Are Some Sins Worse Than Others? Please don't get this wrong!
Ideas (34)
The claim 'all sin is the same' contains a kernel of truth but is ultimately inaccurate and too imprecise to be useful.
Mike opens the livestream by stating the topic: is all sin really the same? He acknowledges the idea has partial truth but argues it is clumsy and misleading.
00:00:05Old Testament law assigns different penalties to different sins, which itself demonstrates that God does not treat all sin the same.
Mike begins his Old Testament survey by pointing to the differentiated penal codes in the Mosaic law.
00:03:11The 'eye for an eye' passage (Exodus 21:22) establishes proportional justice, not revenge, and further proves that sins are not equal in God's legal framework.
Mike unpacks the lex talionis principle, which is commonly misquoted as a license for personal revenge.
00:05:44Deuteronomy 25 provides a catch-all principle: punishment is to be 'in proportion to the offense,' explicitly grounding proportional justice in God's law.
Mike examines a general sentencing passage in Deuteronomy to show that the proportionality principle is not limited to specific crimes but is a foundational legal principle.
00:08:49Hebrews 2:2 confirms that Old Testament punishments were morally just retributions, not merely symbolic — validating the OT penal code as a genuine moral revelation.
Mike anticipates a possible objection that the OT law was purely symbolic and therefore its differentiated penalties do not reveal moral truths about sin.
00:10:231 Kings 16:25 — Omri 'did more evil than all who were before him,' implying qualitative, not merely quantitative, differences in wickedness.
Mike moves from the law to narrative descriptions of individuals to show that Scripture uses qualitative language about degrees of evil.
00:11:54Jeremiah 7:24-26 — Israel 'did worse than their fathers,' a qualitative moral judgment, not merely a count of more sins.
Mike cites another Old Testament narrative statement about moral deterioration across generations to reinforce qualitative distinctions in sin.
00:13:29Hebrews 10:28-29 — Rejecting the gospel of Christ deserves a worse punishment than violating the Mosaic law, establishing a clear hierarchy between sins.
Mike examines a key New Testament passage that explicitly compares the severity of two different categories of sin.
00:14:31Matthew 11:20-22 — Jesus declares that judgment will be 'more bearable' for Tyre and Sidon than for Chorazin and Bethsaida, indicating degrees of future condemnation.
Mike looks at Jesus' words about future judgment to show that not only are some sins worse, but the punishments in final judgment are also graduated.
00:15:35John 19:11 — Jesus tells Pilate that the one who handed him over 'has the greater sin,' demonstrating a qualitative comparison of two specific sins.
Mike examines the conversation between Jesus and Pilate during the Passion narrative as a direct statement by Jesus about comparative sin.
00:17:38Luke 12:47-48 — The servant who knew his master's will and disobeyed receives a severe beating; the one who did not know receives a light beating. Knowledge and intent factor into the moral weight of a sin.
Mike examines a parable of Jesus about two servants with differing levels of knowledge to show that the same act can be morally worse depending on the actor's awareness.
00:19:47Revelation 20:13 — At the final judgment, each person is judged 'according to what they had done,' indicating individualized and tailored condemnation, not a uniform punishment.
Mike rounds out his biblical survey with the great white throne judgment in Revelation to show that eschatological judgment is personalized.
00:22:20James 2:10 does not teach that all sins are identical; it teaches that breaking any one point of the law makes a person a law-breaker before the same Lawgiver — a relational, not equivalence, statement.
Mike addresses the primary proof-text used to argue all sin is the same and offers an exegesis that resolves the apparent tension.
00:24:21No sin is trivially small because every sin is a personal offense against a holy God — the error is in using 'not all sin is the same' as a license to minimize some sins.
Mike offers the first pastoral guard against misusing the hierarchy-of-sin principle.
00:27:56Matthew 5:27 — Lusting in the heart is adultery in the heart, but it is not the same act as physical adultery; using 'all sin is the same' to justify the full act is logically incoherent.
Mike examines Jesus' teaching on lust to show how the 'all sin is the same' doctrine can be weaponized to rationalize escalating sin.
00:28:58Personal anecdote: a young woman used 'all sin is the same' to equate fornication with stealing a pencil, which prompted Mike's investigation of this doctrine.
Mike shares an early formative experience that drove him to examine this topic biblically.
