WEBVTT
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[inaudible].
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Welcome to the Project Zion podcast.
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This podcast explores the unique spiritual and theological gifts Community of Christ offers for today's world.
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[inaudible]
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Hello and welcome to the Project Zion podcast.
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I'm your host, Carla Long and today you're going to hear two voices, one of which you know really well and one of which I think you're getting to know pretty well.
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Um, I'm going to be interviewing Brittany Mangelson and Matt Frizzell and we are going to be talking about dun, dun duh sin.
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And I asked Brittany and Matt to be on this podcast with me because they are two of the biggest sinners that I know.
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Rock on! Woo!
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Actually Matt talked to us about doing the podcast like this.
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He has been doing a couple of retreats that are named, what are they named Matt?
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These retreats that you're doing.
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Yeah, I did a couple of, well I did one called, well I did it, you know, my details aren't monitored, but I call it Die Sinner Die.
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It was sarcasm.
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That's good.
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Anyway, yeah.
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Die sinner Die.
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So, um, what we've recognized and what Matt has recognized and what we're, we're figuring out is that it's really uncomfortable to talk about sin.
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And so we wanted to, you know, put it out there in the open and make sure everybody is as, as uncomfortable as we are.
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So Brittany, Matt, thank you so much for being on the podcast.
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So Matt, why don't you start off like, why do we even want to talk about sin?
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Why is it important?
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Why do we, why do we even need to think about it?
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Well, I appreciate that question and uh, I guess I would want to start by saying well one of the reasons why I think we need to talk about it is because the, the document of sin has been used as a Billy club to hurt people.
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The whole, the whole idea, uh, of, uh, the separation between righteous and center has really been used I think throughout history in many, many different ways to name exclude.
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And in some, in many cases just do violence against people.
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And what's interesting to me is first of all, I think we should, we need to repent of that just, and who does, I don't know anybody who's done that does that we need to name it because in many ways theologians have already said the nature of sin means that nobody's excluded from it.
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So even people who think they know sin versus righteous are often committing the very sin of self righteousness.
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So it's a, it's a doctrine that can really, um, spiral out of control because of its own nature, which in some ways proves to be right.
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Reinhold Niebuhr the great theologian of 20th century said, you know, sin is probably the only empirically provable Christian doctrine.
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And so it's a really interesting way to think about that.
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And so I guess I want a name that up front and then try to find different ways to understand sin because I'm of the observation as a contemporary theologian and a constructive theologian, my focus is like, how do you take this tradition and make it work and think about the world today?
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I have actually found that and our attempt to be less and less judgmental because of the way sin works as a Billy club, in many ways we've become more judgmental and it's been good and bad.
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And in terms of, of how we talk about what's right and wrong.
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And so there's, I think it's just created, I think, I think the doctrine of sin, at least for folks who, who, who or intersect with Christianity forms this knot that is very, it's very important to spend time detangling and get into.
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So I think, I think that's one of the reasons why it's important.
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And maybe I'm like other people who had their own history with sin.
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I don't know about you guys, but I remember as a kid, I didn't like, I'm gonna not sin today, I'd be like six years old, you know, and be like, I'm gonna not send today.
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And as soon as I got through breakfast, I absolutely forgot about that commitment.
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And by the end of the day, I'm like, Oh, I sinned by forgetting that I wasn't going to sin.
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How did I?
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Oh no, you know, and it just kind of all fell apart for me.
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What an incredibly dorky kid you were, Matt.
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Well I obviously was brought up in like a really religious home, right on both sides.
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And I guess, and I don't mean to draw this out, but this is where I think it might be interesting to people or at least it is interesting for me.
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I actually, for me personally, even though I have been the target of sin of being called a sinner in some ways and yet not as in brutal ways as others have, um, in many ways by being repulsed by it and then saying, well, I want to know more about what this doctrine means.
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I actually have discovered, for me it's one of the most helpful and interesting teachings in Christianity.
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And I know that's weird, but I think the sin is the good news.
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And let me explain what I mean by that.
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One.
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Sin lets me know that no matter how much I think I'm supposed to be perfect and have high expectations of myself and I need to fulfill the responsibility of being successful, beautiful, effective, whatever expectations are put on me, send reminds me of a, that's not gonna happen.
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I'm imperfect, I'm off the hook, I'm gonna make mistakes.
