What is Sin

The Biblical Words for “Sin” (Hebrew & Greek)

The Bible does not use one single word for “sin.” It uses a family of words, each revealing a different dimension of what sin is.

Let’s start with the Hebrew.

HEBREW TERMS (Old Testament)

A. חַטָּאת / חֵטְא — ḥaṭṭā’th / ḥet’

Meaning: to miss the mark, to fail, to fall short. This is the most common Hebrew word for sin.

Key ideas:

  • Missing God’s standard
  • Falling short of what is right
  • Wandering from the path

Key uses:

  • Genesis 4:7 — “Sin is crouching at the door.”
  • Psalm 51:2 — “Wash me thoroughly from my sin.”

This is sin as failure to hit the target of righteousness.

B. עָוֹן — ‘avon

Meaning: iniquity, moral crookedness, twistedness.

Key ideas:

  • Inner corruption
  • Twisted motives
  • Guilt that distorts

Key uses:

  • Exodus 34:7 — God forgives “iniquity, transgression, and sin.”
  • Psalm 32:5 — “You forgave the iniquity of my sin.”

This is sin as internal distortion.

C. פֶּשַׁע — pesha‘

Meaning: rebellion, revolt, willful transgression.

Key ideas:

  • Breaking covenant
  • Open defiance
  • Rebellion against authority

Key uses:

  • Isaiah 53:5 — “He was wounded for our transgressions.”
  • Proverbs 28:13 — “He who conceals his transgressions will not prosper.”

This is sin as deliberate rebellion.

D. רַע — ra‘

Meaning: evil, harm, wickedness.

Key uses:

  • Genesis 6:5 — “Every intention of man’s heart was only evil continually.”
  • Isaiah 5:20 — calling evil good and good evil.

This is sin as moral evil.

E. אָשֵׁם — asham

Meaning: guilt, offense, liability.

Key uses:

  • Leviticus 5 — guilt offerings
  • Isaiah 53:10 — the Servant becomes a “guilt offering”

This is sin as guilt that requires atonement.

GREEK TERMS (New Testament)

A. ἁμαρτία — hamartia

Meaning: missing the mark, failure, sin. This is the main NT word for sin.

Key ideas:

  • Falling short of God’s glory
  • A power that enslaves
  • A condition as well as an action

Key uses:

  • Romans 3:23 — “All have sinned…”
  • John 1:29 — Jesus takes away the sin of the world.

This is sin as failure + power + condition.

B. παράπτωμα — paraptōma

Meaning: trespass, slip, false step.

Key uses:

  • Matthew 6:14 — forgiving trespasses
  • Romans 5:15 — Adam’s trespass

This is sin as stepping off the right path.

C. ἀνομία — anomia

Meaning: lawlessness, rejection of God’s law.

Key uses:

  • Matthew 7:23 — “Depart from Me, you workers of lawlessness.”
  • 1 John 3:4 — sin is lawlessness.

This is sin as rebellion against God’s moral order.

D. παράβασις — parabasis

Meaning: transgression, crossing a forbidden line.

Key uses:

  • Romans 4:15
  • Hebrews 2:2

This is sin as boundary-breaking.

E. κακία — kakia

Meaning: malice, wickedness, badness.

Key uses:

  • Ephesians 4:31
  • 1 Peter 2:1

This is sin as corrupt character.

F. ἐπιθυμία — epithymia

Meaning: desire, often sinful desire or lust.

Key uses:

  • James 1:14–15 — desire gives birth to sin
  • Galatians 5:16–17

This is sin as disordered desire.

Timeline of the Concept of Sin from Genesis to Revelation

Stage 1: Sin as Disobedience and Death (Genesis 1–11)

  • Adam and Eve’s disobedience
  • Cain’s murder
  • Human corruption before the flood
  • Tower of Babel

Sin = rebellion + corruption + death.

Stage 2: Sin as Covenant Violation (Exodus–Deuteronomy)

Sin becomes defined by:

  • breaking God’s law
  • violating covenant
  • idolatry
  • injustice

Sin = breaking relationship with God.

Stage 3: Sin as Injustice and Idolatry (Prophets)

Prophets emphasize:

  • oppression
  • violence
  • idolatry
  • hypocrisy

Sin = social injustice + spiritual unfaithfulness.

Stage 4: Sin as Inner Corruption (Wisdom Literature)

Psalms and Proverbs show:

  • sin in the heart
  • sin in the tongue
  • sin in the mind

Sin = internal disorder.

Stage 5: Sin as a Power (Gospels–Romans)

Jesus and Paul reveal sin as:

  • a power that enslaves
  • a master
  • a kingdom
  • something we need deliverance from

Sin = a tyrant.

Stage 6: Sin as Flesh vs. Spirit (Epistles)

Sin is:

  • a force in the flesh
  • opposed to the Spirit
  • defeated by Christ
  • overcome by walking in the Spirit

Sin = a defeated enemy still fighting.

Stage 7: Sin’s Final Judgment (Revelation)

Sin is:

  • judged
  • destroyed
  • removed from the new creation

Sin = a temporary intruder that will be erased forever.

Comparison of Sin in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam

Judaism

Sin is:

  • missing the mark
  • breaking Torah
  • violating covenant
  • harming others
  • failing to honor God

Key ideas:

  • repentance (teshuvah) restores relationship
  • sin is serious but forgivable
  • emphasis on action and responsibility

Judaism sees sin as behavior + intention, but always within covenant.

Christianity

Sin is:

  • a condition
  • a power
  • a rebellion
  • a failure
  • a corruption
  • a separation from God

Key ideas:

  • all have sinned
  • sin enslaves
  • Christ atones for sin
  • salvation frees from sin’s power
  • sin will be destroyed in the end

Christianity sees sin as both a disease and a crime, cured and forgiven through Christ.

Islam

Sin (dhunūb, sayyi’āt) is:

  • disobedience to God
  • forgetting God
  • violating His commands
  • harming others

Key ideas:

  • humans are born innocent
  • sin is forgiven through repentance
  • God is merciful and forgiving
  • major sins require sincere repentance

Islam sees sin as a moral failure, not a fallen nature.

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