00:30:01Sexual sin is categorically worse than non-sexual sins according to 1 Corinthians 6, and comparing homosexuality to gluttony as though they are equivalent misuses the 'all sin is the same' argument.
Mike addresses a common rhetorical move in contemporary Christian discourse where sexual ethics are deflected by invoking other common sins.
00:31:34Two errors bracket this topic: claiming all sin is the same (minimizes serious sin) and believing some sins are so minor they are barely wicked at all (hardens the conscience).
Mike summarizes the two ditches on either side of the correct biblical position.
00:33:07The unforgivable sin (blasphemy against the Holy Spirit) — Mike is not fully settled on the interpretation but identifies the key exegetical questions: is it calling the work of the Holy Spirit the work of Satan, a continuous act of resistance, or any negative speech about the Spirit?
Q&A section: a viewer asks about the unforgivable sin.
00:36:42Smoking is not categorically sinful — it depends on frequency, addiction, and bodily harm; 1 Corinthians 6 ('I will not be mastered by anything') is the relevant test.
Q&A section: a viewer asks whether smoking is a sin.
00:38:13Hell likely involves graded punishment — Jesus' teaching about more or less tolerable judgment supports the idea that individual experience in final condemnation varies.
Q&A section: a viewer asks whether hell's punishment bends to the severity of the sin.
00:40:17Mike would consider a video on Joel Osteen but would need to study his teaching thoroughly first before offering any critique.
Q&A section: viewer requests a video critiquing Joel Osteen.
00:41:19People who jumped from the Twin Towers on 9/11 were not committing suicide — they were choosing the least terrible option available, which involved no moral culpability.
Q&A section: a viewer asks whether the 9/11 jumpers committed suicide.
00:41:51Mike has watched James White's response to his Calvinism video and appreciates the brotherly spirit; a formal response will have to wait until after his resurrection debate and additional study of the recommended reading.
Q&A section: a viewer asks about Mike's reaction to James White's response video on Calvinism.
00:43:25Mary's virginity is unambiguous in the New Testament; the translation debate concerns Isaiah 7:14 and the Hebrew word 'almah,' where Mike thinks 'virgin' is the stronger reading.
Q&A section: a viewer asks whether Mary's virginity is an error of translation.
00:44:27Sin is always sinful — it is not divinely placed to guide humans; God works good through evil but that does not transform evil into good.
Q&A section: a viewer asks whether sin was placed to guide humans and poses the Adam and Eve hypothetical.
00:46:32Sin damages the relational walk with God for believers without severing salvation; New Testament epistles urge repentance precisely because ongoing sin harms fellowship.
Q&A section: a viewer asks whether they are separated from God when they sin in daily life.
00:49:03Infants and young children who die are saved — Mike holds this as a personal conviction based on David's hope of reunion with his deceased infant son.
Q&A section: a viewer asks whether their 8-month-old sister who died will be in heaven.
00:49:38Believers are not punished at final judgment but may experience loss of rewards; the Bema Seat (1 Corinthians 3) is a judgment for rewards, not condemnation.
Q&A section: a viewer asks whether believers will receive any punishment similar to the Luke 12 servant passage.
00:50:38Doubt is not automatically a sin; faith is a decision and doubt is often a feeling, and both can coexist — as illustrated by the father who said 'I believe; help my unbelief.'
Q&A section: a viewer expresses fear that their doubt may be their spiritual demise.
00:52:46Treasures in heaven are eternal, imperishable blessings — not necessities but blessings, possibly including crowns cast before God — as opposed to the temporary, corruptible treasures of earthly life.
Q&A section: a viewer asks what 'treasures in heaven' means and why they would be needed when all needs are met.
00:53:49Interfaith prayer can be acceptable when praying for or with someone of another religion, but becomes wrong when the act affirms their belief system as true or acceptable to God.
Q&A section: a viewer asks whether it is wrong to pray with Mormons, Muslims, or pagans.
00:55:21Infant salvation and adult salvation both ultimately flow from Jesus Christ, but differ experientially — one comes through knowing faith, the other through grace applied to the innocence of accountability.
Q&A section: a viewer asks whether an infant's salvation is different from a young person's or adult's.
00:56:54It is unwise to predict the timing of the rapture; history of failed predictions demonstrates that 'no man knows the day or the hour' is to be taken seriously — Christians should live ready rather than speculate.
Q&A section: a viewer asks how close we are to the rapture given current events.
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