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And I actually find that liberating.
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It's absolutely liberating to realize, give up on that, would you Matt?
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Let it go.
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And because you're just not gonna be perfect and you're not going to be righteous all the time or whatever, and we can use secular terms.
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I mean fill that in with the ones I'd thrown out.
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You know, I won't be famous.
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I won't always perform correctly.
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I won't always be successful.
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I won't always be effective.
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I will always be beautiful.
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All those things,
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Which is why you always send the second after you finished your cereal when you were six years old.
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That's an excellent first point.
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Keep going.
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You're doing great.
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Well I don't mean to be long.
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It's just there for me.
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This is obviously an interesting, the second one is, and after this we'll move on.
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But sin is also the one the most helpful, liberating terms for me understanding the world.
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So the sin in many in, in modern theology as the way of reminding us that Christianity starts with this idea that the world is broken.
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It's broken, and it's so broken that even when we all get together and to try to do the right thing, sometimes actually the opposite happens or bad things that we never intended happen.
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Our intentions send us the reminder that our intentions do not drive consequences.
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They're only a piece of it.
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And anybody who's tried to do the right thing in this world and anybody who's tried to live the right life or have the right lifestyle or you know, save the planet, not hurt others, be just, you're gonna recognize that you're gonna fail, you're gonna fail epically.
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And it's going to, and it's because the world is fundamentally broken at this level that none of us can really escape from.
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And that also has helped me just cope with understanding the world and understanding life and realizing if I can't be perfect in the world is broken.
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Where's the hope?
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What can I do?
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And so that has driven me to understand spirituality and Christianity deeper in a deeper way.
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And that's that I found that liberating.
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So that's why I think it's important to talk about.
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Oh, that's really interesting.
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Brittany, do you have anything you wanna add?
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Like why you think talking about sin is important?
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Um, Brittany is going to be offering her perspective, but also, um, listeners, she's going to be offering kind of a, a, a Mormon perspective as well.
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So not necessarily at this very moment, but I wanted to let you know that she's going to be offering as a former Mormon herself.
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What Mormons think about sin.
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But Brittany, before we get to that, why is sin important to talk about for you?
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So first I have had to giggle at Matt's comment about being a little kid and thinking, I'm not going to send today because I distinctly remember moments after I was baptized at eight.
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I was probably still wet even in the rest of the service was happening.
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And I just thought, I am perfect in this moment.
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I thought my sins had been washed away and the in this moment I was perfect and I was gonna have that going for me as long as I could.
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And then it dawned on me that I was, I probably didn't understand the word arrogance, but I probably understood what pride was.
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And so then I felt bad for feeling perfect.
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I felt, Oh, this is, Oh, I'm already sending it.
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So it did not last very long, which I think ties into some of my thoughts that I'm going to share with the LDS perspective.
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But as I was thinking about this topic, it dawned on me rather quickly how interconnected the doctrine or the theology of sin is to so many other points of theology.
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And Christian thought.
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How you think of Jesus probably dictates how you think of sin, how you think of humanity.
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And the human condition dictates how you think of sin.
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The afterlife, the ways that sin is connected in Christianity to other parts of Christianity and other theologies and doctrine, it's just married right there, right together.
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The purpose of this life, sin is right at the heart of this conversation.
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And so I have really had to reframe sin and we'll talk about that.
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But I can't just forget about sin completely because if I do, then like Matt said, I have to forget about the good news because it's all interconnected.
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And so I think that reframing what sin can be or what sin is, is really important as far as continuing your discipleship past a faith transition.
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I've noticed that for me, every time I come across something that is challenging or that triggers me or whatever, that I have to just sit and rest with it and then work through it.
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I can't just set it aside because it's kind of this nagging thing in my ear this topic that I need to do hard work and work through.
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And sin definitely was one of those because again, it's so interconnected to so many other parts of Christianity, so we can't really ignore it.
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Yeah.
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What Brittany said is brilliant because I just want to add, so just this one piece, we were talking about it personally, but if, if, if you, if anyone wants to take the biblical narrative seriously, if anyone wants to take Christian tradition and just teaching seriously, if you take sin out of the message in the story, it's like talking about resurrection with never talking about death, which makes no sense.
