reflection: On this winding path of faith, may we resist the temptation to trade compassion for control. Empathy is not our enemy—it is the very heart of Christ beating within us.