F4S: What's Sin Got To Do With It?

Thursday, April 23, 2026

What's Sin Got To Do With It?

Choose to.. yes, learn to hate SIN to the same degree that God hates it because it destroys the people He loves. You. 

It's not really an affair. It's destructive Adultery.

It's not casual sex. It's destructive Fornication.

It's not gay love. It's destructive Sodomy.

It's not veneration. 
It's destructive Idolatry.

It's not pro-choice. 
It's destructive Murder.

It's not an exaggeration. 
It's destructive Lying.

It's not training your parents in PC-speak by distance. It's destructive Disrespect. 

It's not a true concern. 
It's destructive Gossip.

It's not just admiration. 
It's destructive Lust.


All sin hurts God, and all sin is against Him primarily. It's moronic to trivialize your sin as so many like to do. Please don't go there. 

People notice a real need and then, independent from a relationship with the Lord, they try to go fulfill it their way. That's sin. If they have a real need as God's child, then Got the Father will indeed meet it. He promises to. 

Here's what we'd do well to do instead go our own way. Repent, believe in, and follow Jesus

So What's The Point of It All -- Being Here? Acceptable biblical worship. 

Knowing and glorifying the Lord. We were not made for even the good gifts from God’s hands—but for God Himself.

Isaiah 43:7“Everyone who is called by My name, whom I created for My glory.”
Ephesians 1:12 “That we…should be to the praise of His glory.”

Before we ever do anything for God, we are called to know Him, love Him, and live before Him.

Not performance—presence.

Not activity—adoration.

Not gifts—the Giver.


What Worship Really Is

Worship is not a song set—it is a surrendered life.

Romans 12:1 “Present your bodies a living sacrifice…this is your spiritual worship.”
John 4:24“Worship…in spirit and truth.”

It is waking up and saying:
“Lord, today is Yours—my thoughts, my words, my choices.”

It is doing ordinary things—work, conversations, decisions—with an extraordinary aim:

1 Corinthians 10:31“Whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.”

John Piper said it plainly:

“God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him.”


The Order We Must Not Reverse

We don’t worship to earn God—we worship because we’ve been given God.

Ephesians 2:8-9“By grace you have been saved through faith…”

It begins with repentance and faith in Jesus Christ, and only then flows into real worship.

Mark 1:15“Repent and believe the gospel.”

No Christ—no true worship.
No cross—no clean heart.
No surrender—no substance.


Why This Matters Right Now

We are living in a time where God is often treated as a means, not the end.

Barna research has consistently found that a large percentage of self-identified Christians do not hold a biblical worldview (often cited around only 6–9% of U.S. adults)—indicating a gap between belief and lived devotion. (Source: Barna Group studies on worldview, 2021–2023.)

In other words:
Many want blessings without repentance, change or surrender,
comfort without repentance,
religion without transformation.

But Scripture cuts through the noise:

Matthew 15:8“This people honors Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me.”


The Hard Truth About Sin (and the Better Hope)

All of us have sinned, but there's a Solution and He has a name. Jesus. Sin is not harmless—it is soul-destroying.

Romans 6:23“The wages of sin is death.”

What culture renames, God still calls sin—
not to shame us, but to save us from what destroys us.

But here is the hope:

1 Corinthians 6:11“Such were some of you…you were washed.”

Billy Graham once said:

“God never takes anything away from your life without replacing it with something better.”


A Short Lyrical Reflection

Not for the gifts, but for Your face,
Not for the crown, but for Your grace,
Not for the healing—though we plead,
But for Yourself, our deepest need.

Take all the world, its shining lies,
Its fleeting joys, its loud disguise—
Give me the Christ who bled for me,
My life, my hope, my eternity.

Psalm 73:25“Whom have I in heaven but You? And there is none upon earth that I desire besides You.”


The Simple, Unshakable Call

Live focused on Christ. Sure, we live to know, worship (yep, it's priority one, pray and obey), to seek, to please, to walk with, to praise, to obey and enjoy the Lord and everything else is secondary. The Blesser is way better than His blessings, His presence beats all His presents. ~ kvs

Seek Him and His will first. 

Walk with Him.

Obey Him.

Enjoy Him.

Everything else is secondary.

Hebrews 11:6“He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him.”


Final Word

This is not complicated—but it is costly:

Die to self.

Turn from sin.

Trust Christ fully.

