"What
then? Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace? Certainly not!"
Romans 6:15
In the movie The Princess Bride, a hired swordsman named Inigo wondered if his boss knew what "inconceivable" meant because he repeated it over and over. "You keep using that word," he said. "I do not think it means what you think it means." There is debate over whether the swordsman was showing his ignorance, that he ironically instructed his "genius" boss or accurately identified hyperbole. The fact is, people can mean different things by saying the same word or phrase. "Taking out the trash" may mean carrying rubbish from inside the house to outside or also include hauling the bins to the kerb for pickup. Not understanding the full implications of a word or phrase can lead to misunderstanding or a job only half done.
Sometimes I feel a bit like Inigo when I hear people talk about not being "under the Law." The biblical phrase is used with regularity in Christian circles, but I wonder if we comprehend the full force of it since we have never experienced life as a Jew under the Law of Moses. To them it was a badge of honour and identify with God, not the drudgery we expect it must be. The implication I pick up on from Christians is gratitude for not being under the Law is appreciation not to observe rules and regulations. As we read the Law in the Torah we are blown away by the almost oppressive nature of it in every area of life: the hundreds of commands and prohibitions, kinds of food to be eaten or refused, the composition of clothes to wear, ceremonial cleansings, sacrificing, appearing before the LORD in Jerusalem in observance of feasts and on. Born-again Christians can be like happy children because time-consuming chores on their daily list have already been completed by an adult, and thus they can do as they please and embrace playtime. If this is what not being "under the Law" means to you, some important realities are not being considered.
Not being "under the Law" does not mean we are free to do as we please, for having been born again we are led by the Holy Spirit in our thoughts, words and deeds to go beyond the letter of the Law of Moses. Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount repeatedly made the point to His disciples "It has been written...but I say unto you..." The definition of adultery was expanded beyond sleeping with a married woman to simply looking with lust; instead of hating enemies followers of Jesus were to love them, pray for them and do good unto them. Because the Holy Spirit fills each Christian, we are provided guidance, wisdom and help to do God's will even as Jesus did the will of the Father--not according to the letter of the Law of Moses, but by the leading of the Spirit. We are not to limit the good we do by the leading of the Spirit to the extra mile but to the ends of the earth for God's glory. Being under grace does not mean our workload has decreased at all but increased from being under Law that could never save a soul. Jesus has established a new standard for living by the Gospel, for He works within us to do the Father's will.
No longer being under the Law is cause for rejoicing because we have been freed from the condemnation and curse of the Law: the letter of the Law kills, but the Spirit gives life by faith in Jesus. The handwriting of ordinances that condemned us has been taken out of the way and nailed to the cross, and Christ's righteousness is freely imputed to us by faith in Him. The Law had no power to save and could only condemn, and those who kept it as best as they could still had no promise of everlasting life. Hebrews 8:6 speaks of what Jesus accomplished: "But now
He has obtained a more excellent ministry, inasmuch as He is also Mediator of a
better covenant, which was established on better promises." The Jews searched the scriptures, thinking in them they had eternal life, but Jesus said they testified of Him. The Law was like a schoolmaster that led the Jews by the hand to know and receive Jesus Christ the Saviour of sinners.
Rather than obeying the letter of the Law out of fear of punishment or retribution from God, we are under grace that leads us to humble ourselves before God in faithful service who has drawn us to Himself in goodness, love and mercy. Ephesians 2:8-10 says, "For
by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it
is the gift of God, 9 not of
works, lest anyone should boast. 10 For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good
works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them." Instead of trying to work to measure up to an impossible standard that was incapable of saving us, Jesus has provided the gift of salvation for all who trust Him. As His workmanship and new creations, we walk in obedience to God and joyfully do the good works He has prepared for us to do that go beyond the Law. We repent of conviction for sins that are not plainly condemned in the Law because the Holy Spirit guides us into all truth. Jesus did what the Law could never do by atoning for our sins and adopting whosoever will believe in Him as children of God, and He is worthy of all praise and rejoicing. Better than rejoicing we are no longer "under Law" we ought to rejoice in our Saviour Jesus Who continually works in and through us under grace.
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