Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Fundamental Grace- A Study of Galatians

GALATIANS

Paul, an apostle, (not of men, neither by man, but by Jesus Christ, and God the Father, who raised him from the dead;) And all the brethren which are with me, unto the churches of Galatia: Grace be to you and peace from God the Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ, Who gave himself for our sins, that he might deliver us from this present evil world, according to the will of God and our Father: To whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.” (Gal. 1:1-5)

The book of Galatians is a small book, but it is powerful.
Oliver B. Greene, when writing about Galatians, said: “Great Bible teachers of the past have called this ‘Paul’s crucifixion epistle’ and ‘Paul’s explosive epistle.’” One Bible scholar said that every sentence in it is a “thunderbolt.” Another great scholar said, “Every word in Galatians is a stick of dynamite.”
Martin Luther testified, “Galatians is my epistle. I am married to Galatians.” Certainly this book was the pebble from the brook with which Luther, like David, went to meet a mighty giant more dangerous than Goliath – the papacy of the Roman Catholic Church. Like David, Luther emerged victorious.
I find it interesting that only five verses in Galatians are given as the introduction. Most of you would agree if I said that the church of Corinth was the most carnal church mentioned in the New Testament. It was a wreck. We have two epistles on record explaining the situation there and all of the things that were going on. But if you go back and look at the introduction to I Corinthians, you see that Paul spends nine verses greeting his friends and co-laborers there.
The church at Galatia seems to be in a lot better shape, but as we see in the middle of chapter 1 that is not the case. Paul gives a brief greeting and then says, “Now stop it! You’re doing wrong.” Why would he seem so nice to the Corinthians but smack the Galatians in the mouth so quickly? The answer is simple. In Corinth it was a matter of behavior; in Galatia it was a matter of belief.
Do you know what is wrong with our churches today? We minor on the major and major on the minor. We are so concerned with how people behave, while God is more concerned with how they believe. You can teach behavior if the belief is right. If the belief is wrong, the behavior does not matter.
What an incredible thought. Why is So-and-so not living right? Why has that family gone downhill? Why is this person turning his or her back on God? It is because they all have no concept of the holiness of God. They have been taught, “Do this and don’t do that. Then you’ll be good boys and girls.” Belief must come before behavior, and Galatians is a power-packed book because it shows that the heart of the matter is your belief system.
We are a spiritually ignorant generation. We do not know the doctrine and the fundamental truths of the Word of God. In Galatians the Apostle Paul got back to basics, and he wasted no time doing it.
Why is it so hard to build a good church? People like to be tickled, not taught. They don’t want to have doctrine, because it requires going line upon line, precept upon precept. You have to plow through it verse-by-verse. It takes work. Most of us would much rather sit back and listen to a topical sermon on whatever happens to be the flavor of the month.
It is harder for preachers and Sunday school teachers to go verse-by-verse because you have to deal with whatever is there. I remember the first time I went through I and II Corinthians with my former church in Texas. In no time we were on the subject of tongues. I thought, “I’d really like to just save topic that for another time,” but it was the next verse so I had to address it.
It all boils down to laziness and apathy. We are more concerned about the things of the world than the things of the Word. Galatians is one of those books that makes you say, “Wow!” when you first read it. But when you start studying it and breaking it down, you realize that there is a lot there you need to know.
What was this other gospel? What was there about it that was so confusing? I am a fundamentalist, and I have no doubt about it. I am very settled in that. But did you know that some of our fundamental brethren have preached some very bad doctrine over the years? They have hurt some people by preaching things that, if you were a Berean Christian, would have made you stop and say, “Whoa! That’s not in my Bible.”
We had a period of time where we so exalted men and our own movement that they became more important then the Scripture. At the same time we were blistering all of the infidels, we were not even preaching the Bible.
In Galatians, Paul talked to the people about how far removed they were from what he had taught them. They were being seduced by other teachings that were not the Gospel, and Paul said, “I’m not happy about this. We need to deal with it.”
Our study begins with the first verse of the first chapter. “Paul, an apostle, (not of men, neither by man, but by Jesus Christ, and God the Father, who raised him from the dead).” The Apostle Paul lays out some strong CREDENTIALS. He was not “Papa-sent and Mama-called.” He was called by God, sent by God and with a message from God. He laid out his position, the proof of that position, and the power from which it came.
