“Our
Toleration of Evil”
Prov. 28:13-14; 3:12; 1 Pet. 1:14-15; Isa. 59:1-2
SUBJECT: CORRECTION ADVERSITY COMPELS US TO MAKE
THEME: Examine Your Attitude Toward Evil and Sin When Trouble Invades Your Life.
RELEVANCY: God Desires for Us to Correct Our Attitude
Toward Evil and Turn Away from the Practices of Sin. Sin usually leads
to even more sin; it is certain that the “hardened heart shall fall into mischief.” God desires to compel all of us to engage
in periodic self-examination so we may face up to our own sin and to do the
difficult work of changing our beliefs
and our behavior. Once more we want
to encourage you to, look at your own heart and life to see what you may need
to correct when adversity comes your way. Our goal is to live in total harmony
with what Jesus would believe and do.
INTRODUCTION:
The Scriptures tell us, God is a God of absolutes. We are either evil or righteous, based upon what we have decided to do in response to Jesus Christ and His shed blood on the cross. If we accept that what Jesus did on the cross was for us and for the remission of our sins, and we receive Him as our Savior, then we move from the classification of sinner to the classification of saved.
Sin is the Worldwide
separation of people from God.
Romans 3:9-10, What then? are we better than they? No, in no wise: for we have before proved both Jews and Gentiles, that they are all under sin; [10] As it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one:
Paul uses these verses to show that humanity in general, in its
present sinful condition, is unacceptable before God.
Have you ever thought to
yourself, ‘Well, I'm not too bad.’ I'm a pretty good person?
Have you ever lied? Have you
ever hurt someone's feelings by your words or tone of voice?
Are you bitter toward
anyone? Do you become angry with those who strongly disagree with you?
The Bible tells us the world stands silent and accountable before almighty God. No excuses or arguments are left. Have you reached the point with God where you are ready to hang up your defenses and await his decision? If you haven't, stop now and admit your sin to him.
MESSAGE:
WHY DO WE CARELESSLY
TOLERATE SIN AND EVIL?
We answer this question by asking another one. What does the Bible say about God's holiness? Our view of sin is directly related to our view of God’s perfect holiness. With a low opinion of God’s holiness we tolerate and harbor more sinful attitudes and actions. When we have a high admiration for God’s holiness, we are far less passive regarding our sin. The following are some principles that help us quickly grasp the infinite holiness of God.
A. WE DISMISSED GOD’S HOLINESS WHICH IS BEYOND COMPARISON.
1 Peter 1:14-15, As obedient children, not fashioning yourselves according to the former lusts in your ignorance: [15] But as he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation;
Being holy in the sense of superior moral qualities and possessing certain essentially divine qualities in contrast with what is human—‘holy, pure, divine.’[1]
We are called to abandon our former, sinful lifestyles and align our daily behavior with the perfect holiness of God. This radical transformation as followers of Christ replaces worldly ignorance with active obedience and moral purity.
The moral excellence of God that unifies his attributes and is expressed through his actions, setting him apart from all others. Believers are called to be holy as God is holy. —Systematic Theology
1. God Sets the Standard of Morality.
The God of Israel and of the Christian churches is holy—he sets the standard for morality.
The believers’ living hope based on their new birth should lead to a lifestyle of holiness. Those chosen for new birth are also called to be holy. Peter exhorted his readers to prepare to meet the challenge of obedience by adopting a new mind-set. The price paid for a believer’s redemption calls for reverence and obedience. Obedience involves purifying oneself and practicing holy living, while offering spiritual sacrifices as a royal priest.[2]
Unlike the Roman and Greek gods, God is not warlike, adulterous, or spiteful. These ancient gods acted like spoiled, jealous, and powerful humans; many ancient religions featured immoral and unethical gods and goddesses. They supposedly had superpowers but also bad habits like stealing, lying, and cheating. Unlike the gods of the pagan cults popular in the first century, Jehovah is not bloodthirsty or promiscuous. He is a God of mercy and justice who cares personally for each of his followers. Our holy God expects us to imitate him by following his high moral standards. Like him, we should be both merciful and just; like him, we should sacrifice ourselves for others.
2. God's Holiness Is Our Universal
Standard for Pure Living.
God is holy; He is utterly unique, distinct from all of creation, and entirely perfect in moral purity. It is the defining characteristic of His nature; His absolute purity—He is completely unstained by sin or evil. There is no darkness or falsehood in his thoughts, statements, and activities—He is perfectly good and just.
