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Well, our sermon text this morning
is Galatians 5 verses 13 through 15, if you would turn there with
me. These verses are a crucial hinge on which the book of Galatians
turns. Almost everything prior to Galatians
5.13 has been focused on explaining, and applying, and defending the
doctrine of justification by faith. And then from Galatians
5.13 onward much of what Paul writes is written to ensure that
the church in Galatia doesn't misunderstand what he's been
saying up to this point by taking it to an unhealthy extreme, unorthodox
extreme. So let's hear now the word of
the Lord from Galatians chapter 5, verses 13 through 15. For you were called to freedom,
brothers. Only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for
the flesh, but through love serve one another. For the whole law
is fulfilled in one word. You shall love your neighbor
as yourself. But if you bite and devour one another, watch
out that you are not consumed by one another. Let's pray. Father, as we contemplate your
word this morning, and as we consider our own thought processes
and reasoning, as we think about our own values and behavior in
light of that word, help us to know the truth, your truth, and
be set free by that truth. free from the condemnation of
the law, but also free from our enslavement to sin. Lord, you
have justified us by your grace. Now I ask that you would also
perfect us by your grace. Thank you for the time that you
give us on this earth and in these bodies. at the time between
our conversion and our glorification. But Lord, help us to use that
time wisely and profitably. Fit us for heaven, fit us for
an eternity spent in your presence with exceeding joy. So now, Holy
Spirit, please open our eyes to behold wonderful things from
your word. I pray in Jesus' name, amen. Well, we're now 11 or 12 sermons
into our journey through the book of Galatians, and today's
text is a turning point in Paul's letter. The focus has been on
the doctrinal confusion in Galatia over justification. Right out
of the gate, right at the very beginning of his letter, Paul
strongly rebuked the church in Galatia for so quickly turning
to a different gospel, a gospel of works rather than of faith. And after that opening rebuke,
Paul immediately began to defend his apostolic authority. Since
Paul was an apostle who had been converted, and called, and tested,
and vetted, and confirmed by the other apostles, he held real
authority over the Church. And if he held real God-given
authority, then the Galatian Church had an obligation to listen
to him and obey what he was telling them. So having rebuked the Galatians,
and having established his credentials and authority, he begins a lengthy
and thorough defense of the doctrine of justification by faith alone
in Christ alone. He traced this doctrine theologically,
and rationally, and historically. And his argument culminated in
that wonderful affirmation that we find there in chapter 5, verse
1, for freedom to Christ has set us free, stand firm therefore
and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery. And Paul repeats
that same thought in our text today. Verse 13, for you were
called to freedom, brothers. But Paul's focus is now gonna
shift somewhat as he addresses a different extreme that in one
sense is at the other end of the moral spectrum, but in another
sense is rooted in the very same heart problem that made legalism
such an attractive teaching to the Galatians. Paul is going
to begin addressing the danger of viewing this freedom that
we have in Christ as a license to sin all we want to, as permission
to do as we please. The old translations used to
call this the sin of licentiousness. It's the notion that we have
a license to sin because Christ has already paid the punishment
for our sins. Now Paul's going to tear down
this notion by first addressing our tendency toward license.
Then he will point us to the antidote, the fix, the solution
for living as if we have license to sin. And then lastly, he will
give us a final warning with regard to the effect that unchecked
license will have on us if we fail to instruction of God's
Word. And in all of this Paul is making
the point that because we are susceptible to the lie of license,
to the lie of licentiousness, and we all are susceptible to
that, Christians need to pursue servant hearted love toward one
another. Well let's consider then first
the tendency toward license that is inherent in all sinners. And
we see this in verse 13. For you were called to freedom,
brothers, only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for
the flesh. The gloriously good news of the
gospel of Jesus Christ is that sinners are free from the condemnation
of the law. We have sinned, we deserve eternal
judgment, but because Christ has atoned for our sins, we are
free from the wrath of God that we justly deserve, and that is
good news. That's the gospel. Now, if we
truly take that good news to heart and grasp its scope and
magnitude, we begin to realize that if I am truly in Christ,
nothing, absolutely nothing can change the fact that I'm saved
from eternal death. I will not go to hell when I
die because the law's declaration of my guilt has been silenced
forever. I'm off the hook. The trial is
over and I've been declared innocent. And nothing I say or do is ever
gonna reverse that declaration. In fact, there is no one left
to condemn me. I am free in Christ. But there's
a problem. You see, although I am free in
Christ from the condemnation of the law, my sin nature is
still present within me. The gracious verdict of innocence
has been given, but I still think and act and reason like the guilty
criminal that I have always been. It will take time for my thought
processes and my habits to change. It will take time for my affections
to stop being guided and directed by what I was and start being
guided and directed by what I have become. This battle between old
sinful self and my new justified self is intense and difficult. At times it's discouraging and
feels like a hopeless lost cause. Paul describes this very thing,
this battle in the heart and mind of the justified sinner
in great detail in Romans 7. He says, I find it to be a law
that when I want to do right, evil is close at hand. For I
delight in the law of God in my inner being, but I see in
my members another law, waging war against the law of my mind,
making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members.
