LEGALISM-MISUNDERSTOOD
An individual
Christian may see fit to give up all sorts of things for special reasons –
marriage, or meat, or beer, or cinema; but the moment he starts saying the
things are bad in themselves, or looking down his nose at other people who do
use them, he has taken the wrong turning.
C.S. Lewis
We are not
Legalists when we keep the Law, because we do not look to the Law for life.
Rather the Law shows us we have true life in our hearts. We keep the Law to be
obedient to Christ and show Him how much we love Him for rescuing us from the
damning influences of trying to keep the Law to gain eternal life. Obedience is
a far cry from Legalism.
C. Matthew McMahon
What is the Difference between Legalism and
Obedience?
Legalism
is:
1. Distorting the gospel
by adding conditions to free grace: Acts 15:1, 7-11; Gal.1:6-7, 2:11-16,
4:8-11, Gal. 5:2-4; Col. 2:16-17.
2. Substituting man-made
regulations for the Word of God: Matthew 15:1-3.
3. Majoring on the
minors and neglecting the more important issues: Luke 11:42.
4. Over concern with the
externals while disregarding matters of the heart: Matthew 23:27.
5. Regarding with
contempt or judging a brother based on matters of personal conviction: Romans
14:1-5.
6. Trusting in ourselves
that we are righteous based on religious performance: Luke 18:9-14.
7. Hypocrisy, the leaven
of the Pharisees: Luke 11:53-12:1.
Legalism
is not:
1. A zeal for the
commandments of Christ: Matthew 5:19; 1 Corinthians 7:19.
2. A ministry that
teaches others to follow Christ in obedience: Matthew 28:20; 1 Thes.4:1-2.
3. Strong personal
convictions (as long as they are not required of others): Romans 14:2, 5.
4. Man-made restrictions
for personal protection from sinful habits (as long as we do not begin to view
them as binding on others): Romans 13:14; 1 Corinthians 6:12.
5. A zeal for good
works: Eph.2:10; Titus 1:16, 2:7, 14, 3:8, 14.
6. Limiting our liberty
for the benefit of others: Romans 14:15, 21, 15:2; Acts 16:1-3.
7. Obedience: John 14:15,
23, 15:10; 1 John 2:3-5, 5:2-4.
Bill Busshaus
An Outline for Understanding Issues of Conscience and Legalism, Christian
Communicators Worldwide, www.CCWtoday.org. Used by Permission.
But
underlying much of the conscious rejection of spiritual discipline is the fear
of legalism… But nothing could be farther from the truth if you understand what
discipline and legalism are. The difference is one of motivation:
legalism is self-centered; discipline is God-centered. The legalistic heart
says, “I will do this thing to gain merit with God.” The disciplined heart
says, “I will do this thing because I love God and want to please Him.” There
is an infinite difference between the motivation of legalism and discipline!
[Paul] knew this implicitly and fought the legalists bare-knuckled all the way
across Asia Minor, never giving an inch. And now he shouts to us, “Train
(discipline) yourself to be godly”! If we confuse legalism and discipline, we
do so to our soul’s peril.
Kent Hughes
Disciplines of a Godly Man, Crossway Books,
1991, p. 15.
Legalism,
properly understood, is not about Christians obeying too precisely. It is also
not about individuals having convictions that are their own private resolves.
It is about seeking to be justified by means of the law. When Jewish
infiltrators came to the early believers and said that they must be circumcised
and obey the Jewish feasts in order to be true Christians (Acts 15:1), then
they demonstrated New Testament legalism. We do have Christians with a spirit
akin to the legalist, but their sin is that of being unloving or distorting
responsibility or placing private convictions on others, not true legalism. In
most cases, they are not seeking to be justified by the law (Gal. 5:4).
Jim Elliff
The Care and Feeding of Flies, Christian Communicators Worldwide, www.CCWtoday.org. Used by Permission.
The Christian is not
free to do what the Bible forbids. Christian freedom does not entail the right
to fornicate or to steal or to lie or to persist in an unforgiving attitude or
to do anything else the Scriptures explicitly prohibit. And a person who
lovingly points this out to you is not a legalist for having done so!
Sam
Storms
Legalism vs. Liberty, November 6, 2006, www.enjoyinggodministries.com.
Used by Permission.
Legalism…does not describe the attitude of a Christian
who earnestly seeks to please God, but uses the law as a means to that end. A
sincere desire to please God is not legalism. Nor does it cause legalism.
Legalism results from the actual misuse of the law. Nor does legalism in any
sense diminish the goodness of the law. There is nothing wrong with God’s holy
law. Woe to the person who disparages the holy law that God wrote on stone with
His finger.
John Reisinger
Studies in
Galatians – Part 24, Sound of Grace, April 2009. Used by Permission.