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Confessions
of a Recovering Legalist Legalists often place a high premium on commandment keeping and obedience.1 They are extremely zealous for God’s law. The standard that they bear is the Ten Commandments, and they are diligent to point out every misstep in the lives of people they come in contact with. They can also be very diligent in pointing out their own missteps as well. As a result, they can carry around an extraordinary amount of self-imposed guilt. I know. I am a recovering legalist. Legalism is a Christian
heresy that is as old as the church. When God devotes an entire book of
the Bible to combating a certain thing you can know for sure that it was,
is and will be a problem for the church. That is exactly what God did
with the book of Galatians. He devoted an entire book, perhaps the most
impassioned book of the Bible -- to combat the heresy of legalism. I can
honestly tell you that I used to read Galatians and think, "Hey,
Paul, what’s the big deal? After all, isn't it a good thing to want
to keep God’s law?" Now I understand what the big deal is.
Let's not sugarcoat it. Paul called legalism "a different gospel."2
That is serious business. However, here’s
where the heresy and perversion of the gospel comes in. Keep in mind that
the book of Galatians was not written by Paul to lost people, telling
them how to be saved. It was written to people who had already received
the Holy Spirit.3 Paul was angry with these baby Christians because they
were trying to live out the Christian life by keeping the law! Legalism is bad medicine. If your heart is full of bitterness towards others and self-condemnation, could it be that you have been going about living the Christian life all wrong? If anything that I have said has struck a chord with you, you can be sure that God desperately wants you to be set free from legalism. Let me share with you a remarkable truth. God loves legalists. He hates legalism, but he loves legalists. I believe that one of the most passionate statements in the Bible is Jesus lamenting, heart-broken over the fact that the legalists of his day had rejected him.7 F. F. Bruce, one of the greatest theologians of the twentieth century, said that “Doing the will of God is not a matter of conformity to outward rules but of giving expression to inward love, such as the Spirit begets.”8 The Christian life was never meant to be a life of drudgery, although some of us have made it to be. Jesus said, “I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10). The Christian life was never meant to be a burden, although some of us have made it to be. Jesus said “my yoke is easy and my burden is light” (Matthew 11:30). The Christian life was meant to be a life of supernatural love, joy and peace that is squelched when we attempt to live under legalism. I confess I have been guilty of that, but God is showing me a better way. 1 Of course there is nothing wrong with obedience as long as one realizes the only way to live a consistently obedient lifestyle is by letting Christ live through them -- not be focusing on Law. 2 Galatians 1:6 3 Galatians 3:3 4 Galatians 2:20 5 2 Thessalonians 1:8 6 Steve Mcvey, in his book Gracewalk 7 See Matthew 23:37 8 F. F. Bruce. Paul: Apostle of the Heart Set Free. (Grand Rapids: Eerdman’s Publishing Company, 1977) 200. Steve Reynolds is a recovering legalist in Memphis, Tennessee. |
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