From Sin to Stepping Stone

The Lord can turn our sins into stepping stones.

January 19-25

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From Sin to Stepping Stone 

This week we get to read about how Adam and Eve made their way out of the garden and into the world that we know today. There are principles here that can change how you see your own efforts to follow Christ. Some of the principles we read about this week have the power to bring you out of perfectionism and into true salvation because they are not the same thing.

Background on the verse we’re about to read: Moses is learning about Satan because Satan had recently come to him to tempt him. The Lord starts to teach Moses about the man who was trying to get Moses to worship him, specifically about Satan’s role in the beginning of the Plan of Salvation.

Moses 4:6 And Satan put it into the heart of the serpent, (for he had drawn away many after him,) and he sought also to beguile Eve, for he knew not the mind of God, wherefore he sought to destroy the world. 

Satan wanted to tempt Eve in order to destroy the world. He wanted to destroy the plan of God because he was mad. Despite his original pleadings to come down and save everyone and bring them all home, now Satan threw away his supposed love for us and merely sought to destroy what God was planning. He was a fraud; he never loved us. He just wanted glory and honor. 

There is beautiful irony here. Satan would have destroyed God’s plan if he had left Adam and Eve alone, but he knew not the mind of God. He didn’t know that tempting Eve and convincing her to sin was part of the plan. 

One more time. He didn’t know that tempting Eve and convincing her to sin was part of the plan.

I want to switch up the verse just a little bit. I’m going to put in my name. You put in your’s.

Moses 4:6 And Satan put it into the heart of the serpent, (for he had drawn away many after him,) and he sought also to beguile Autumn, for he knew not the mind of God, wherefore he sought to destroy the world. 

Satan tempts me because even though he already lost his chance to destroy the plan with Adam and Eve and then again with Christ in the Garden of Gethsemane, he wants to destroy the effects of the plan in my life.

There is beautiful irony here. Sin was part of the plan, and not just as some unfortunate byproduct of a fallen world. It was one of the most powerful tools utilized to save Adam and Eve. Let me explain myself. 

Let’s pretend for a moment that Satan predicted the mind of God and left Adam and Eve alone. We would have remained in the exact state where we were. Adam and Eve would have remained innocent in the garden, and we would have stayed in our heavenly home with God. God’s plan would have been thwarted. No sin would have occurred, but no true happiness would have occurred either.

Sin was part of the plan, and not just as some byproduct of a fallen world. Sinning teaches us powerful lessons. 

Now we have to be careful with this principle and have the right attitude towards it. I don’t teach this principle so that someone feels like they can go try cocaine in order to learn that it’s bad. That’s ridiculous. I’m not even teaching that it’s okay to lie or cheat so that you can learn your lessons. I’m not teaching that it’s okay to go sin as long as your purpose is an education.

I am trying to break apart the ridiculous arguments of perfectionism. 

We came here to grow and become. Our purpose in life should not be to stand frozen and still so that we don’t do anything wrong. Our methods should not include berating ourselves into perfection. We were meant to come down here and return to live with God, prepared to live His life and participate in His work. How do we get from Point A to Point B?

There are a lot of ways we acquire that growth. One of those ways is sinning. I have learned so much from reflecting on the times that I screwed up. This doesn’t give us license to go out and sin on purpose for the supposed goal of learning because that doesn’t get you to Point B. If you’re using “learning” as an excuse to sin, you’re not returning to God, prepared to live His life and participate in His work.

Rather, this gives you license to look at your sins the way Adam and Eve came to look at their sins. Here is another verse from this week.

Adam and Eve sinned. They disobeyed God and were driven out of the garden. They toiled, suffered, had children, and offered sacrifices to God. One day, an angel came to them and taught them about Christ. The angel told them that they could be redeemed after they sinned and return to live with God again. 

Moses 5:10-11

10 And in that day Adam blessed God and was filled, and began to prophesy concerning all the families of the earth, saying: Blessed be the name of God, for because of my transgression my eyes are opened, and in this life I shall have joy, and again in the flesh I shall see God.

11 And Eve, his wife, heard all these things and was glad, saying: Were it not for our transgression we never should have had seed, and never should have known good and evil, and the joy of our redemption, and the eternal life which God giveth unto all the obedient. 

They rejoiced. Because of his transgression, Adam’s eyes were opened. He got to experience joy because he had transgressed and he still had an opportunity to return to live with God whom he knew personally and loved. Eve rejoiced that she learned the difference between good and evil as well as the joy of Christ paying for them to come home. 

We don’t look at a choice ahead of us and disobey God in the name of learning good from evil. However, we do have permission to look back at our transgressions through the lens of a testimony of Christ. We rejoice that He took our sins and turned them into powerful stepping stones that brought us closer to Christ. 

