GotQuestions and countless other go-to Christian Q&A websites have plenty to say--but what, from your perspective (informed by the Scriptures), is legalism?
One might be called a legalist for taking an uncompromisingly firm stance on a certain doctrinal or moral issue with which others may disagree based on divergent biblical interpretations, or because of insisting on baptism as necessary for salvation, strict Sabbath observance, tithing, etc. Maybe you've been called a "legalist" before, or you have called someone else a "legalist." Some contend that certain denominations are "legalistic?"
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Colby,
My response to your three questions can be viewed in the following:
Legalism works in order to acquire or retain. We are called to obedience that is driven by love. Legalism is motivated by fear at times and other times by the desire to gain or receive something for performance. Obedience seeks to please God and to bring glory to His name. Legalist view acceptance as performance based rather than grace based. We must ask ourselves why we do what we do in light of what I have said above IMO. Our motivation, the driving factor, will reveal if we are a legalist or simply in love with Jesus desiring to please Him.
1Jn 2:3-6 NIV84 We know that we have come to know him if we obey his commands. (4) The man who says, "I know him," but does not do what he commands is a liar, and the truth is not in him. (5) But if anyone obeys his word, God's love is truly made complete in him. This is how we know we are in him: (6) Whoever claims to live in him must walk as Jesus did.
Lord Bless,
LT
Thank you for succinctly comparing and contrasting obedience and legalism. The passage you shared from First John links our obedience to God's commandments in our love of God. Others writing on this question follow the same line of thought.
"Legalism is bondage. ... We have freedom in Christ (but we are not to flaunt it). ... Wanting to walk in the holiness and righteousness that we have in Christ is not legalism." Nicely said. Your insight is particularly illuminating because you have had firsthand experience with a church that embraces legalism. I appreciate your frankness, depth and clarity in addressing the questions posted.
I haven't read "Grace Awakening" by Chuck Swindoll yet, but I've listened to many of his sermons, and your mention of it caused to me search out several reviews. It looks like a good read. A plug says, "'Grace Awakening' calls all Christians to wake up and reject living in such legalistic, performance-oriented bondage."
Thanks again for weighing in on this topic.
"The one who eats everything must not treat with contempt the one who does not, and the one who does not eat everything must not judge the one who does, for God has accepted them. Who are you to judge someone else’s servant? To their own master, servants stand or fall. And they will stand, for the Lord is able to make them stand" (Romans 14:3-4, NIV).
Eyes Wide Open - Genesis 3
This message is a little long, but I think it speaks to this topic, at least in part.
Lord Bless,
LT
Whoever claims to live in him must live as Jesus did (1 John 2:6, NIV).
Lengthy yes, but on point and loaded with scriptural references!
In Genesis 3, do we see the beginnings of legalism? Did Eve add to God's words in Gen 3:2-3? Do you agree with this statement by Sammy Rhodes?
Colby,
After reading this a couple of times I would say that I get what the message is and for the most part agree, but think it is mislabeled. It appears to be more in line with liberal thinking that allows the alteration of Scripture so that one can get and or do what they want by removing the constraints. Satan, as we understand, wanted to be (like) God. He could never obtain a position of deity by legalistically following God and His Word. Thus, there would have to be an alteration of Scripture and redefining of certain things to make an attempt plausible, at least in one's own mind.
From the audio message I think that we get into trouble by following the process of "Challenge - Rationalize - Adjust - Act." Some times the process is slow and at other times quite accelerated.
Lord Bless,
LT
Thank you, LT. You have helped clarify in my mind what this writer was saying or intending to be understood to say and whether or not it lines up with Scripture. In particular, I was trying to wrap my head around his opening comment that "Satan is a legalist."
Feel free to elaborate (if time permits) on the process of "Challenge - Rationalize - Adjust - Act."
Colby,
The basics would be:
Challenge: I don't like what the Word says.
Rationalize: Explain why what I believe is acceptable and right and thus the Word must either be in error or misunderstood.
Adjust: Tweak the Word just enough by adjusting the meaning or using some various verses out of context to attempt to proof text one's position.
Act: Act upon your altered view as if it were God's view all along.
Example:
Challenge: God would not ever send anyone to hell.
Rationalize: God is a God of love. Sending someone to hell does not appear to be loving and since God is a God of love He must not send people to hell.
Adjust: God is a loving God and wants everyone to be saved and thus because He is loving all will be saved, or lost only because they reject Him.
Act: People only go to hell because it is their fault for not accepting Jesus, because a loving God wouldn't do that.
Picking this strawman I built apart :-)
Challenge: God does send people to hell. Matthew 7 is one example. When Jesus says depart from me you evil doers He is not telling them to go and play in the park. The Bible teaches that the unsaved are judged under the law and we know that there is the white throne judgment looming.
Rationalize: The Bible does not say that God is simply a God of love, but that He is love. The Bible also says He is holy, just and righteous. God showed how much He hates sin by sending His Son to die on the cross to bear our burden (Rom. 5:8). What loving father would send his son to be executed if love was the only driving factor .... justice had to be satisfied, love alone would not do it.
Adjust: People assume that people are only lost because they reject Jesus. This is absolutely backwards thinking and does not align with God's Word. We are born with sinful natures and a default position before God ... lost and destined to hell. The only way to change the default position is to be born again and thus become a child of God. The Hymn Amazing Grace states it nicely ... I once was lost, but now I am found. Was blind, but now I see.
Act: They (some) teach that people only go to hell because they reject Jesus, not because God judged sin and sinful man stands condemned by God facing eternity separated from Him with only one hope.
Subtle change, but a change none-the-less IMO.
Lord Bless,
LT
LT,
Thanks for your explanation of this flawed logic or thought process: Challenge, Rationalize, Adjust, Act.
Now that you've described it and used it in an example, it's familiar to me and I'm sure to most people reading your response. We've seen it used countless times by persons to explain away or contradict clear biblical teachings and admonitions with which they disagree and can't accept.
It's a form of biblical interpretation known as isegesis. Reading the Bible but imposing our personal values, prejudices, and presuppositions on the text rather than seeking to be informed by what the Bible says (exegesis) and adjusting our thinking and behavior accordingly. A kind of interpretive gymnastics where we end up twisting verses we don't like and can't ignore into pretzels. Some call it "cafeteria" Christianity where people are free to pick and choose which parts of the Bible they choose to believe and which of God's commandments they choose to follow.
Thanks again for taking the time to share this with us!
Colvy,
The term “legalistic” is defined by the Oxford Dictionary of Current English as “adhering excessively to a law or formula. Legalism tends to involve dependance upon a practice to acquire or retain salvation when only Grace can do that.
It is important to realize that in today's church culture the word is often misapplied to those who have a passion for biblical purity.
An example of legalism:
Luke 18:9-14 “Also He spoke this parable to some who trusted in themselves that they were righteous, and despised others: ‘Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself, “God, I thank You that I am not like other men—extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this tax collector. I fast twice a week; I give tithes of all that I possess.” And the tax collector, standing afar off, would not so much as raise his eyes to heaven, but beat his breast, saying, “God, be merciful to me a sinner!” I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than the other; for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted.'”
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