Wretched man that I am, who will deliver me from this body of
death? So the fight is real for every
Christian, but the promise of victory is also real. We have
to remind ourselves frequently that the same faith that was
necessary for justification is also necessary for this battle
that takes place in the heart of the justified sinner. I have
to continually believe what God says has happened, has really
happened. Because truth be told, it doesn't
always appear that way, does it? On our best days, we hate
those sinful dispositions that still reside in us, but on many
days, We indulge them, and we coddle them, and we even defend
them. That's what Paul is warning about
here. That's what Paul knows is the
tendency of even justified, redeemed children of God. It's the rationale
that says, I'm free in Christ, therefore I can do anything I
want to, even commit sin without consequence, without judgment,
without the disapproval of God. And this tendency is nothing
new. Paul addressed it in Romans, Romans 6, 1 and 2. What shall
we say then? Shall we continue in sin that
grace may abound? God forbid. Peter addressed it
in his epistle, 1 Peter 2, 16. Live as people who are free,
but then he adds, not using your freedom as a cover-up for evil,
but living as servants of God. Jude spoke of it in his letter,
Jude 4. Certain people have crept in
unnoticed who long ago were designated for this condemnation, ungodly
people who pervert the grace of our God into sensuality and
deny our only Master and Lord Jesus Christ. Former sons of
Adam, now turned sons of God, have and have always had a lingering
tendency to pervert the grace of God into a license to freely
sin without consequence. And it's something we ought to
resist and run from. It's something that one day we
will be free of, but for now it is our lingering tendency.
Like the child who can't wait to become a parent because he
thinks then he can do whatever he wants to do, right? It's a
misunderstanding of the privilege of freedom. And it's something
to which we are all prone. Well, this brings us to Paul's
second point, which is the antidote to license. The antidote to selfish
indulgence, as Paul explains it, is servant-hearted love. Servant-hearted love. Look with
me at the latter half of verse 13. And verse 14, but through
love serve one another for the whole law is fulfilled in one
word. You shall love your neighbor as yourself. Now it's interesting
to me that of all the antidotes Paul could have identified, the
one he mentions is love exhibited in service to others. If I were
addressing the problem of Christians assuming that the grace of God
meant they could sin all they wanted to without consequence,
I think I would explain the importance of holy living. I might explain
how Christians need to be different from the world, distinct and
separate from any kind of association with immoral, ungodly things. I might describe the ways in
which indulgent living ruins people and ruins families and
ruins churches. How living like the world is
a bad witness to the world of the power of the gospel and so
on. Paul addresses none of that, at least not initially. Instead,
he tells Christians to focus their effort and energy on lovingly
serving each other. Now, why would servant-hearted
love be the antidote to lawless, godless living? Well, if we thought
about it for just a moment, we would realize that this tendency
towards sinful license is rooted in a preoccupation with self. It's rooted, in fact, in the
very same self-centeredness that legalism is rooted in. Paul is
not suddenly addressing a different batch of Galatian Christians
from this point forward in his letter. No, he's still addressing
the very same heart problem that he's been addressing all along,
which is the self-centeredness of the human heart. You see,
the self-oriented person who wants tries to earn salvation through
what he does or does not do because he selfishly wants the credit
for that salvation. The self-oriented person who
discovers that salvation is by grace and not works views grace
as a license to sin freely because he wants autonomy or the pleasures
of sin. In legalism, self wants the glory,
the credit. In lawlessness, self wants freedom,
autonomy, to be the boss. But both extremes stem from a
heart of selfishness, a heart that wants to be either its own
savior or its own master and lord. And so if the Galatians
are going to rid themselves of the tendency toward moral license
and self-indulgence, they need to learn to be selfless. Makes
sense then, doesn't it? That Paul would say that the
antidote to licentious living is love expressed through self-denying
service towards others. Through love, serve one another. goes so far as to say that the
whole law is fulfilled in one word, you shall love your neighbor
as yourself. These Galatians were supposedly
interested in keeping God's law as a means of salvation. That's
why they were so susceptible to the false teacher's influence.
Well, if they really loved God's law, they would demonstrate that
love by doing the one thing that Paul and Jesus before him and
Moses before him acknowledges as being of utmost importance
when it comes to obeying God, and that one thing is love. When
asked what the great commandment is, Jesus answered, you shall
love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your
soul and with all your mind. That is the first and great commandment. And then Jesus added, and the
second is like it, you shall love your neighbor as yourself.
On these two commands depend all the law and the prophet.
