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Home » All Resources » Sermons on Justification » Matthew Kratz, Justification through the Gospel by the Triune God - Page 1 of 9

Justification through the Gospel by the Triune God

Topic: #47 of 88 for Sermons on Justification
Scripture: Galatians 3:1-3:5
Sermon Series: God in the Gospel
Denomination: Independent/Bible
Date Added: November 2008
Audience: General Adults (31 - 49)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
If you are a fan of classic TV, you will remember the show Bewitched. It was an American situation comedy originally broadcast for eight seasons on ABC from 1964 to 1972. The show stared Elizabeth Montgomery, Dick York (1964–1969), Dick Sargent (1969–1972), Agnes Moorehead and David White. It continues to be seen throughout the world in syndication and it is the longest running supernatural themed sitcom of the 1960s–1970s. The focus of the show is on the mixed marriage of a nose-twitching witch, Samantha Stephens (Montgomery), and her mortal husband, Darrin (originally played by Dick York and later by Dick Sargent). Set in an upper middle class suburb, from which Darrin commutes to Manhatten for work, it is described by the producers as a romantic comedy, showing how true love can endure the most vexing of situations, even between a witch and a human http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bewitched. One of the cleaver results is to protray as innocent and normal, the occult.
From the first lie to Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden, Satan has always desired to downplay his actions as benine and confuse. The primary area upon which he desire to confuse is people’s understanding on the way of Salvation. The most successful effort has been in the almost endless combinations of world religions that all desire to have people earn God’s favor in order to achieve eternal life. God’s way is by His grace working through man’s faith. On October 31 1517 Martin Luther posted his 95 thesis on the Church door in Whittenburg for Christians to realize God’s way of salvation by Grace though faith alone.

When Paul first came to Galatia, he marveled at his gracious reception (Gal. 4:14). Now the apostle marveled at their defection from the gospel he had preached to them (1:6–7). Having received new life in Christ by faith, they had been persuaded to live out their new lives by the old way of works. They had turned back from grace to law from faith to works, from Calvary to ceremony, from freedom to bondage.

In Galatians chapters 3–4 Paul gives a classic defense of the doctrine of justification by faith, a defense he had introduced in 2:16–21. In 3:1–5 he defends the doctrine from the standpoint of personal experience, and in 3:6–4:31 from the standpoint of scriptural revelation. Paul always promoted the coherence of sound doctrine and holy living. While it is true that experience minus theology will surely lead to a distorted spirituality, it is also true that theology minus experience can only issue in a dead orthodoxy. (George, T. (2001, c1994). Vol. 30: Galatians (electronic ed.). Logos Library System; The New American Commentary (210). Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers.)

In Galatians 3:1–5 the apostle Paul asked the Galatians a series of six rapid-fire questions, all of which he expected them to answer on the basis of their Christian experience. Paul was not so much arguing from experience as he was asking the Galatians to examine the basis of their Christian experience.

He reminds his readers that 1) A believer’s experience of the Lord Jesus Christ, 2) of the Holy Spirit, and 3) of God the Father are incontrovertible evidence of having been graciously made acceptable to God through personal faith in the perfect, complete work of Christ, apart from any human supplement.

1) THE BELIEVER’S EXPERIENCE WITH CHRIST
Galatians 3:1 [3:1]O foolish
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