Friday, November 10, 2017

Tokonaki Novema 11, 2017

Ko ‘ete maumau‘i ‘a e lao ‘o e kalāvité
Breaking the law of gravity


Fehuʻi #16

Ko e ha ‘a e angahala?

(What is sin?)

Ko e angahalá  ko e sītu‘a pe ta‘etoka‘i ‘a e ‘Otuá ‘i he mamani na‘a ne fakatupú, mo‘ui fakafetau kiate Ia, talangata‘a ki he‘ene laó ‘o iku ki he‘etau mate mo e ‘auha ‘a e me‘a fakatupu kotoa pe. 

( Sin is rejecting or ignoring God in the world he created, rebelling against him by living without reference to him, not being or doing what he requires in his law, resulting in our death and the disintegration of all creation. )

1 Sione 3:4
Ko ia kotoa pē ‘oku fai angahala ‘oku ne maumau foki ‘a e lao: ‘io, ko e angahalá  ko e maumau lao ia.

1 John 3:4
Everyone who makes a practice of sinning also practices lawlessness; sin is lawlessness


Commentary - JOHN LIN  (Cont…)


Think about it this way. If you were to walk off a cliff saying, "I don't have to live by the law of gravity; I can live by my own rules," you would, on the one hand, be disobeying a very specific rule and commandment - namely, "Don't walk off a cliff." But on the other hand, you would also not be living in reference to gravity. You would be living as if gravity were of no consequence or importance in your life. You would never say the law of gravity is arbitrary, or that it is unreasonable that you have to obey it. You would never say that, because you understand that gravity is something that we must live in reference to. Of course there are guidelines to honor and boundaries to acknowledge. You know the result of walking off a cliff and trying to break the law of gravity: death and disintegration.

No comments:

Post a Comment