So love of God expressed in a love for those made in God's image
is the height of obedience. It is the purest expression of
a holy life. It is the epitome of unselfishness. It is the fulfillment of God's
law. Now the word love is a tricky
word, isn't it? As soon as the concept of love
comes up in a conversation or in a sermon, I wonder if we don't
just sort of glaze over because while we all acknowledge that
love is important, it strikes us, perhaps, as such a nebulously
broad quality that none of us really think we are lacking in
love. If I were to say church, You
need to fight your self-indulgence by fasting every Tuesday and
Thursday for five years. I would likely have your attention
because all of a sudden things just got very specific and measurable. You might agree with it or disagree
with it, but you can't ignore it or dismiss it because it's
so objectively obvious who is fasting every Tuesday and Thursday.
It's not so objectively obvious who is loving others. Love is,
to some extent, a posture of the heart, a disposition of the
mind, and so it's not very visible, which means it's easy to fake.
It's easy to deceive others and to even deceive ourselves into
thinking that we love others well. But Paul doesn't let us
get away with that. He qualifies this command to
love by including two statements that make the quality of love
very visible, very measurable even. First, he says that true
love is the kind of love that serves others. It's not just
a feeling or an attitude that you have toward another person.
No, it's actionable. It serves. It washes the other
person's feet. It bears the brunt of someone
else's hardship. It lightens the load for the
other person. Love looks like selfless service. Let me put it like this, if you're
not serving others, you're not loving others. Certainly you
can serve without loving, but you cannot love without serving. So the question is, do you serve
others? Do you serve others? I'm sure
you do on Sundays at church when everyone is looking, but what
about at home when it's just you and your sibling, or you
and your spouse? Nobody's watching, you're not
gonna get noticed or praised for it. Do you serve then? That's
the real test of the genuineness of unselfish love. A friend once
told me a story that I suspect we can all identify with and
that illustrates this tendency of ours to pretend to love and
serve when we're really just tooting our own horn. He said
it was Thanksgiving Day. The big meal had just ended and
the family and friends were gathered around the table staring at this
insurmountable pile of dirty dishes and leftover food. Well, my friend graciously said
to the group, I'll do the dishes. I'll clean up after the meal.
And he dutifully began clearing the table, prepping the sink
to wash this mountain of dishes, when to his surprise, everyone
moved into the living room and were in there visiting and enjoying
each other, having a good time, leaving him to do the dishes
in the kitchen. And my friend thought to himself,
well, I know I said that I'd do the dishes, but I thought
some people would help. And it occurred to him in that
moment that he wanted the reputation of being a servant, but he didn't
want to actually be treated like a servant. And I think we're probably all
that way at one time or another, aren't we? We want the credit
for being selfless, but we don't wanna actually have to be selfless. Church, that is fake love. That
is pretend selflessness. Real love, real selflessness
is love that doesn't just talk about being a servant, it actually
serves. It actually loves in objective,
concrete ways. And if we excuse away our selfishness
behind a mask of pretend love, we're still being selfish, which
means in the larger context of this passage, we're still vulnerable
to the thought processes of moral license and sinfully indulgent
behavior. We're using our liberty in Christ
as an excuse to sin. there's another point, another
statement that Paul makes which won't let us off the hook easily.
It's actually a quote from Leviticus and from the Gospels that says, as yourself, and it's those last
two words that I wanna draw your attention to, as yourself. You see, it's possible that we
acknowledge that love through service is a great thing. It's
possible that we even recognize that true servant-hearted love
gets its hands dirty, not for personal credit, but for the
sake of others. But then we excuse away our obligation
to lovingly serve on the grounds that the person I'm being called
to serve really doesn't deserve it, or want it, or need it. Maybe we tell ourselves, I would
lay down my life for that person, but alleviating their difficulty
might just get in the way of what God is doing in their hearts.
So I'll stay out of the way. Or maybe we say, I would help
them, but I don't want to rob other people of the joy of serving,
so I'll just let someone else have a turn. And just like that,
we've spiritualized our selfishness and made it out to be some sort
of virtuous deference or a wise discerning of God's greater purposes. But to sort of counter all of
those mental gymnastics that we go through, Paul describes
very specifically how we can objectively measure when and
where we ought to serve. And it doesn't require some sort
of super sixth sense of God's will or some mystical discernment
of the hidden purposes of providence. It's really a rather simple rule
that says love other people in the same way that you love yourself. Love other people with the same
fervor and diligence with which you love you. When you're hungry,
do you really have to stop and ask yourself, do I want to go
to the trouble of making myself some food? When you desire some
righteous pleasure or convenience, do you really have to deliberate
all that much? No, we are quick to serve and
meet our own needs and wants. Love is just as quick to serve
and meet the needs and wants of others. It's very measurable
and visible and concrete. Martin Luther, a Protestant reformer,
said this. He said, it is tersely spoken,
love thy neighbor as thyself. But what more needs to be said?
