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Born Afraid: The Engine of Sin

Born Afraid: The Engine of Sin

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Episode 6

Born Afraid: The Engine of Sin

What if we’ve misdiagnosed the human problem?

Many Christian traditions begin with inherited depravity — the idea that we sin because we were born corrupt at the root. But Scripture may emphasize something even more foundational: death and the fear it produces.

In this episode, we explore whether mortality — not metaphysical corruption — is the deeper engine beneath human sin.

Core Question

Do we sin because we are sinners?

Or are we sinners because we sin?

And if we sin, is it because we were born evil — or because we were born mortal?

The Biblical Frame

Hebrews 2:14–15

Humanity is described as enslaved “through fear of death.” The bondage is existential and lifelong.

Genesis 3

The first recorded response after the fall is fear:

“I was afraid… and I hid myself.” (Genesis 3:10)

Death enters. Fear awakens. Hiding begins.

Romans 5

Paul emphasizes that:

  • Sin entered the world.
  • Death entered through sin.
  • Death “reigned.”

The focus is not only corruption — but dominion.

1 Corinthians 15

“The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.” If death is the last enemy, perhaps it is also the deepest one.

A Provocative Thesis

What if sin is self-preservation without trust?

What if sin is self-medicating fear?

  • Lust quiets loneliness.
  • Greed quiets insecurity.
  • Control quiets vulnerability.
  • Religious performance quiets anxiety.

If death is the atmosphere of fallen humanity, fear becomes instinct — and sin becomes anesthesia.

Christ’s Reversal

In Gethsemane:

“My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death…” (Matthew 26:38)

On the cross:

He refused the anesthetic (Matthew 27:34).

Jesus does not numb fear. He enters death fully conscious — and breaks it from the inside.

If death is the root problem, resurrection life must be the root solution.

The Conclusion

Our predicament does not require inherited depravity as the engine when we have already inherited death.

If death reigned, then resurrection must reign stronger.

If fear fueled sin, then the destruction of death removes fear’s leverage.

If we share in Christ’s life, then fear no longer writes our prescriptions — and sin no longer defines our destiny.

Scripture References

  • Hebrews 2:14–15
  • Genesis 3:10, 19
  • Romans 3:9
  • Romans 5:12–14
  • 1 Corinthians 15:22, 26, 55
  • Matthew 26:38–39
  • Matthew 27:34
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