ððķðð°ðžðķðŧðēðŋð' ðŠðŪðŋ ððīðŪðķðŧðð ððŧðķðūððķðð
A couple weeks ago, Connor Boyack (author of the Tuttle Twins and many other books) recorded an episode of his weekly "musing" podcast, and started by talking about the difference between sins, transgressions, and iniquity. These words are often tossed around, even in more religious communities, without much thought to what they ðģðĶðĒðððš mean.
Connor explained that "sin," for all their negative connotation in our modern culture, simply means "to miss the mark," like an archer missing the center of the target. Sins aren't good, of course, but they're not what make us evil; they're what prove that we're human. Transgressions, on the other hand, are intentional and knowing violations of God's law, so they're generally much worse. And iniquity is living with a false paradigm, belief, or tradition, which then leads to sins and transgressions.
So if sins are just general mistakes, and transgressions are deliberate rebellions against something one knows is right, then iniquity is the matrix that the culture is plugged into, the system that so many are so inured and hopelessly dependent on that they will fight to protect it. No one likes it when someone else points out a mistake (sin) they made, and no one who purposefully does something wrong will want to be told what they should do instead, but some people will literally fight to the death before waking up and repenting from their iniquitous lifestyle.
And yet, as Bitcoiners, we're tasked with helping to awaken those who are ready to take the rĖķeĖķdĖķ Ėķ orange pill. We have perhaps the most powerful tool for fighting against iniquity ever, and the final phase of the eternal war against those who would prefer slavery and death to freedom and life has scarcely begun. Everything we do to help people wake up to the realities around them (both glorious and terrible) is a small win for the future of all humanity.