Page 237 - Built For God Handbook (Annotated and Explained Edition) - The Christian Edition of the Tao Te Ching - The New Evangelization - Pope John Paul II
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            The mystics speak of a great Cloud of Unknowing, which resonates with the
            first sentence of this chapter, claiming wisdom lies in knowing that we do not
            know. The more we learn about life and the mystery of faith, the more we
            realize there is to learn, which calls for a certain humility that, when denied,
            leads one into the sin of hypocrisy.

            The Greek word for sin is hamartia, which means falling short, like an arrow
            falling short of its target. At its core, sin is the failure, by our thoughts,
            actions, words, or omissions, to be the person we have been created to be.
            There is a saying, “Name it, claim it, don’t blame it, tame it, and then we can
            aim it,” which basically refers to the process of naming our sin and
            sinfulness (that which makes us sin) and coming to the Lord to receive both
            forgiveness and healing, as the way to inner freedom that can then be
            shared with others.

            The biblical incident of the people who were bitten by poisonous scorpions
            in the wilderness and saved from death by looking upon a bronze serpent
            raised up on a standard is a prophetic presaging of Jesus, the Son of God,
            dying on the cross. As that bronze serpent was without poison, so too was
            Jesus sinless and without any addiction. As the Messiah who came to
            redeem and sanctify, he who is free from sin also has the power to set us
            free from sin.








                                                 b
            a  Matthew 23:1-4; 1 John 1:8; John 9:41; Job 36:26;  Romans 6:15-18;
            c  1 Peter 2:22-24; 1 John 3:4-6; 2 Corinthians 5:21;   Romans 8:1-8
                                                d
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