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I mean, you can't have resurrection without something dying and you can't talk about Shalom without saying the world's broken and something's wrong and you can't talk about a, you know, whether whatever salvation deliverance liberation means to you, if you talk about those things without some operative assumption about what sin is, it becomes a really weird story that really doesn't have a lot of internal coherence to it.
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And Jesus and every one of the gospels starts his message with repent.
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The kingdom of God is near.
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And of course Luke embellish isn't that the most, but that's what he says.
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Repent of what I mean.
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It doesn't make any, Jesus' very story, makes no sense without understanding some operative understanding of sin.
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And where you'll see me be going with this is towards the end.
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I hope everybody who's listening starts to realize, man, whether I think about sin in a good or a bad way, a constructive or destructive way or critical or an uncritical way, there's an assumption about sin and brokenness that's operative in almost every one of my beliefs when I start talking about the way the world should be.
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And so it's always already there.
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And just because we stop using the word sin or at least some people have, that doesn't mean we're not talking about it all the time.
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Well, that's kind of where I wanted to go next.
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What, what you just said.
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The fact is, I've been a full time minister, uh, working for the church since 2005 for 14 years.
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And I think I've probably used the word sin in a serious way, probably four times total.
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Like I just don't talk about it.
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I don't talk about sin.
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I, I don't want to, I, I just find it uncomfortable to talk about.
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So why have we stopped talking about it?
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Why, why don't we talk about it as ministers and as a priesthood and as people in Community of Christ.
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In fact, I was helping out at a high school class just last week.
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I was talking about Community Christ to a world religions class.
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And I pulled up the basic beliefs on online and one of them is sin and they're like, what do you guys believe about sin?
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And I was like, Ugh.
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Like I just didn't want to talk about it.
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So why have we stopped talking about it?
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Well, I'll, I'll give my 2 cents.
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I'll be really interested to see how, how Brittany responds to this too.
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So I, I come from a kind of a Midwestern American world and in a Christian environment.
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And a lot of my personal life perspective has been shaped by this kind of tension between liberal, what we would call so-called liberal or progressive and so-called conservative or traditional Christianity and Christianity.
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And those, those are ideas.
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I actually are not just unique to me.
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They run deep throughout 18 fights in the 20th century.
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And so anyway, I think, I think one of the ways to think about it is just to name something that a lot of people have experienced.
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Um, and I'm going to use the words dominant discourse.
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So, and what I mean by that is the way we talk about sin, I think, I think if you go into a traditional evangelical church or if you've listened to am radio, a Christian am radio or even FM radio or you tune in Trinity broadcasting, the message of sin has become quite narrow as this way to describe right and wrong, good and bad, who's in, who's out, and then ultimately tie that to a sense of shame, guilt and getting on the right side of religion.
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And, and it's become a, it's become this, uh, intended or unintended too to I think, manipulate individuals to keep identities very uniform and tidy and clean and moralistic.
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I think we've used it as a way to, to hurt people who do not fit in our cultural, Christian understandings of what it means to be righteous and what it means then to be a center and be unrighteous.
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And so the term has really, we, we've created the condition.
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I say we, I guess I don't know who that we is through time the church Christianity has made, has set the conditions to use the term as a Billy club to shame and hurt people.
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And I think those, it has become so rigid and hurtful in the way it's been used, particularly as a term politically and in, in as, uh, I'll be, I'll just name it, it's used as social control, you know, to make sure people fit inside of a box.
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All you gotta do is, is talk about the way sin is used and deconstruct it from a feminist perspective, how it's used to shame women and, and, and control sexuality and all these other different, uh, forms of it.
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Um, see it's very complicit with racism and homophobia.
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It's just become, I think such a problematic term that it's almost too dangerous to use cause you can no longer control what people think or feel when you use it.
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And so it's been very, it's been easier I think to just like a rock and a river to go around it.
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And I think many forms of Christianity have just tried to go around it because the term has almost become useless to them when they're trying to say something else.
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So that's one perspective I would say.
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I would agree with that and that's probably why I just don't talk about it either, either from the pulpit or when talking to people about it in a conversation because I, it feels like it requires a 30 to 45 minute conversation just about that one word.
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Brittany, do you have something?
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Yeah.
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So I want to be clear that I am speaking from my own perspective as a former Mormon and I do know that a lot of former Mormons would agree with me, but I, I recognize that people would push back on this as well.
