The Sinfulness Of Sin
Weight | 0.37 kg |
---|---|
Dimensions | 18.1 × 12.1 × 1.9 cm |
ISBN | 9781800402300 |
Binding | Paperback |
Format | Book |
Page Count | 284 |
Short ISBN | |
Series | Puritan Paperbacks |
Topic | Man & Sin, Spiritual Growth |
Original Pub Date | 1669 |
Banner Pub Date | Dec 1, 1965 |
This Edition | 2021 |
Endorsement
‘Works like Ralph Venning’s The Sinfulness of Sin have steered me into a greater understanding of God, his word, and indeed even my own heart. Few today would dare think so carefully and comprehensively about the Bible’s teaching on the stuff of sin. Fewer still would dare write it. Perhaps even fewer have sat to read Venning’s cogent study. But any who read this book will never think the same way about sin, evil, and God’s grace in Christ Jesus. Thank you, Banner.’ — DAVID GARNER
Book Description
First published in the aftermath of the Great Plague of London and entitled Sin, The Plague of Plagues, this book gives a crystal-clear explanation of what sin is, why it is so serious, and what we need to do about it. Here is reliable medicine for a fatal epidemic.
Table of Contents Expand ↓
Publishers’ Introduction | xv | |
INTRODUCTION | 1 | |
1. | SECTION ONE | |
WHAT SIN IS | 9 | |
2. | SECTION TWO | |
THE SINFULNESS OF SIN | 13 | |
Sin’s Contrariety to God | 16 | |
1. To the nature of God | 17 | |
2. To all the names and attributes of God | 18 | |
3. To the works of God | 19 | |
4. To the law and will of God | 20 | |
5. To the image of God | 20 | |
6. To the people of God | 21 | |
7. To the glory of God | 23 | |
8. To the being of God | 23 | |
Sin’s Contrariety to Man | 25 | |
1. Sin is against man’s present good in this life | 27 | |
(1) In a natural sense | 28 | |
(i) It is against man’s well-being in this life | 28 | |
(ii) It is against man’s very being | 34 | |
(2) In a moral sense | 35 | |
(i) It has degraded man | 35 | |
(ii) It has darkened man’s understanding | 38 | |
(iii) It has made man a fool | 43 | |
a. In relation to his chief and ultimate end | 44 | |
b. In relation to the means leading to happiness | 47 | |
c. As to the non-improvement or mis-improvement of means | 49 | |
Examples of man’s folly | 51 | |
(iv) It has made man a beast | 55 | |
a. Like a beast | 56 | |
b. Like the worst of beasts | 57 | |
c. Worse than the beasts | 58 | |
(v) It has separated man from God in a moral sense | 61 | |
Effects of this separation from God | 64 | |
2. Sin is against the good of man in the life to come | 65 | |
The damnation of sinners is privative and positive | 68 | |
1) Privative damnation | 70 | |
a. Sinners will be deprived of all the good things they had in this life | 70 | |
b. Of the pleasure they had from them | 71 | |
c. All their peace | 72 | |
d. Their hopes of Heaven | 73 | |
e. All good company | 73 | |
f. Heaven | 74 | |
g. God himself | 75 | |
h. They shall be incapable of any alteration for the better | 76 | |
2) Positive damnation | 77 | |
The damnation-state of sinners considered under six headings | 78 | |
1. The torment of Hell | 80 | |
a. The place with its names | 80 | |
b. The thing itself | 82 | |
2. The quantity and the quality of the torments of Hell | 83 | |
a. They will be exceedingly great and terrible | 83 | |
b. They will be universal | 85 | |
c. They will be without intermission | 86 | |
3. The duration of these torments | 87 | |
4. The tormentors | 88 | |
a. The Devil | 88 | |
b. Conscience | 89 | |
c. God | 90 | |
5. The aggravations of these torments | 91 | |
6. The effects of these torments | 93 | |
3. | SECTION THREE | |
THE WITNESSES AGAINST SIN | 97 | |
God himself bears witness against sin | 99 | |
(1) He has forbidden sin and made a law against it | 99 | |
(2) He will not allow us to do evil that good may come | 100 | |
(3) By threatening man | 103 | |
(4) He is angry with the wicked | 103 | |
(5) Sin alone made God repent that he had made man | 104 | |
(6) By many great and severe judgments | 105 | |
1. On sinners | 106 | |
2. On his own people | 108 | |
3. On his own Son | 109 | |
(7) He sent his Son into the world to condemn sin and destroy it | 110 | |
1. Christ’s sufferings were for sinners | 110 | |
2. They were exceedingly great | 112 | |
(a) He suffered all kinds of suffering | 113 | |
(b) He suffered from all kinds of persons | 116 | |
(c) He had all kinds of aggravating circumstances united in his sufferings | 117 | |
3. Their greatness is a full witness against the sinfulness of sin | 118 | |
Angels bear witness against sin | 119 | |
(1) Good angels | 119 | |
(2) Evil angels | 123 | |
The Witness of Men | 127 | |
(1) Good men | 127 | |
a. Against other men’s sins | 127 | |
b. Against their own sin | 130 | |
Objections against the witness of good men answered | 134 | |