After people commit their lives to Christ, they usually still feel
a pull back to their old ways. Peter tells us to be like our heavenly Father --
holy in everything we do. Holiness for us means being totally devoted or
dedicated to God, set aside for his special use, and set apart from sin and its
influence. Rev. 15:4, says,
“Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? for thou only art holy: for all nations shall come and worship before thee; for thy judgments are made manifest.”
We’re to be set apart and different, not blending in with the crowd, yet not being different just for the sake of being different. What makes us different is having God’s qualities in our life. Our focus and priorities must be his. All this is in direct contrast to our old ways (1Pet. 1:14). We cannot become holy on our own, but God gives us his Holy Spirit to help us obey and to give us power to overcome sin. Don't use the excuse that you can't help slipping into sin. Call on God's power to free you from sin’s grip.
Commonly God’s standard of holiness is trumped by the “new morality” which is a wide-ranging cultural and ethical shift from traditional, Bible-based absolute moral frameworks toward bases centered on individual self-fulfillment, situational ethics, and bodily self-government. That is moving in favor of flexible, context-driven ethical notions—from God-centered to human-centered ideas! (See Christianity Today). These modern principles emphasize living an authentic, personally rewarding life, prioritizing happiness and emotional well-being over self-denial. Current morality relies increasingly on psychological and observed characterizations of right and wrong. It is closely tied to required concerns for others' welfare, fairness, and justice, driven by secular humanist philosophies rather than traditional biblical views. Our society is presently feeling the woes of that mistake!
B. WE DISMISSED GOD’S HOLINESS WHICH CANNOT ALLOW
SIN.
Isaiah 59:1-2, Behold, the Lord's hand is not shortened, that it cannot save; neither his ear heavy, that it cannot hear: [2] But your iniquities have separated between you and your God, and your sins have hid his face from you, that he will not hear.
God is always willing and able to save His people, but our willful sins create a spiritual barrier. Instead of God losing His power or ignoring prayers, our iniquity breaks fellowship, causing Him to withhold His deliverance until repentance occurs.
There is widespread perversion of justice and dishonesty. People conceive evil and bring forth crime. Their activities are as dangerous as vipers’ eggs and as useless as a spider’s web. Sin controls every area of their lives—what they do, where they go, what they think. They care nothing for peace and justice, preferring what is crooked. What was true of Israel is also true of the entire human race (Rom. 3:15–17).[3]
God's inability to tolerate sin is mentioned in Habakkuk 1:13, saying. "Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil, and canst not look on iniquity..."
Sin prevents prayer from being answered (cf. Ps. 66:18). Those sins included murder, lying, injustice (cf. Isa. 59:9, 11, 14–15), and planning evil (vv. 3–4). Their actions were like those of deadly poisonous snakes (vipers and an adder), for they were harming each other. [4]
God is absolutely holy. In fact, his moral perfection is so vast that He cannot look upon sin with approval or tolerate its presence. Psalm 5:4, says, “For thou art not a God that hath pleasure in wickedness: neither shall evil dwell with thee.” This embraces the concept of God’s zero-tolerance policy toward sin and wickedness.
1. There Is a Colossal Problem with All of Us Before a Perfect God—our sins have cut us off from any relationship with Him. Because of our sinful attitudes and actions, he has completely turned away from us and utterly refuses to listen.
2. Sin Offends Our Holy God and Separates Us from Him. Because God is holy, he cannot ignore, excuse, or tolerate sin as though it didn't matter. Sin cuts people off from him, forming a wall to isolate God from the people he loves.
No wonder this long list of wretched sins makes God angry and forces him to look the other way. People who die with their life of sin unforgiven separate themselves eternally from God. God wants them to live with him forever, but he cannot take them into his holy presence unless their sin is removed. Have you confessed your sin to God, allowing him to remove it? The Lord can save you if you turn to him.
3. Beloved, this is God’s Second Correction—the Purging Away of Sin from Our Lives. Proverbs 28:13, He that covereth his sins shall not prosper: but whoso confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy.
There is a stark contrast between two responses to sin—concealment versus confession—and their ultimate outcomes.
- “Covereth” (this
is hiding/excusing sin). Trying to hide, deny, or justify wrongdoings. God
warns that this approach “shall
not prosper”. Hiding sin requires
constant energy, leads to inner turmoil, and ultimately blocks spiritual
success or peace.
- “Confesseth” (relates
to admitting/owning our sin). Honestly acknowledging faults to God and
taking responsibility for those wrong actions.
- “Forsaketh” (is turning
away from sinful behavior). True repentance involves not just
saying sorry, but actively abandoning or changing that sinful behavior.