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But I think that from my perspective, growing up in a rigid system of do's and don'ts and worthiness interviews and this idea that God's spirit can leave you if you're sining, if you're not currently worthy of having God's spirit with you, that's all centered on sin.
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So when I said that it connects with so many different things, that's what I'm talking about.
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It connects with God's love for you.
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It connects with whether you are worthy, uh, it connects with whether you, and when I say worthy, I mean where they'd have the spirit with you worthy to enter into certain sacred spaces, worthy to hold certain positions in the church.
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Uh, things like that.
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So when Latter-day Seekers are ex-Mormons, whatever you want to call that population, when they leave, that system of do's and don'ts and these do's and don'ts are taught from the time you're three years old and you enter into their children's program.
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When they leave that usually they leave in a, with a deep sense of brokenness with a deep sense of that they've been betrayed or that they've been rejected by the system or they couldn't live up to the expectations.
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So there's deep, deep, deep pain.
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So in my ministry, when I'm talking with Latter-day Seekers, most people are pretty hesitant to talk about sin because they have been marginalized and hurt over this topic.
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Uh, their self esteem, their sense of worse has been diminished by this topic.
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And it's, it's like I really appreciated what Matt said that we've kind of narrowed down the definition because I think that that's what happens a lot is we think of sins as individual actions that we take.
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What we watch, what we say, what we drink, what we eat, those kinds of things.
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When we're not, we're not necessarily seeing the brokenness of the world or of humanity on a macro perspective, but we, we narrow it down to an individual, a micro perspective.
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And that's where all the shame and, and things like that come in.
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So I think that people are really hesitant to reframe that because it's a system, like Matt said, of control and they just don't even know where to start to reframe it.
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And so if they have healed themselves and consider themselves worthy in whole, maybe they've read some Brene Brown, maybe they've gone to therapy or you know, something like that.
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And they recognize that their worth is not tied to this concept of sin revisiting that can be pretty triggering.
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And it's, it's just daunting.
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It's, it's really, you just don't know where to go because when you've been taught one definition of this word since you were a little kid, it's really, really hard to want to reframe that and go visit it again.
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Because again, it's usually caused a lot of harm.
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Yeah.
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I don't think it's too much to use the word.
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Well, I'm being kind when I say this and I, maybe I should just be more honest.
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It the words, the words have been used as spiritually abused people and uh, it's it to emotionally, mentally, and sometimes physically.
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And of course in the, in the Christian tradition, I really can't speak so much to LDS tradition, but in the Christian tradition, of course, sin is, uh, is connected intimately to two other, um, elements of spiritual practice as well as another theological idea.
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One of them is confession.
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And so confession is a very interesting tool too.
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When you start thinking about sin, you go speak to an authority and, and confess your sins.
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There's a power relationship at work there.
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There's a, there is a mechanism of getting right with the community and getting right with authority, obedience and fulfilling a responsibility and maintaining a power relationship that is involved with that, that I, that many theologians have unpacked and talked about how it's a bad thing.
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But interestingly also theologians have come around and say, man, I wish tradition, I've heard people say in Community of Christ, I wish there was a way we could reconcile.
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That'd be another way that confession is, that's what's really about, but it's been turned into something else.
00:20:59.710 --> 00:21:01.210
But also this term evil.
00:21:01.569 --> 00:21:10.990
So, I mean, once you talk about someone who sins, you can start easily slipping directly into this way of naming and characterizing and decentralizing people's evil.
00:21:11.440 --> 00:21:13.750
If you keep doing this sin, why is it happening?
00:21:13.750 --> 00:21:27.099
Well, there must be something fundamentally wrong with you and that can go into all sorts of very interesting areas about you need to exercise a devil from you or you need to be, you need to repent and find Jesus and straighten out your life and your way.
00:21:27.430 --> 00:21:33.539
And on one hand, you know, when we think about these things, we think about it in horrible, terrible ways that can be very abusive.
00:21:33.579 --> 00:21:37.119
And yet at the same time, just to talk how volatile this can be.
00:21:37.759 --> 00:21:43.119
I've, I've been in ministry and worked with others who were addicts and they needed this language.
00:21:43.150 --> 00:21:54.069
They adopted it because the only way out of addiction was to be rigid and to stay away from those places that pulled them into the darkness and the destruction and the difficulties of addiction.
00:21:54.460 --> 00:21:58.329
So it's not black and white, which is part of our point, right?