They abhor sin as sin | 134 | |
They still sin | 137 | |
But they hate sin nevertheless | 138 | |
(2) Wicked men | 140 | |
a. They are ashamed of sin before and when they commit it | 142 | |
b. They are ashamed after they have committed it | 146 | |
(i) They dare not own their sin | 146 | |
(ii) They dare not look into their actions | 148 | |
(iii) They decry and punish in others sin which they themselves are guilty of | 149 | |
(iv) They usually fly to forms of godliness | 149 | |
(v) They desire to die the death of the Righteous | 150 | |
The most hardened sinners at one time witness against sin | 152 | |
The Whole Creation witnesses against sin | 154 | |
(1) As having done it a great deal of wrong | 154 | |
(2) With respect to God and man | 155 | |
a. The creatures teach man his duty | 155 | |
b. They convince men of many sins | 157 | |
(3) The creatures are instruments in the hand of God to punish sinners | 160 | |
The Law witnesses against Sin | 161 | |
1. Before it is committed | 162 | |
2. After it is committed | 162 | |
3. The law will not pardon the least sin | 165 | |
4. It cannot justify any man | 166 | |
5. It makes sin abound | 167 | |
6. It has become as a schoolmaster | 167 | |
7. It silences man from making any complaint | 168 | |
8. It leaves a man without hope | 169 | |
The Gospel bears witness against Sin | 170 | |
The Witness of Sin itself | 176 | |
(1) Sin’s names | 176 | |
1. The work of the Devil | 177 | |
2. All filthiness of flesh and spirit | 183 | |
a. Sin is loathsome | 183 | |
b. It is polluting; and infectious | 184 | |
(i) In its universality | 185 | |
(ii) How suddenly it infects | 187 | |
a. How it increases in ourselves | 188 | |
b. How it increases in others | 189 | |
(iii) Its infection is almost incurable | 190 | |
(iv) It lives in its effects when we are dead | 191 | |
(2) The arts sin uses to disguise itself | 192 | |
4. | SECTION FOUR | |
THE APPLICATION AND USEFULNESS OF THE DOCTRINE OF SIN’S SINFULNESS | 199 | |
Sin is the Worst of Evils | 201 | |
(1) It is worse than any affliction | 202 | |
(2) Worse than death | 209 | |
(3) Worse than the Devil | 212 | |
(4) Worse than Hell | 213 | |
(5) In every way the worst of evils | 214 | |
Inferences from the Sinfulness of Sin against God | 217 | |
(1) The patience and long-suffering of God with sinners is wonderful | 217 | |
(2) The judgments of God are just | 221 | |
(3) How precious a mercy is the forgiveness of sin! | 224 | |
(4) Sin is not to be committed on any account whatsoever | 226 | |
(5) How transcendently and incomparably beautiful a thing is holiness! | 229 | |
Inferences from the Contrariety of Sin to the Good of Man | 230 | |
(1) They who seek for any good in sin are miserably mistaken | 230 | |
1. There is no profit to man by sin | 231 | |
2. There is no honour to be gained by sin | 235 | |
3. There is no pleasure to be had from sin | 236 | |
(2) Time spent in sin is worse than lost | 243 | |
(3) Those who mock at sin are worse than fools and madmen | 244 | |
(4) It can never be well with a man while he is in his sins | 244 | |
(5) Men should become religious without delay | 245 | |
(6) How welcome should the Gospel be! | 249 | |
Exhortation and Counsel | 250 | |
(1) Repent | 251 | |
(2) Believe the Gospel | 254 | |
(3) Sin no more | 257 | |
(4) Take heed of living in any sin | 258 | |
1. Take heed of sinning in thought | 259 | |
(i) Sinful thoughts defile a man | 261 | |
(ii) They are an abomination in the sight of God | 261 | |
(iii) Thought-sins are root-sins | 262 | |
(iv) We must beg pardon for them | 263 | |
(v) The Gospel is to bring thoughts to the obedience of Christ | 264 | |
(vi) Conversion is in the thoughts of men | 264 | |
(vii) God keeps an account of thoughts | 266 | |
Directions | 267 | |
2. A warning against sinful words | 274 | |
(i) Sinful words are wholly forbidden | 276 | |
(ii) Unless a man take heed to his words his religion is in vain | 277 | |
(iii) They evidence sinful hearts | 277 | |
(iv) Evil words corrupt men and manners | 278 | |
(v) The tongue is either man’s glory or shame | 279 | |
(vi) God will judge us for and by our words | 280 | |
Directions | 282 | |
(i) Let our words be few | 282 | |
(ii) Let us speak as we ought | 284 | |
3. Beware of sinning in deed | 285 | |
(i) Take heed of sins of ommission | 286 | |
(a) Some of the best men have been guilty of this | 286 | |
(b) It is a great affliction to good men to be forced to omit duties | 287 | |
(c) It is a sin to be willing to omit a duty | 287 | |
(d) One omission makes way for another | 288 | |
(e) The more knowledge we have of a duty, the worse the omission of it | 291 | |
(f) Sins of omission are bad examples | 292 | |
(g) They are sins which God has judged and will judge | 293 | |
