In Walter Pendleton's sermon titled "Spiritual Adultery Forbidden," the main theological topic addressed is the relationship between believers and the law, particularly focusing on the concept of "spiritual adultery." Pendleton argues that believers, through the death of Christ, are freed from the law and thus cannot be spiritually united to both the law and Christ simultaneously. He discusses Romans 7, emphasizing that the law has dominion only as long as one lives; through Christ's death, individuals are released from this bondage and free to be united with Christ (Romans 7:4). The significance of this truth is profound; mixing reliance on the law with faith in Christ constitutes spiritual adultery, which is a grave condition that threatens one's relationship with God. This distinction reinforces the Reformed doctrine of justification by faith apart from works of the law, highlighting that true belonging to Christ demands a complete rejection of any form of legalism.
“If you're married to Christ, you're not married to the law. If you're married to the law, you're not married to Christ.”
“Spiritual adultery is more damning than natural adultery. You hear what I'm saying? Now it's all damning, but spiritual adultery is more damning because there is forgiveness for natural adultery.”
“Believers are not under the law. Believers are dead to the law by the body of Christ.”
“You cannot teach that the truth of God as taught by the Apostle Paul was that you got a little bit of Christ and a little bit of law.”
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