The sermon titled "The Law of Faith" by Paul Pendleton primarily addresses the relationship between faith and the law, particularly through the lens of Romans 3. Pendleton argues that through faith, believers do not abolish the law; rather, they establish it by trusting in Christ, who fulfilled the law's requirements on their behalf. He references Romans 3:31, which asks if faith makes the law void, and he emphasizes that the law was weakened by human flesh, yet Christ upheld its demands while providing liberty through grace. The practical significance of this belief lies in understanding that true righteousness comes not from adherence to the law but through faith in Jesus Christ, who is the source of that faith. This aligns with Reformed doctrines of justification by faith alone and the belief that believers are liberated from the law's condemnation through Christ's righteousness.
“Do we make void the law through faith? God forbid, yea, we establish the law.”
“The law cannot give righteousness...The law does not make us what we are, and it does not fix what we are. It only shows us what we are.”
“By faith we believe in God and the record he gave of his son to establish that law because faith is energized by love and love is the fulfillment of the law.”
“The law of faith is what I'm talking about. And this law I am under by the grace of God in Jesus Christ.”
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