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Galatians 5:1

Christian Liberty #10

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In 'Christian Liberty #10,' Pastor Albert N. Martin expounds Galatians 5:1, 'For freedom did Christ set us free; stand fast therefore, and be not entangled again in a yoke of bondage.' He argues that Christian liberty, procured by Christ's atoning work, frees believers from the condemning power of the law and the Mosaic covenant. Martin warns against two abuses: antinomianism (Mr. Libertine) and legalism (Mr. Legality), focusing this sermon on the latter. He applies this truth by urging believers to resist adding anything to Christ's finished work for justification and sanctification, and by calling unbelievers to embrace Christ alone for salvation.

Primary Texts

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Galatians 5:1 This verse is the central text, providing the sermon's title and structure, affirming Christian liberty and exhorting believers to stand fast in it.

Outline 10 sections · 64 min

  1. Introduction: The Centrality of Christian Liberty 0:00
  2. Review: The Goal of Liberty and the Two Attorneys 5:28
  3. Addressing Mr. Legality: The Crucial Text of Galatians 5:1 12:20
  4. The Burning Question and Paul's Gospel of Grace Alone 17:21
  5. The Judaizers' Perversion: Christ Plus 20:27
  6. The Glorious Affirmation: For Freedom Did Christ Set Us Free 25:18
  7. The Necessary Exhortation: Stand Fast and Be Not Entangled Again 34:31
  8. Application for Believers: Resisting Legalism in Dealing with Sin 48:10
  9. Application for Unbelievers: Embrace Christ the Great Liberator 57:41
  10. Conclusion: The Balance of Liberty and Love 62:11

Key Quotes

“God in Jesus Christ, through the gospel, has procured and offered to us a liberty that makes any civil liberty possible. To pale into insignificance.”
“And gospel liberty, we were never made for that. sets us free to fulfill the purpose for which we were created, to render worshipful service to our Creator and now our Redeemer God.”
“Mr. Legality is constantly seeking to put something between us and Christ in our dealing with sin.”
“To give up freedom ground is to denigrate Christ and his sufferings. That's serious stuff, folks.”
“But my dear brothers and sisters, it is equally a slap in the face of Christ when I give up my liberty and do not stand in the reality of that liberty in the face of my sin.”
“You've got Christ plus. No, not circumcision and keeping the Mosaic law, but all the things that accompany our religious life together, and you put them between yourself and Christ.”
“There's nothing left in the dealing with that sin but for me to lay hold afresh in faith, believing that if I confess my sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive me and to cleanse me from all unrighteousness.”
“You know why it does? Because you get saved by a salvation that's all of grace and none of your deserving. All of Christ and not your works. By faith alone.”

Applications

All listeners

  • Do not use your freedom as a staging area for the flesh, but through love, be slaving for one another.
  • Do not use your freedom for a cover-up of wickedness, but as bond-slaves of God.
  • Stand your ground in the freedom into which you came when you embraced my gospel.
  • Do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.
  • If in answer to that question [how to deal with guilt] you put anything between your guilty soul and a direct faith embrace of Christ, you have fallen out of your liberty in Christ.
  • When you've sinned, go directly to Christ as your advocate, without wallowing in grief or trying to earn forgiveness through other means.
  • Lay hold afresh in faith, believing that if I confess my sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive me and to cleanse me from all unrighteousness.
  • Put yourself in Christ's saving, liberating hands; come unto Him, and He will in no wise cast you out.
  • Don't get your habits all sorted out first; go to Jesus who can get them sorted out.
  • Repentance means you want Jesus to deliver you from everything that's displeasing to him, and you come to him to get delivered from it.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 165 paragraphs, roughly 64 minutes.

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