(ii) Take heed of sins of comission | 295 | |
(a) Of Your besetting sin | 295 | |
(b) Of sins as relative | 297 | |
(c) Of the sins of the age and place where you live | 298 | |
(d) Of the sins that attend your callings | 299 | |
(e) Of ‘little’ sins | 308 | |
(f) Of secret sins | 310 | |
(h) Of being guilty of other men’s sins | 312 | |
[1] In giving occasion for them before | 314 | |
[2] As co-helpers of them | 321 | |
[3] As accessory after they are committed | 323 | |
Conclusion | 329 |
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Seth Meyers –
Works like this are gold hidden in a non-descript paperback binding. I bless the Banner of Truth for giving it to us. What minister talks like this today? Who would direct his congregations’ full attention at a sustained effort in Christian hatred of sin? I counted only 2 pages of 284 that did not use a Scripture reference. His torrent of Bible and logical argumentation were buttressed by metaphors and a few references to classical Greek and Latin literature. And yet he was a learned man who had not forgotten that learning only matters if it helps us love Christ and hate sin. Many PhD’s could learn more from this one volume than their entire degree combined.
David Banks –
Would really recommend this to everyone and anyone. Logical but heartfelt, clear but not trite.Many thanks to Banner of Truth for publishing such an excellent book.
Jack Karpan –
I tend to highlight the important passages in the books I read. Venning’s treatise on sin took me three yellow china markers to complete. It seems that every heading and subheading was simply rife with warnings and advice to help us combat the sin in our lives. I highly recommend this book to all Christians.
Daniel Ochefije Ajeibi –
Hmmm… I bless God that I found this noble book. I almost marked every part of this book. For me, it’s a great treasure. I pray, God will continue to use the banner of truth to preserve many more God honouring and sin exposing books like. Every christian denomination need this book. Yea, every human creature need this treasure of great value. Now, I fear and hate sin the more. Dear Lord, please raise up more men like Ralph Venning and other Puritans all over the world in this our day.
Gerry Lautner –
This is, I think, an excellent and exhaustive Biblical study of sin. Every aspect of sin, what it really is, what is its essential nature and what makes it so vile and poisonous is covered in great detail.
As such we are led to see it’s potential and it’s actual harm from Gods perspective, and if His Spirit should blessedly accompany that sight, that insight, with His grace such that sight of sin will have “entrance” into the soul and give it understanding as we are taught here:
“The entrance of Your words gives light;
It gives understanding to the simple.” Ps 119:130
For me this phrase of entrance of words giving light suggests that that there is a surface knowledge of things that does not produce this light and understanding which are necessary for real, deep, abiding transformation.
For example, in reading Owen and the best of the Puritans we see that we are to actually “hate sin”, and not simply, or only,’or primarily because it causes us difficult or offends us, but rather because it offends each member of The Trinity, actually and really and personally.
But unless we actually feel that, actually enter into to the pain and shame and harm this offense brings to our relationship of these Three loving Beings, it seems to me that it remains little more than an abstract concept that we may agree with, but which misses the goal and good done by actually engendering a “hatred of sin”.
But not only does this work promote such a knowledge but it also deals with how to actually go about recognizing and fighting against this enemy. And though I love Owen on mortification and Indwelling Sin In Believers, both insightful and useful works, Venning in pages 259 -274 gives a clear concise and critically important insight into our thoughts as sins and how until we develop the habit and skill of looking carefully at our thoughts and discerning and refusing those that are sinful, we have done nothing at all truly effective in “tearing down the strongholds” of sin that give rise to the actions and lusts which arise first from our thoughts.
Though the whole book is a masterpiece of clarity and useful direction about sin, just those pages on thoughts as sins are worth infinitely more that the price of this book.
Praise God’s use of Banner of Truth in making this work available to those whom the Spirit has inclined to learn to hate and mortify the sins and lusts in their members and to bring every thought into captivity for Christ.