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Painting/photo of Jerusalem Temple-Casual English Bible

Original sin and original sinners

Stephen M. Miller
Toddler with boxing glove
DON’T PUNCH OTHERS. If we tell a toddler not to punch Grandpa, we know what the toddler will do. There’s nothing original about that sin. A more effective course of action might be to warn Grandpa to watch out for a left cross. Photo composite by Stephen M. Miller; boxing glove by AltSpace, Wikimedia, CC 4.

LET ME ADMIT IT RIGHT UP FRONT. I don’t know what original sin is.

I do, however, know an original sinner when I see one.

I see one almost every day. I have grandkids.

I love them. And I don’t think of them as tiny sinners. But I do think we can patch together a few insights about the theologically lofty and abstract concept of original sin by consulting toddlers who can’t say much more than “Buddy,” “Paw Paw,” and “No, no, no, no, no!”

Consider these clues from a couple of grandkids, each child roughly one-and-a-half years old.

  • Granddaughter picks up Grandpa’s iPhone off the coffee table. Instantly she runs with it toward Buddy the Dog’s water dish. Grandpa, on the other side of the house, barely wins that race.
  • Grandson breaks out of the gated community set up for him in the living room. By the time Grandpa turns around to find him gone, grandson has one leg out the doggie door, and a smile on his face. The smile doesn’t last.
  • Grandson, being taught not to hit people, gives Grandpa a bloody nose.
  • Granddaughter decides to help Grandpa unload the dishwasher. Of all the objects she could reach for, she goes for the knives. She is negatively reinforced: “No, no, no, no, no!”
  • Grandson loves to go to Grandpa’s Man Cave, downstairs. “Down dares,” as he puts it. Buddy the Dog joins them because he wants one of the biscuits Grandpa keeps in the storage area. While Grandpa reaches for a biscuit, the grandson reaches for a bottle of wine. He pulls it out of the wine slot and throws it on the floor. Happily, it bounces.

Original sin, a definition

“All people are born in sin. They are by nature self-centered. They find it easy to disobey. This is because they inherited a share in Adam’s first sin. They are under the power of a sinful nature. Jesus came to destroy original sin…The Holy Spirit cleanses Christians from original sin.” —A Dictionary of the Bible & Christian Doctrine in Everyday English

The idea here is that when Adam and Eve sinned, it somehow affected everyone.

Apostle Paul puts it this way: “Adam sinned, and that sin brought death into the world. Now everyone has sinned… Adam brought death to all of us, and Christ will bring life to all of us” (Romans 5:12, 1 Corinthians 15:22 CEV).

Sorry Paul, but I don’t get it. I don’t understand how Adam’s sin has anything to do with me. I never met the guy.

Even one of the smartest Christian scholars who ever lived, Augustine (AD 354-430), said there’s nothing harder to explain.

Here’s what I do understand.

Sin comes natural. Doing the right thing doesn’t.

Sinning is coasting. Doing the right thing is pushing a Buick up a tree.

Quote from a theologian

I remember what my seminary theology prof, Rob Staples, said about original sin.

“Even if we didn’t all sin in Adam, we’ve all sinned since then.”

I get that.

I see it in the grandkids who are already doing what their parents once did, testing boundaries, to discover that grandpas let them get by with stuff Mom and Dad forbid.

Some call it “spoiling.”

Grandpas call it “grace.”

Either way, it looks like this:

Punch Grandpa in the nose.

Grandpa says, “I regret that I have but one nose to give for my grandson…which is why you shouldn’t do it again.”

Casual English Bible
Bible Gateway

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About Stephen M. Miller

STEPHEN M. MILLER is an award winning bestselling Christian author of easy-reading books about the Bible and Christianity and author of the Casual English Bible® paraphrase. His books have sold over two million copies and include The Complete Guide to the Bible and Who’s and Where’s Where in the Bible.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. George Stuart

    June 14, 2017 at 10:18 am

    I understand what you are saying I’m saying it’s not that hard. When Adam and Eve ate of the forbidden fruit they gained the knowledge of right and wrong and passed that on to their children and on down to us. To sin you have to know the difference between right and wrong. Just my 2 cents but I do think it is that simple.

    Reply
    • Stephen M. Miller

      June 14, 2017 at 11:20 am

      Thanks, George. Over the years, some scholars have argued that original sin is passed on genetically. Others countered by saying if that’s so, our researchers will eventually find a genetic cure. Then the Holy Spirit could take some time off.

      Reply
  2. menj

    July 22, 2017 at 8:00 am

    Why do Christians see the descent of Adam PBUH to earth as the result of “original sin”, when we can look it at another way and say that this is actuall y the Original Forgiveness?

    Reply

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