00:21:58.960 --> 00:22:02.049
Sin is not black and white, but it's not black and white.
00:22:02.050 --> 00:22:27.190
And so it gives us another reason to rethink and to try to recover what is at work here when we use this word and how can we do it in ways that don't abuse and how can we understand it in ways that are spiritually fulfilling and not just matters of spiritual abuse and social control and lead to this, this pink elephant in the room for so many religions, which is self-righteousness.
00:22:27.339 --> 00:22:29.140
Cause that's a sin too.
00:22:29.259 --> 00:22:45.640
If you pretend to know exactly what God thinks and wants and you're just going to wield that stick and on everybody who doesn't fit in your understanding that itself is a problem and is a reflection of the sinful human condition in theological terms.
00:22:45.940 --> 00:22:47.589
I mean I think that's a fair thing to say.
00:22:47.890 --> 00:22:51.309
So anyway, I think that's why we stopped talking about it.
00:22:51.310 --> 00:22:54.099
It leads to judgmentalism than it leads to fashioning.
00:22:54.101 --> 00:22:55.450
It leads to power and abuse.
00:22:55.839 --> 00:22:59.200
And we, when we've used it so narrowly, it's almost become unusable.
00:22:59.201 --> 00:23:06.369
And for many people when I do retreats or talk about it, the Christian theology, for some people it plain is unusable.
00:23:06.640 --> 00:23:08.019
The term is unrecoverable.
00:23:08.470 --> 00:23:14.650
And I'm just suggesting maybe it's not, but I certainly would not argue against those who feel like it is.
00:23:14.680 --> 00:23:16.539
It's just a very hard word to replace.
00:23:16.540 --> 00:23:19.329
If we're going to then go back and read scripture because it's there.
00:23:20.329 --> 00:23:21.980
Well that's actually where I want to go next.
00:23:21.980 --> 00:23:25.460
But, but you keep both of you, both Brittany and Matt, you booty both.
00:23:25.461 --> 00:23:34.069
Keep making me think of that line from Nadia Boltz Weber, uh, where it says the second you draw a line in the sand, Jesus has already on the other side of that line.
00:23:34.130 --> 00:23:42.500
You know, the second we start calling someone a center or pointing them out or pointing out whatever, that's when Jesus is farther away from us.
00:23:42.799 --> 00:23:46.730
And so I, I just, that line just keeps coming into my head over and over.
00:23:46.730 --> 00:23:48.049
The more we talk about this.
00:23:49.450 --> 00:23:53.000
I do want to go though, Matt, where you just ended up.
00:23:53.390 --> 00:23:57.859
So since we've, we've talked about why sin is important.
00:23:58.099 --> 00:24:00.799
We've talked about why we stopped talking about it.
00:24:01.039 --> 00:24:07.130
So let's talk about what it is like are there scriptural things that we can look at?
00:24:07.680 --> 00:24:16.309
Um, a theological understanding of sin that we can talk about that, that helps us frame it and do what it actually is rather than what it has become.
00:24:17.259 --> 00:24:17.769
Sure.
00:24:18.009 --> 00:24:27.700
Well, and I invite you to interrupt me here cause this is, you know, of course a good answer to that question would minimally run two hours and it would turn shut everybody off and nobody would even know where to go with it.
00:24:27.759 --> 00:24:29.319
Nobody, nobody wants that, Matt.
00:24:31.079 --> 00:24:32.309
Well I'm not sure I do.
00:24:32.310 --> 00:24:33.720
So that's fair.
00:24:34.109 --> 00:24:36.599
But my background is contemporary theology.
00:24:37.109 --> 00:24:41.369
Um, I'm familiar with the historical tradition but I think in more modern theological terms.
00:24:41.819 --> 00:24:55.440
And so I'm just going to visit a couple of things that it hopefully just to kind of drop tools in touch points along the way to get at what I would say as a scriptural or a theological understanding of sin today, uh, that maybe we can pick up.
00:24:55.441 --> 00:25:05.160
So contemporary thinking of course for many people, and I'm going to kind of go back to the traditional categories, is thinking about sin is doing something wrong.
00:25:05.519 --> 00:25:08.849
It's like it has an opposite which is obedience.
00:25:08.940 --> 00:25:21.930
So sin is very much under there, stood in opposition to what it means to be obedient and um, that's connected to our theological understandings of, of law and commandment.