- “Mercy” (refers
to God’s forgiveness and compassion). The reward for complete repentance
is God's grace, pardon, and compassion.
1)
Choose
Transparency with God over denial. God already sees everything, so attempting
to hide sin is foolish. Admitting fault brings peace and breaks the hold that
the secret has on your life.
2)
Engage
the two-step path to forgiveness. Genuine repentance requires both confession
(admitting it) and forsaking (turning away from it).
3) Take the biblical promise to heart. Align yourself with 1 John 1:9, where God promises that if we confess our sins, He is “faithful and just to forgive us”.
Admitting our faults and actively turning away from these behaviors are the only path to forgiveness and grace. Remember God will never admit a sinful, arrogant soul, into his kingdom. But if we confess our sin, with a broken heart, forsake every evil way, and we give proof that we are serious with God. The sincerity of the confession is proved by our forsaking sins (Job 34:31-32). Then mercy is guaranteed to such a soul (Ps 32:5; 1 John 1:8-10).
4. God deals with
our Shame effectively in Salvation!
These two previous discussions bring us to the unavoidable subject of shame. This is a painful relational consequence of sin that causes a person to feel worthless, exposed, and alienated from God and others. While guilt is about breaking a rule, shame is about feeling that your core identity is irreparably flawed—a valid moral conviction.
Spiritually, shame is often viewed as a heavy burden on the soul rather than a mere character flaw. It is defined as an internalizing force that attacks your core identity, whispering that your whole self is flawed and unworthy of love.—Unknown
Shame causes individuals to hide their authentic selves from God and from their community (like Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden—Gen. 3:7-10). It emerged immediately after the Fall when Adam and Eve realized their nakedness, felt exposed, and hid from God. Again, shame is not just an internal feeling; it is a degraded, defeated, or outcast state within a community (e.g., poverty, barrenness, or disease). Experiencing brief shame can motivate a straying believer to repent and return to godly standards.
Practice God's Solution for Shame!
God seeks to remove our shame. Through Christ, God replaces our disgrace with
honor, grace, and a new identity.
- Isaiah 54:4: Assures us
we will no longer remember the shame of our youth.
- Romans 10:11: says, “For the scripture saith, Whosoever
believeth on him shall not be ashamed”
(this persistent theme is also promised in 1 Peter 2:6).
- Hebrews 12:2: Highlights that Jesus “who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God” to secure victory over sin and restore us to fellowship with God.
Guilt is judicial in character; shame is relational. Though
related to guilt, shame emphasizes sin's effect on self-identity. Sinful human
beings are traumatized before a holy God, exposed for failure to live up to
God's glorious moral purpose. The first response of Adam and Eve to their
sinful condition was to hide from God, and consequently from one another (Gen
3:7-8; 2:25). Christ's unhindered openness to the Father was both a model
for life and the means of removing humanity's shame. Christian self-identity is
transformed "in him."
When one confesses Christ and openly rebels against him, however,
the work of Christ is publicly shamed (Heb 6:6). Christians must be diligent to
renounce shameful behavior, though tempting because of its hidden character (2
Cor 4:2).
Shame is a godly motivator. A virtuous life shames the ungodly,
providing a context for evangelism (Titus 2:8; 1 Peter 3:16). A believer's
shame for past sin is a spur to forsake sinning (Rom 6:21), to renounce
disobedience (2 Thess 3:14), and to minister the gospel (2 Cor 4:2).
Shameless people flaunt their unholiness, calloused to God (Zep
3:5) and glorying in their shame (Php 3:19). Yet no one is shameless
ultimately. "Shameless Acts" receive the judgment inherent in the act
(Rom 1:27). Also, at the final judgment the nakedness of those not clothed with
Christ' righteousness will be exposed (Rev 3:18; 16:15).—Bradford A.
Mullen
[1]
Johannes P. Louw and Eugene Albert Nida, Greek-English
Lexicon of the New Testament: Based on Semantic Domains (New
York: United Bible Societies, 1996), 744.
[2]
Roger M. Raymer, “1 Peter,” in The
Bible Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the Scriptures, ed. J. F.
Walvoord and R. B. Zuck, vol. 2 (Wheaton, IL: Victor Books, 1985), 842.
[3]
William MacDonald, Believer’s Bible
Commentary: Old and New Testaments, ed. Arthur Farstad
(Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1995), 984.

There is a stark contrast between two responses to sin—concealment versus confession—and their ultimate outcomes. https://maxevangel.blogspot.com/2026/07/our-toleration-of-evil.html #Sin #Standard #Holy #Repent #Moral #Confess #MaxEvangel
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