Live for His glory alone.

And in losing your life—you will finally find it.

Luke 9:24“Whoever loses his life for My sake will save it.”

here to orbit our lives around lesser things. We were made for God Himself—personally, deeply, daily.

To know Him, to walk with Him, to worship Him in spirit and truth (John 4:23), to love Him with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength (Mark 12:30)—this is not one priority among many. It is the center that gives meaning to everything else.

Everything else—work, family, success, even ministry—must take its rightful place beneath that one blazing reality:
God is not a means to our life; He is our life (Colossians 3:4).


The Great Reversal We Must Resist

Our age has quietly inverted this truth. Many seek God for what He gives, not for who He is. Yet Scripture calls us higher:

“Whom have I in heaven but You? And there is none upon earth that I desire besides You.” (Psalm 73:25)

The psalmist doesn’t say, “God gives me what I desire.”
He says, “God Himself is my desire.”

This is the turning point of real Christianity.

A.W. Tozer captured it plainly:

“The man who has God for his treasure has all things in One.”

And the old hymn echoes the same truth:

“Thou, O Christ, art all I want, more than all in Thee I find.”


The Blesser Over the Blessings

We must learn this quietly but firmly:
The Blesser is infinitely better than His blessings.

His lasting presence is greater than His temporal presents.

Moses understood this when he prayed:

“If Your presence does not go with us, do not bring us up from here.” (Exodus 33:15)

He had seen miracles, power, provision—but none of it satisfied him without God Himself.

This is where shallow faith either matures—or collapses.


The Simplicity of a God-Centered Life

Strip everything down, and the Christian life becomes beautifully simple:

  • Know Him — not just facts, but fellowship (Philippians 3:10)
  • Seek Him — early, intentionally, continually (Psalm 63:1)
  • Walk with Him — moment by moment (Micah 6:8)
  • Obey Him — not selectively, but sincerely (John 14:15)
  • Delight in Him — not out of duty alone, but desire (Psalm 37:4)

Everything else becomes secondary—not meaningless, but rightly ordered.


A Quiet Warning

It is possible to build a full life and still miss the central thing.
Church activity without intimacy.
Service without surrender.
Truth without tenderness toward God.

Jesus warned:

“You have left your first love.” (Revelation 2:4)

Not abandoned truth—
not abandoned service—
but abandoned Him at the center of it all.


A Simple Illustration

Think of a man who marries for love—but over time becomes more interested in the benefits of marriage than in his wife herself. The home remains, the structure stands, but the relationship quietly thins.

That is what happens when we love God’s gifts more than God.


A Needed Return

So we come back—again and again—to first things:

To open His Word not just to learn, but to meet Him.
To pray not just to ask, but to commune.
To worship not just in song, but in surrender.

As John Piper rightly said:

“God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him.”


A Fresh Reflection

You were made for one supreme purpose:
to know the Lord deeply,
to walk with Him closely,
to worship Him acceptably,
to delight in Him continually.

Everything else will either serve that purpose—or distract from it.

So choose the better portion.
Choose the presence.

Because in the end,

When you have Jesus as Lord, you have not lost anything worth keeping at all—and you have gained everything worth having. 

You were made for God the Son. He's the Bridegroom and the Church is his bride. Yes, you were made for God—and until that settles deep in the soul, everything else quietly competes for His place.

To know Him, seek Him, worship Him, obey Him, and enjoy Him is not one priority among many—it is the reason we exist (1 Corinthians 10:31; Mark 12:30). When that center holds, life finds order. When it shifts, even good things become dangerous.


The Hidden Drift: Idolatry Repackaged











Idolatry did not disappear back in the day—it kind of changed some but still happens.

What once stood as a golden calf now lives in subtler forms: ambition, comfort, approval, success, control. The heart still bows—just not always visibly.

Scripture is unflinching about the root:
it is sin—the inward bent of the human heart to replace God with self (Romans 1:25).

At its core, modern idolatry is not merely the love of things—it is the elevation of self.
We pursue what we want, define truth as we prefer, and even reshape God into someone more agreeable to our desires.

Paul warned this would come:

“For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine…” (2 Timothy 4:3)

And here we are.


What Is an Idol—Really?

An idol is anything that takes God’s rightful place in your heart.

