In the sermon titled "Our Law and Our Warfare," Fred Evans addresses the theological conflict between the flesh and the Spirit as articulated in Galatians 5:16. He argues that believers, having been justified and sanctified by Christ through faith, are engaged in a continuous spiritual warfare due to the presence of two natures—the old sin nature and the new nature in Christ. Evans leans heavily on Scripture, referencing Romans 7 to exemplify the internal struggle of wanting to do good yet falling into sin, affirming that while the new nature cannot sin, believers still contend with a fleshly nature that opposes God. This duality underscores the significance of walking in the Spirit rather than relying on the law, as obedience to the law can only stir up sin rather than empower righteousness. The practical implication is a call for believers to continuously rely on grace and to look toward Christ as their guiding law, emphasizing that through the Spirit, they are enabled to overcome the flesh’s desires.
“Every believer in Christ is running a race. We begin this race by faith, we continue to run this race by faith, and we end this race by faith.”
“The only one that can justly pardon sin is God. He's the only one really offended by sin.”
“The flesh can paint the tomb but it can't give life... Religion can paint you up, but it's just painting a corpse, not giving life.”
“If you be led of the Spirit, you are not under the law. What are you under? Grace. Free pardon, free forgiveness, constant, perpetual cleansing of your unrighteousness.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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