You cannot find a better or nearer example than your own. If you
want to know how you ought to love your neighbor, ask yourself
how much you love yourself. If you were to get into trouble
or danger, you would be glad to have the love and help of
all men. You do not need any book of instructions to show
you how to love your neighbor. All you have to do is to look
into your own heart and it will tell you how you ought to love
your neighbor as yourself. So Paul has exposed our tendency
to excuse away obedience under the banner of freedom in Christ.
And Paul has shown us the means of avoiding that tendency, the
antidote to selfishness, if you will. And that antidote is unselfish
love expressed through serving others the way we love and serve
ourselves. The final point then Paul makes
has to do with the effect of license. The effect of license. If we insist on using our freedom
in Christ as a license to sin, there will be destructive consequences. Verse 15, but if you bite and
devour one another, watch out that you are not consumed by
one another. So the opposite of serving one
another through love, according to Paul, is biting and devouring
one another. Our posture towards others is
going to be either a posture of self-giving love, or it will
be a posture of defending and serving myself at the expense
of others. And again, it's helpful to see
this effect in light of the main topic of the book of Galatians.
The Galatians are toying with the false gospel of salvation
by works. And what do people who are trying
to make a good showing in the flesh do in relation to others? Well, they compare themselves
to others. They measure their virtue or
their spirituality by seeing how they stack up to other virtuous
spiritual people. They rank themselves according
to their works. And all of this comparison and
competition and vying for spiritual superiority automatically creates
division and strife and contention. It turns the body of Christ,
the church, into a contentious mess in which brothers and sisters
in Christ dare not lay down their lives for each other because
they're too busy trying to compete with each other for spiritual
clout or for preeminence. A works-oriented congregation
is a divided congregation because everyone's trying to upstage
everyone else. And this works in both directions.
On the one hand, we might be driven by the need to appear
the most spiritually mature and holy person in the crowd, and
so we virtue signal or we humble brag about all the good things
we're doing. On the other hand, we might be
driven more by the need to appear to be the most free in Christ,
and so we belittle those legalists and we tout our freedom of conscience. But in doing so, we're being
just as self-oriented and merit-based as the strictest legalist. Salvation
does not come by my ability to keep the law, but neither does
salvation come by my ability to not care about the law. You
see, both of those attitudes are oriented towards my ability
and not God's grace and Christ's imputed righteousness. If we
insist on living like this, Paul says, we will be consumed by
one another. One pastor compared it to two
snakes that grabbed each other by the tail and each swallowed
the other. Christians competing against each other to be either
the most obedient or the most free in Christ have missed the
point of both obedience and freedom in Christ. And their insistence
upon making much of themselves will end in the church turning
in upon itself and consuming itself. This is what happens
when we neglect sincere love and instead use our freedom as
an opportunity for the flesh. A church member once said that
when preaching, I should not try to apply the Bible to people's
lives. I should simply explain what
the Bible means and then let people apply it to their own
lives in whatever way they see fit. The problem with that notion,
oftentimes, if not all the time, is that the right application
of a passage of Scripture is part of the interpretation of
a passage of Scripture. I don't get to divorce Galatians
5.13 from verses 14 and 15. If Paul says, don't do that,
but instead do this, I don't get to determine for myself what
this is, because part and parcel to rightly understanding Paul's
meaning here includes rightly understanding Paul's application.
The way to not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh,
the way to not fall prey to licentiousness, to lawless living, the way to
not be a self-indulgent antinomian who neglects the importance and
the necessity of obedience in the Christian life is by lovingly
serving others. Do you love people? You say,
well, what does love entail? Well, the Bible tells us that
too. 1 Corinthians 13 defines it very specifically and practically. Love is patient and kind. Love does not envy or boast. It is not arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own
way. It is not irritable or resentful. It does not rejoice at wrongdoing,
but rejoices with the truth. Love bears all things, believes
all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never
ends. Do you love people? Secondly, do you serve people? Do you look for ways to treat
others the way you want to be treated? And do you act on those
thoughts? The choice before us, brothers
and sisters, is love for others or love for self. It's freedom
in Christ or enslavement to our flesh. It's salvation by grace
or condemnation by works. Do not use your freedom as an
opportunity for the flesh. Instead, use that freedom as
an opportunity to love and serve others like Christ has loved
and served you. Let's pray. Father, thank you for your word
and the instruction it gives. Lord, help us now by the power
of your Holy Spirit in us to obey what we've heard, not legalistically
or licentiously, but in faith, always looking to Christ, who
is our righteousness. And it is in His name that I
pray. Amen.
Love, Not License
Series Galatians
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| Sermon ID | 1124241340405381 |
| Duration | 1:02:37 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Galatians 5:13-15 |
| Language | English |
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