The Remnant Awakens - What Is Sin? Exposing the Lie That Keeps the World Lawless
The remnant awakens
Chapter 1
Intro
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Shalom, family. I’m your brother Pierre Lidji. If you’re new here, let me just say: welcome to The Remnant Awakens, the podcast that, well—if I’m being honest—probably makes a lot of people uncomfortable. But that’s kinda the point, isn’t it? To stir up the real ones, the scattered ones from Yashar’el and those grafted in, to wake us up to who we really are and who the Most High says we are. Some of you might still be wrestling with the stuff we dug into last episode. If you missed it, you gotta go back, for real. Today, though, we’re kicking off with something basic, but so misunderstood: what sin really is, straight from the Scriptures. So lets get started.
Chapter 2
The Biblical Definition of Sin
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Let’s not waste time. 1 Yochanan (1 John) chapter 3 verse 4 says “Whosoever commits sin transgresses also the Torah: for sin is the transgression of the Torah.” I mean, it could not be clearer. It didn’t say sin is making a mistake or falling short or whatever kinda watered-down definition you grew up hearing. Sin means breaking the Torah. Breaking the commandments. Point blank. And Torah, you gotta remember, just means instruction, not some ancient law book collecting dust, but nah, It’s the blueprint, You ever wondered why so many denomination believers feel lost or disconnected? It’s ‘cause they’ve replaced the Most High’s instructions with what—feelings? Church traditions? Whatever’s trending on TikTok? Nah. Sin isn’t a grey area. The world would like you to think it’s all subjective, but Scripture—our Hebrew Scriptures—don’t leave that open.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And look, I’m not saying that to condemn anybody out here. I know—I’ve been there too. But if we’re gonna do this narrow path walk for real, we gotta get the definitions right. Sin isn’t about just “messing up” or “being human.” Nah, it’s that deliberate line—you cross it, and you step outside our Creator’s design. That’s why, in previous episodes, I’ve hammered on about original Hebrew meanings—not some translation or commentary that makes everything sound easy. Sin is Torah-breaking. That’s it.
Chapter 3
How Religion Twisted the Truth
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And here’s where it gets sticky. Most Christian churches, let’s just say it, have moved that ancient boundary stone. They’ll tell you, “we’re not under the law, we’re under grace”—and to them, that means Torah’s gone, done away with, nailed to the tree. I’m not here to bash; I know many are sincere. But sincerity doesn’t mean you got the truth, does it? If we just go off what people say, rather than what’s in the book, we end up with the confusion we see today. Remember in earlier episodes, how we talked about the “Mystery of Iniquity”? That lawlessness that crept in, replaced Torah with Greco-Roman religion, turned our faith into something soft, something that it isn't, something passive. That’s by design. The religious system twisted what sin even is, so folks wouldn’t even recognize it anymore!
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
I mean, if the definition of sin changes based on your denomination or what year it is, that can’t be the unchanging Word, right? Truth has to be rooted. Without Torah, and with all these traditions getting stacked on top, it’s easy for folks to say, “I’m good, I just need forgiveness every week like a subscription service.” That’s not it. That’s the trap. And if you haven’t noticed, the world’s gotten more chaotic, not less, since they scrapped Torah, i mean look at our adults and youth today, this generation is out of control.
Chapter 4
The Fruit of Lawlessness
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
So let’s break down what happens when you rip Torah out the picture—when you make up your own definition of sin. What’s the fruit of that? Well, I don’t even have to convince y’all. Just look around: confusion between right from wrong and identity confusion, , lawlessness, folks claiming any and every identity except the one Yahuah gave them, denying real consequences, picking and choosing what’s convenient. When you remove the Torah, man, it’s like removing the foundation from a house and then acting surprised when it crumbles. people don’t even know who they are anymore! And when people say, “well, the law’s gone, we just need grace!”—it produces a culture where nobody is accountable. Grace, grace, grace, but what are we being saved from if there’s no definition of sin? That’s the crazy part.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
You see, once you abandon Torah, you end up with fruit that looks nothing like the Mashiach or the early assembly. As we mentioned in past episodes—especially about the true Hebrews and the importance of going back to our roots—if we don’t restore that foundation, we’re lost. The fruit of lawlessness is chaos and confusion, period.
Chapter 5
Yahusha Came to Free Us From Sin — Not the Torah
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Now, a lotta folks get real confused about why Yahusha came. They’ll twist paul's words, let’s use his right name (Sha'ul) and forget the rest of the context. Romayim—Romans chapter 6 verse 1 to 2 in the Cepher: “Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? Never!” Some versions say (God forbid) but I like how the Cepher pulls no punches: NEVER! Do you hear that? It doesn’t say, "Keep on sinning so grace can pile up higher." It says, “No way.” Yahusha didn’t suffer, die, and rise again so we could stay in the same pattern of lawbreaking and confusion.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Sometimes I wonder, how did we get so turned around? People act like Yahusha came to get rid of the instructions, when every prophet He quoted, every move He made, was Torah. They act like grace is this cheap get-out-of-jail-free card instead of the power to actually break free from lawlessness (torahlessness). You know, in an Episode, we really leaned into the idea that the whole Bible, all the covenants, were written to the Hebrews, for the Hebrews, and the nations get grafted in. Yahusha was only freeing us from sin and the penalty of sin in order to restore us into covenant with Yahuah—so we could keep Torah, not ignore it. That’s what He did. That’s what He expects.
Chapter 6
The Role of the Remnant
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
I gotta say, our job as the remnant (Yashar'el and the grafted in believers) isn’t to just blend in. We’re not here to be background characters in somebody else’s story. Nah, we’re here to set the record straight, uncover what’s been hidden, and call our people—and anybody grafted in—to the truth. The remnant is supposed to be that righteous thorn in the side that reminds the world: “Hey, this ain’t about religion, it’s about identity, covenant and obedience.” We ain’t trying to be popular. If anything, standing for Torah and truth is gonna have you standing alone, at least for a while.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
But honestly, that’s okay. Our calling is bigger than comfort or approval. And man, just remembering why we do this—so the next generation knows who they really are, so nobody has to sit in some pew and moving from churches to churches and wondering why their prayers hit the ceiling and bounce back. The remnant is the wake-up call, the stubborn witnesses in a world that’s too sleepy and rebellious or, if I’m being real, too scared to see what’s really going on.
Chapter 7
Final Words
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
Sin, family, ain’t a slip-up, or just some mistake, or “well, I’m only human.” It’s not a bad habit like biting your nails. And it for sure isn’t just some religious idea somebody made up. Nah, it’s rebellion—going against the Torah, the very instructions Yahuah gave our people and us for our good (deuteronomy chapter 6 verse 24). So why am I saying all this? Because if you don’t know what sin is, you’ll never know what freedom really feels like. If you think Torah is the problem, you’ll never actually leave Egypt, not in your heart, not in your mind, not even in your generations.
Pierre Alexandre Nissi Lidji
And that's all for today family, i want you to reflect back on what we've just shared together. alright family. I’m Pierre Lidji, your brother from the tribe of Yahudah, and this is The Remnant Awakens. If this message stirred something in you—don’t keep it to yourself. Like this video so it reaches more people, subscribe and turn on your bell notification if you’re awakening to truth, and comment below with what stood out to you the most. And if you know someone still sleeping share this episode with them. Until next time — Shalom. See you all on the next episode.
