Jesus Christ — "Everyone who practices sin is a slave to sin."
Everyone who practices sin is a slave to sin.
Everyone who practices sin is a slave to sin.
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"If you love me, keep my commands."
"It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God."
"You blind guides! You strain out a gnat but swallow a camel."
"You are of your father the devil, and your will is to do your father's desires."
"If anyone comes to me and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple."
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Habitual wrongdoing doesn't make you free or powerful; it traps you. When you repeatedly choose harmful actions, those patterns start choosing you back. What begins as a decision becomes a compulsion, then an identity. You think you're exercising freedom, but you've actually handed control over to the behavior itself. Real freedom isn't doing whatever you want whenever you want, it's being able to stop.
Jesus spent his ministry reframing religious categories around inner transformation rather than external rule-keeping. He confronted people who considered themselves righteous by lineage or law, arguing that moral bondage was deeper than political bondage. This saying, from John 8, was delivered to listeners who bristled at being called unfree because they were Abraham's descendants. It fits his pattern of exposing hidden captivity and offering liberation through allegiance to him.
First-century Judea was occupied by Rome, and literal slavery was everywhere: household slaves, debt bondage, prisoners of war. Jewish identity centered on the Exodus story of God freeing Israel from Egypt. Claiming someone was a slave was provocative, especially to Pharisees who prided themselves on Torah observance. Jesus weaponized the most familiar social institution of his day to make a theological point his audience couldn't easily dismiss.
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