THE MAIN EVENT
Proverbs 5:22-23 The evil deeds of a wicked man ensnare
him; the cords of his sin hold him fast. He will die for lack of discipline,
led astray by his own great folly.
The
shortest and clearest way to state the relations between sin and folly is to
say that not all folly is sin, but all sin is folly. Sin is both wrong and
dumb. Indeed, wherever the follies are playing, sin is the main event. Sin is
the world’s most impressive example of folly.
What is
it about sin that makes it so foolish? Sin is the wrong recipe for good health;
sin is the wrong gasoline to put in the tank; sin is the wrong road to take in
order to get home. In other words, sin is finally futile.
Sin is
futile and therefore foolish. Georges Bernanos’s country priest remarks that
Satan has involved himself in a hopeless program of swimming against the stream
of the universe, of “wearing himself out in absurd, terrifying attempts to
reconstruct in the opposite direction the whole work of the Creator.” Thus,
while moral evil is destructive, and sometimes infuriating, it is also in some
ways ludicrous.
Sin is
folly. No matter what images they choose, the Bible writers say this again and
again. Sin is missing the target; sin is choosing the wrong target. Sin is
wandering from the path or rebelling against someone too strong for us or
neglecting a good inheritance. Above all, at its core, sin is offense against
God.
Why is
it not only wrong but also foolish to offend God? God is our final good, our
maker and savior, the one in whom alone our restless hearts come to rest. To
rebel against God is to saw off the branch that supports us.
Not
the Way It’s Supposed to Be: A Breviary of Sin. Cornelius Plantinga, pgs.
121-123.