trusted online casino malaysia
Realizing the presence, promise, and power of the Kingdom of God.
In the Gates

Not unto Salvation

The Law of God: Questions and Answers

The Law will not save us.

Of what use, really, is the Law of God?

Ephesians 2.8, 9

For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not as a result of works, sot that no one may boats.

Many contemporary Christians apparently cannot think about the Law of God apart from salvation. It almost never fails: Whenever I have preached anywhere on the Law of God, someone will always confront me at the door, wagging his finger and insisting that we are not saved by the Law. I always agree and explain that I did not in any way suggest that we are.

Nevertheless, this is what people hear. In the minds of some people, if you insist that the Law has some use, they can only understand it as being a means to salvation, and they (rightly) reject it as such.

We know that we are saved by grace, that’s true. None of our own doing is involved, save to receive what God, by His Spirit, has awakened us to receive – the Kingdom of God. In a larger sense, however, we are saved by the Law in the fact that Jesus’ righteousness and suffering fulfilled all that the Law requires for wretched sinners to enjoy the favor and presence of God. But we have nothing to contribute to that.

Jesus’ work of redemption was according to the requirements, demands, and promises of the Law of God. That’s a good thing, I think we can all agree.

But only Jesus could fulfill the Law so as to earn salvation by so doing. Yet it was not His salvation, but ours, which was thereby secured.

So it is an unlawful use of the Law to insist, in any way, that our keeping the Law of God contributes in any way to our being saved. We are not saved by obeying the Law of God. And we are not saved by believing in Jesus and keeping the Law of God.

We are saved by grace through faith. The Law of God, of course, comes into our salvation, but never in any ways as a means, only as a fruit.

But more on further on.

For a fuller discussion of the uses of the Law, and why it remains useful today, order a copy of T. M.’s book, The Ground for Christian Ethics, from our online store. And while you’re at the website, be sure to read T. M.’s weekly comments on worldviewand to subscribe to our thrice-weekly newsletter, Crosfigell.

 

T.M. Moore

T. M. Moore is principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He and his wife, Susie, make their home in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.
Books by T. M. Moore

Subscribe to Ailbe Newsletters

Sign up to receive our email newsletters and read columns about revival, renewal, and awakening built upon prayer, sharing, and mutual edification.