Understanding the Law: Sin, Grace, and Freedom in Christ

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Sermon Clips

"Nothing is so dangerous when you're reading or interpreting scripture as to take a verse out of its context. I find more and more that the secret of understanding the message of the scripture, one of the most important secrets, is to understand the context. The context will give a meaning when a knowledge of the Greek or the Hebrew very often doesn't do so." [00:11:32]

"Paul uses the illustration of marriage. We were once married to the law; we are no longer in that position. We have become dead to the law so that the relationship has been broken, and therefore, being broken from that relationship, we can marry this other, the Lord Jesus Christ, the one who has died for us and was risen again in order that we may bring forth fruit, bear children, as it were, unto God." [00:07:23]

"Paul argues that the law is spiritual and reveals the depth of our sinfulness, particularly through the commandment 'Thou shalt not covet,' which exposes the sin of lust and covetousness. The law's role is not to sanctify but to illuminate our sinful nature, driving us to Christ for salvation." [00:23:19]

"The law in and of itself, the law as such, and to prove that the law must never be held responsible for our failure. Now, I'll explain in a moment why he feels it's necessary to do that, but that is what he does. It is a vindication of the character of the law, and he absolves it completely from every charge of being responsible for our failure." [00:10:00]

"The Apostle is therefore not saying, because he couldn't possibly say, that he had no knowledge of sin whatsoever apart from the law. Now, what he's saying is this: that he was not aware of the real nature of sin until the law made it clear to him. He wasn't clear, he says, as to what sin really consists of or consists in." [00:19:11]

"The moment a man understands the true nature and character of sin, he becomes troubled about his soul, and he seeks for a savior. So that the trouble with people who are not seeking for a savior and for salvation is that they don't understand the true nature of sin, and it is the peculiar function of the law to bring that out." [00:21:39]

"Sin it only becomes sin when a man does the thing, carries out his desire, but a desire in and of itself is not sinful. Now, the Apostle is therefore saying in the first place that he would never have realized that desires, coveting, lusts, evil thoughts, and imaginations are sin." [00:27:39]

"The law is something spiritual. Its concern is with a man's heart and his ultimate attitude to God. That's the meaning of the law. Now, says the Apostle, it was only when I rarely understood the meaning of the law that I understood the truth about lust. I came to see that to covet is as reprehensible as to commit." [00:30:36]

"The thing that awoke the Apostle to see his need of a savior from heaven was this question of lust. There he was convicted, and he only saw that when he saw the true character of the law as spiritual and thereby saw the true nature of sin." [00:38:39]

"Paul is showing that the law is not sin. Thank God it isn't. Thank God that it has done what it has done to bring him to a knowledge of sin and especially in terms of coveting. God grant that we all may be able to join him in the rejection of the other suggestion and in the offering of praise and thanksgiving to God for his holy law." [00:39:51]

"More than ever, we see that we are saved alone by thy power and not by ourselves, nor our own understandings, nor our own wills, nor efforts. We thank thee that we are indeed thy workmanship, that we are in thy powerful and Almighty hands, that we are under the reign of Grace and that nothing can prevent it nor frustrate it." [00:41:19]

"Paul argues that the law is spiritual and reveals the depth of our sinfulness, particularly through the commandment 'Thou shalt not covet,' which exposes the sin of lust and covetousness. The law's role is not to sanctify but to illuminate our sinful nature, driving us to Christ for salvation." [00:23:19]

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