The Law's Purpose: Leading Us to Grace in Christ

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Sermon Clips

We have seen, I think quite clearly, that it is our failure to understand the function of the law and to experience the work of the law in us and upon us that accounts in very large measure for our failure to thank God and to praise him as we ought for all that he has done for us by grace in and through his only begotten son our Lord and savior. [00:60:71]

The law is given in order that we may know something about the being and the character of God. God was revealing himself when he gave the law in this explicit form to the children of Israel. Not only that, he was reminding them of the law that he had originally placed in the heart of men. [00:168:68]

The law was never given as a possible way of Salvation. Now there I put it in the form of an assertion or a principle. The law was never given to be a possible way of Salvation. Now there you see at once we face to face with this Cardinal error of which the Jews were guilty. [00:459:59]

All people who think that they can make themselves Christian are guilty of this same error. All people, in other words, who think that a Christian is to be defined as a man who lives a good life or a man who does a lot of good or a man who sacrifices himself for the sake of others, they're all guilty of this particular error. [00:523:03]

The law was never given as a possible means of Salvation. We must once and forever get rid of the idea that God is it where through the law was trying an experiment, for that is what it really comes to according to that view, that God said various things to the children of Israel. [00:805:51]

The law was given in order to show that nobody ever could be saved along that line. That's the right way. So I come to my third and last principle and put it like this. I needn't keep you. Why was the law then given? What is the real fundamental object which God had in mind in giving the law? [01:2312:04]

The law was given that we might know our utter and complete helplessness, hopelessness, and our ultimate complete inability, total inability. The difficulty with all of us is that we'll never admit we can't do things. The reason why a man doesn't believe in Christ and accept his salvation is that he still thinks that he can do it himself. [01:2387:11]

The law you see when it does its work properly in me makes me desperate, makes me see my utter hopelessness. It makes me cry out saying, not the labors of my hands can fulfill thy laws demands. Could my Zeal know respit no, could my tears forever flow, all for sin could not atone, thou must save and thou alone. [01:2469:83]

The law was our school Master to bring us to Christ and the law is still the school Master to bring us to Christ. And I assert again that no man ever truly comes to Christ except he be brought by this school master. I don't understand a conversion and a regeneration that says I know nothing about repentance. [01:2605:68]

The law is our school Master to bring us to Christ that we might be justified by faith. That's why it was given. That is the inspired account of the cause of the giving of the law there. Therefore, we must never dismiss the law. Don't misinterpret John 1:17. Don't kick the law out. It's not meant to be. [01:2653:35]

The right reaction to the error of the Jews and to all who are trying to justify themselves by their works and by their actions is not to depreciate or to condemn or to dismiss the law. What is it then? It is to use the law rightly. It is to use the law properly. [01:2690:35]

The law is good if a man use it lawfully. These people, as he were trying to bring the law back, Paul says no, you're doing it in the wrong way. The law is good if a man use it lawfully, knowing this, that the law is not made for unrighteous men but for the Lawless and disobedient. [01:2757:20]

Ask a question about this sermon