I'm reading my NIV study bible in the book of Leviticus; Lev 4:3 to be exact. Anyway, the notes at the bottom was explaining a sin offering is for someone who committed a sin
- without realizing it or
- committed out of weakness rather than rebellion
That second sentence got me curious. What is the difference between committing sin out of weakness rather than rebellion? I thought all sin was rebellion against God's laws and high standards. How does weakness come into play?
The more I'm thinking about it, I might have answered my own question but I'll still throw these examples out. An extreme example I'm thinking of is killing. How is killing done out of weakness? It's a sin according to the 10 commandments. That's straight sin against God's word, rebellion, disrespect for another's life, etc. Maybe the only excuse would be self defense but otherwise, done against God.
Another example might be pornography. As Christians, we know we're not supposed look at porn but maybe we get tempted and something happens. Then we grab a magazine and look at something we're not supposed to (moment of weakness). But this act is still sin and rebellion against God (Matt 5:28, 1 Cor 6:18 to name a few verses).
So is the difference between rebellion and weakness the state of our heart? Rebellion is we're thumbing our nose at God saying we do what we want vs. in the above example where we sin not because we want to but because we were tempted and failed?
Maybe none of this matters since the notes are man's words rather than God's words but the notes in the study bible are there to help us understand the verses/passage in modern terms. So back to my original question, what is the difference between a sin committed out of weakness vs. rebellion?