MONITE SIULAI 13, 2026
PALOVEPI 19-21; SENESI 6:5-7
The questions that divide humanity are: Do I think I'm okay as I am, or do I see myself in desperate need of a Savior?
Ko e ongo fehu’i ‘oku na vahe’i ‘a e fa’ahinga ‘o e tangata: ‘Oku ou pehe ‘oku ou sai pe au ‘i he tu’unga ‘oku ou ‘i ai? pe, ko e tokotaha au ‘oku ou vakai ‘oku ou fiema’u mo’oni ha Fakamo’ui?
Once a child is able to communicate in words, an endless stream of questions starts pouring out. Why, Mommy? Why not, Daddy? What is that? How does it work? Why can't I go? The questions you ask and the answers you accept influence the content, character, and direction of your life. Insightful, wise people are not those who have the right answers. They are the people who have the wisdom to ask the right questions. You can't get to the right answers if you spend your life asking the wrong questions.
The greatest questions have reflected humanity's philosophical and theological search since creation. God designed us to think, wonder, and interpret, and in the center of our thinking lie innumerable small and hugely consequential questions. But one question marks the human fault line. It is humanity's great dividing question, because how you answer it will put you into one of two camps. It is a question that offers no neutral in-between. This question is deeply moral, and your answer sets the spiritual direction of your life. This fault-line question is found in the last third of the book of Proverbs:
Who can say, "I have made my heart pure;
I am clean from my sin"? (Prov. 20:9)
One group answers this question by saying, "I am basically a good person, with the power to be as righteous as I need to be. Sin isn't something I need to worry about." Now, maybe most people wouldn't say it that way explicitly, but most of the people you live near, work with, or encounter at the store or the park think this way about themselves. They are not haunted or anxious about their sin. They think they do not have an evil heart, and, because they think this way, they don't feel any need for the rescuing grace of the Savior.
The other group answers this question this way: "I know I cannot have a pure heart on my own, and I surely know that I am not free from sin." These people recognize the presence and power of indwelling sin and spend their lives crying out for the help of the grace of the Savior, Jesus. May we never become so used to minimizing or explaining away our sin that we no longer have a daily hunger for what he alone can give us.