Not just sinful things—
often good things turned ultimate things:

  • A career that defines your worth
  • A relationship that replaces your dependence on God
  • Comfort that dulls your hunger for Him
  • Success that becomes your identity

Jesus made it unmistakably clear:

“You cannot serve both God and money.” (Luke 16:13)

There is no neutral ground in the heart. Something always sits on the throne.


Why It’s So Powerful

This battle is not casual—it is lifelong.

The pull toward idols is relentless because it flows from within. Even believers feel it. That’s why Scripture calls us to:

  • “Put on the whole armor of God” (Ephesians 6:11)
  • “Fight the good fight of faith” (1 Timothy 6:12)
  • “Endure hardship as a good soldier” (2 Timothy 2:3)

Only those who belong to Christ—indwelt by the Holy Spirit—have any real hope of resisting. And even then, it is a daily surrender.


False Comforts, Empty Wells

When life grows heavy, we often run—not to God, but to substitutes.

Some numb themselves with substances.
Others escape into entertainment, work, or endless distraction.

But Scripture exposes the outcome:

“Those who make them become like them…” (Psalm 115:8)

Empty pursuits slowly hollow the soul.

God offers something radically different:

“Do not be anxious about anything… the peace of God… will guard your hearts” (Philippians 4:6–7)
“The Lord will keep you from all harm” (Psalm 121:7)

Idols promise relief.
God gives peace.


The Most Subtle Idol of All

Perhaps the most dangerous form today is this:
a redefined god.

A “god” who never confronts sin.
A “god” shaped by culture, not Scripture.
A “god” who fits our preferences instead of ruling our lives.

But a god we create is no god at all.

To worship a god of our own making is still idolatry—just dressed in religious language.


The Great Exchange

At the heart of all idolatry is a tragic trade:

We exchange

the Creator for the created (Romans 1:25),

the Giver for His gifts,

the eternal for the temporary.

And the result is always the same:
emptiness.

Solomon searched it all—pleasure, success, possessions—and concluded it was “vanity” apart from God (Ecclesiastes).

Because God has placed “eternity in man’s heart” (Ecclesiastes 3:11), nothing temporary can satisfy it.


The Only Satisfying Answer

People sin when they notice an unmet need or longing, and then on their own try to go meet that need apart from God. Our heavenly Father promises to meet all of His children's needs as we put Christ, His Son first - as we trust His word. 

Jesus Christ alone fulfills what every idol falsely promises to fulfill.

He does not merely improve life—

He is life (Colossians 3:4).

He does not just give peace—

He is our peace.

He does not offer temporary satisfaction—

He gives eternal joy.

As Psalm 73:25 declares:

“There is none upon earth that I desire besides You.”


Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks. What do you speak about most? 

So the issue is not whether we worship—
but it's what and how we worship.

Every day, the heart answers that question.

Will we chase what cannot satisfy?
Or will we return—again and again—to the One who can?

The path is narrow (Matthew 7:13), but it is clear:

  • Put God first every single day—not in theory, but in practice
  • Refuse to let good things replace Him
  • Run to Him, not substitutes, in hardship
  • Worship Him as He is—not as we wish Him to be

The Blesser will always be far better than His blessings.
His presence will always outweigh every present He's given.

The Blesser is better than His blessings.
His presence is greater than His presents.

And when He is rightly placed at the center, everything else finds its proper place.

Because in the end,
every idol takes—
but Christ gives Himself.

Live focused on Christ. We live to know, worship (yep, it's priority one, pray and obey), to seek, to please, to walk with, to praise, to obey, and enjoy the Lord, and everything else is secondary. The Blesser is way better than His blessings, His presence beats all His presents.@KurtwVons

You and I were made for the praise of his glory. That's the ultimate purpose of our existence - starts with repentance, Faith and salvation in #Jesus. We are His Church, made for the praise of the glorify God. 

The Gospel is true whether you believe it or not - it always has been, and always will be. Cuz Christ is true!

Ephesians 1:6, 12, 14 - Apostle Paul repeats this "to the praise of the glory of his grace" or "praise of his glory" three times in this chapter, emphasizing that believers are destined to live for His glory, to worship biblically. Acceptably!

Isaiah 43:7, 21: God states He created, formed, and made each of us, His people for His glory to declare His praise.

1 Corinthians 10:31: A command to do everything—even daily tasks like eating or drinking—for the glory of God. But everything you think, say and do be as worship as unto Him

What is a correct biblical theology of real worship?