Christian Liberty

This article was guest authored by: 

 

Christian liberty is a priceless possession. It can be abused, of course, but legitimately used it is an overflowing source of spiritual joy and empowerment for living.

God’s purpose with regard to the liberty of the believer in Christ is aptly summed up for us in one short verse in the Galatian letter:

“For, brethren, ye have been called unto liberty; only use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh, but by love serve one another” (Gal. 5:13).

As the cause of spiritual decline in Israel was always their departure from God’s Word to them through Moses, so the cause of spiritual decline among believers today is always their departure from God’s Word to us through Paul. If anything is made unmistakably clear in the Epistles of Paul, it is the fact that believers in this present "dispensation of the grace of God" have been delivered from the Law and, as God’s full-grown sons in Christ, have been “called unto liberty.” The failure of God’s people today to appropriate and enjoy this liberty results in the spiritual decline we see in the church at large just as surely as did the failure of the people of Israel to observe the law of Moses in their day.

Could anything be plainer than those passages in same Galatian epistle, where the Apostle Paul says by the Spirit:

CHRIST HATH REDEEMED US FROM THE CURSE OF THE LAW, being made a curse for us: for it is written, Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree” (Gal. 3:13).

“But when the fulness of the time was come, GOD SENT FORTH HIS SON, made of a woman, made under the law, TO REDEEM THEM THAT WERE UNDER THE LAW, THAT WE MIGHT RECEIVE THE ADOPTION OF SONS” (Gal. 4:4-5).

Thus, to reject our blood-bought liberty and go back to the servitude of "the Law" is to repudiate not only the Word of God, but the Word of God to us today, and this must necessarily result in spiritual decline.