Honestly, it makes me think of the Come Back podcast. Some of the stories we hear about on that podcast are so incredibly powerful. People learned from their mistakes and found rejoicing in Christ. We can find that too. We don’t have to let our sins weigh us down unto death. We can rejoice in Christ’s ability to save us from our sins and utilize our sins to help us become prepared to live God’s life and participate in His work.

When we beat ourselves up with perfectionism over our mistakes, it’s only because we don’t yet know the mind of God. 

Satan wants you to believe that your sins and transgressions are the end of the story, that he’s destroyed you. He has since learned that his desire to thwart God’s plan ironically fell apart because of his own participation in that plan, but if he can keep you from understanding that, then he can win a couple of battles even if he can’t win the war. 

He doesn’t want you to know the mind of God which is offering you joy, peace, and salvation. Thwart Satan. Let go of everything that keeps you from the feelings associated with salvation, namely shame and guilt that has been blown out of proportion and continues to hold you down. Rejoice! Gain a testimony of Christ like Adam and Eve did. 


I testify that God didn’t fear Adam and Eve’s transgressions. He knew it would happen. He planned on it. It needed to happen. I testify that God isn’t afraid of your sins; why would He be? They’re already paid for and taken care of. Sometimes the only thing holding us back from salvation is our own inability to know the mind of God and let go of the sins that were already paid for. I testify of Christ’s saving power, and I testify that gaining a true testimony of that power can light up your life like you’ve never experienced.

4 thoughts on “From Sin to Stepping Stone

  1. Yes, Sin was part of the plan, and not just as some byproduct of a fallen world. Sinning does teach us powerful lessons.

    Because each son and daughter of God, comes to this earth with the light of Christ, (a measure of the mind of God), who doesn’t, at least a few times, know they are choosing wrong and willfully choose to do it anyway? I know I have!!

    Would you agree that the Scribes and Pharisees, Saul, who became Paul, Alma and the sons of Mosiah believed their actions were in the “service” of their God and then sinned willfully and intentionally?

    It makes sense to me that whether someone sins willfully, or accidentally, D & C 122:7 still applies. Isn’t repentance, and powerful lessons, available either way?

    I would say the real danger is allowing those “flaxen cords” (2 Nephi 26:22) to remain around our necks until we are bound “with his strong cords forever”. Another huge issue, especially on social media, is sitting in judgement as to whether someone’s sins are accidental or intentional.

    Some of my comments (that I just sent a few minutes ago) also seem to be applicable here. Satan whispers little lies (mingled with scripture) into our ears over and over until they are shouted as if they were the doctrines of God. How sad that millions and millions of credal Christan’s joyfully relish being saved in their sins!!

    Enjoy your weekend. I look forward to writing again this Sunday.

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    • Repentance and powerful lessons are certainly available either way, and isn’t it interesting how something within us seems to buck against that thought? Instead of letting it go and owning it, our visceral response is to fight against it.

      You’re absolutely right on the flaxen cords. I actually just wrote a post that is similar to it. There are a few OT kings who rebelled and didn’t trust God, but they were still spared. I attribute the Lord sparing them to the fact that they prayed hard for deliverance. The real key is to keep turning back to God and throwing off the cords.

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  2. One more thought……

    Do you really think that Satan would have destroyed God’s plan if he had left Adam and Eve alone?

    Was there a loophole, a gap in the plan, that Satan could have used to tie Gods hands? By tempting Eve and getting her to sin, Satan certainly did move the plan forward, but I don’t see how an all-knowing Father, the most intelligent being in the Universe, one who sees the past present and future, would have had to sit by, powerless, because Lucifer wasn’t being Lucifer and by dragging his feet scored a checkmate?

    I definitely don’t think so. We learn from Moses 7:36 that of “all the creations which I have made” …… “and among all the workmanship of mine hands there has not been so great wickedness as among thy brethren”. I don’t see how every world created by God fell and went through the same events as ours did. I can’t say I know the answer, but I really do think there has to be a solution, even without Satan’s participation.

    Please share your thoughts in return.

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    • I’ve had my thoughts sway back and forth on it. I believe the God created innocence because He couldn’t create anything less than perfection. We had to choose to do wrong, and in order to do that, a different option had to be presented. I’m not sure how God could have worked around it without Satan playing his essential role, but you’re completely right. He is all-knowing, and I don’t know all of His mysteries. He definitely could have had a backup plan that never needed to be mentioned, or perhaps, in His all-knowing, He knew that Satan would play his part and didn’t worry about a backup plan. All theoretical. All very interesting. But a veeery difficult question haha

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