Finding Fault

Psalm 25:3 Yea, let none that wait on thee be ashamed: let them be ashamed which transgress without cause.

Yesterday I ended with Psalm 25:1-5 and in doing so I was struck by the phrasing of the third verse, without cause. Is a transgression with cause acceptable? It should not be since it is still a transgression. A sin is a sin is a sin. So here again, I give pause for a correct understanding.

From a grammatical standpoint allow me to address the colon as a dividing point. There is a comparative between the two sides of the colon. The only word that exists on both sides is shame. Who is to be ashamed and who is not to be ashamed.

If we go about thinking that all we have to do to justify our transgression is to assign blame; we will only find ourselves guilty of another transgression, judgement.

Matthew 7:1-2 Judge not, that ye be not judged. For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again.

This goes to a weakness within ourselves which is as old as sin itself and that is in finding fault in others to rationalize our own failures.

Genesis 3:12 And the man said, The woman whom thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat.

The judgement of Adam was not simply that the woman had played her part in his mistake but that God had set all this in motion by creating her in the first place. “If you had not made her, she would not have tempted me, and then I would not have sinned.”

I cannot tell you how many times I have heard it said, “Don’t blame me, God made me this way.” Blaming God for our own weakness is a prescription for conviction. What defendant ever won a court case by blaming the judge?

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