In Walter Pendleton's sermon titled The Law Is Not Of Faith, the main theological topic centers around the relationship between the law and faith in the context of salvation, as articulated in Galatians 3. Pendleton argues that the law is not meant to provide justification or spiritual life; instead, it exposes human sinfulness without offering the remedy. He reinforces this point by referencing Scripture, including Galatians 3:12, which states, “the law is not of faith,” and highlights other texts like Romans 7:5 and 8:3 to emphasize that the law addresses only the flesh and does not transform it. The practical significance of this doctrine lies in the assurance it provides believers; salvation is solely by God's grace through faith in Christ, apart from the works of the law, leading to reliance on grace rather than self-righteousness.
“God has never converted not one single soul through error, through lies, never.”
“The law deals solely with our corrupt flesh.”
“The law exposes our corrupt flesh, but it does absolutely nothing for it.”
“The law plays no part in the free, full, eternal salvation of God in Christ.”
The Bible states that the law is not of faith, implying that righteousness cannot be obtained through the law.
Galatians 3:12, Ephesians 2:8-9
Faith is essential for salvation, as stated in Ephesians 2:8, 'for by grace are you saved through faith.'
Ephesians 2:8-9
Understanding the law's role helps Christians recognize that it cannot save and that true righteousness comes through faith.
Romans 7:5, Galatians 3:10
It means that the law cannot change our sinful nature but exposes it; true change comes only through Christ.
Romans 8:3
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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