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Transgression vs. Sin: A Distinction Worth Understanding There’s a distinction in Scripture that we often miss, and when we miss it, we misunderstand ourselves—and sometimes even God. That distinction is transgression versus sin. While reading Biblical Psychology by Oswald Chambers, I was reminded of a verse we tend to skim past: “And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in transgression.” — 1 Timothy 2:14 Scripture is precise. Eve was deceived. Adam was not. That matters. Eve listened to the serpent and drifted unknowingly. There was no conscious rebellion in her heart. She was in transgression—an unconscious step out of alignment. Adam, however, knew exactly what God had said and chose to disobey anyway. That’s why Scripture associates sin with Adam: “Therefore, just as through one man sin entered the world…” — Romans 5:12 Sin is always conscious. Transgression usually is not. Chambers puts it plainly: original sin is not rebellion—it’s doing without God. The earliest stages of sin aren’t marked by defiance but by fear and shame. Adam didn’t rebel when confronted by God—he hid. There’s also a leadership lesson here that’s uncomfortable but necessary. God gave the command about the tree to Adam. Scripture never records God giving it directly to Eve. That placed responsibility on Adam—not to dominate, but to lead. When the moment came, Adam failed. Eve was in transgression. Adam followed her into sin. That pattern didn’t start with us. It started with Adam. Yet grace shows up immediately. Redemption did not come through man, but through the seed of the woman. That’s not how lineage normally works in Scripture, which makes it all the more striking. In reacting against Mariolatry, many of us have overcorrected and lost sight of a truth worth honoring: God chose to enter the world through a woman. Overcorrection itself is a pattern of the fall. We see wrong and swing too far the other way. Personally. Culturally. Spiritually. It’s not healing—it’s just another form of misalignment. Most of our decisions are made subconsciously. That’s where transgression lives. By the time sin shows up, the groundwork has often already been laid. That’s why Scripture tells us to take every thought captive, not just our actions. Here’s the hard truth: most people around you can see your transgressions before you can. That’s why deep fellowship matters. Real relationships where someone can ask, “Are you open to feedback?”—and mean it. Correction hurts, but it’s a gift when it comes from love. Defensiveness usually reveals that we know we don’t extend the same grace to others. Forgiveness is foundational here. If we want mercy when we fall, we must practice mercy when others fall—separating the person from the sin. People act with the tools they have at the time. That doesn’t make sin right, but it should shape our response. The takeaway is simple, though not easy: Learn to recognize your transgressions, not just your sins Pay attention to subconscious drift Stay close to God Stay close to people who love you enough to tell the truth Practice the grace you hope to receive That’s not weakness. That’s biblical strength.