You do not have to respect Brent Stancil, but when Brent Stancil opens the Word of God you had better listen. I have never claimed to be anyone special; at times I have been embarrassed to be a pastor. I can say some silly and dumb things, but when I tell you what the Bible says, you need to take it seriously. The Word of God is the standard. It is the power.
I am amazed at how many churches have no idea what preaching is anymore. My wife and I like a lot of different styles of preaching, but too many people confuse style with substance. Preaching is not about oratory; it is about reading a verse from the Bible and conveying its meaning to the listeners.
Paul told the Galatians, “You have to listen to me – not because I am Paul, but because I am God’s man.” Today we have two major problems in that we don’t have enough preachers who will preach the truth or enough people who will listen to such preaching. We are all accountable for what we hear. It is almost better to stay away from church than to hear something and not respond as you should.
At the same time, we as preachers and teachers need to get back to teaching the Word of God. A wide variety of material will make its way to my desk on any given week, and a few years ago I got something from a major publishing house promoting a Sunday school series based on “The Andy Griffith Show.” The idea is for a class to watch a few clips from Mayberry, draw a truth from it, and that is your lesson. It can be fun for some people, but it grieves the Spirit of God. We have so little time each week to share the Word and we must take maximum advantage of it.
Some say, “People won’t come if you preach the Bible.” Solid Bible-preaching churches across the nation are proving that the opposite is true. I believe people are starved for truth. They crave the opportunity to hear someone say, “This is not what I think or what I feel. This is what God’s Word says. Like it or not, you must be accountable to it.” If you’re wondering what I plan to do to help my church grow, I don’t know any other way than to “preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all long suffering and doctrine” (II Tim. 4:2).
We don’t need to change our philosophy. We just need to tell them what Jesus said, and get back to the kind of Christianity found in the book of Acts – go, win, baptize, teach.
Every new Christian and every new member in your church should be in a discipleship program. They need to learn the Book. You say, “I don’t want a church like that.” Go to a church that only has a Sunday morning service and you will love it there. I’m not trying to run off anyone from my church, but sometimes you have to prune a plant to see it grow. When growth seems to have reached a plateau, it’s time to speed up, not ease back. We need to get more serious about the Word of God. I want my members to be able to go to the workplace and tell their associates about the promises contained in the Bible and how it can help them in the daily lives.
Notice in verse 2 that Paul was not alone, but had his COWORKERS. “And all the brethren which are with me…” So often we as Christians get into this “poor me, I’m all by myself” syndrome. One big reason our church hosts a Single Vision Conference is to let fundamental Baptists who are single know that plenty of others out there who believe what they believe. Even Elijah, as described in Rom. 11:3, lamented, “I am left alone.”
There are still a lot of people across the country and around the world who believe the Bible as it was written and the old-time religion. Recently at our church’s luncheon for new members we heard from several who were thrilled to find a church in the area that still wins souls and has Sunday night services. “The church we came from used to believe that, but they don’t anymore,” they will often say.
God’s plan is for us to encourage one another in the Word like that. Did you ever wonder why they were sent out two by two? It was because one day Peter might be up and James would be down, and another day it would be reversed, but they could always encourage and strengthen each other no matter who was excited or who was depressed. Each of us needs to be reminded from time to time, “You are not alone.”
Go back to the book of Exodus and you can read about how the Lord gave Moses instructions on how to build the tabernacle, then added, “But you’re not going to build it.” Look at Ex. 31:1-6.
And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying, See, I have called by name Bezaleel the son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah: And I have filled him with the spirit of God, in wisdom, and in understanding, and in knowledge, and in all manner of workmanship, To devise cunning works, to work in gold, and in silver, and in brass, And in cutting of stones, to set them, and in carving of timber, to work in all manner of workmanship. And I, behold, I have given with him Aholiab, the son of Ahisamach, of the tribe of Dan: and in the hearts of all that are wise hearted I have put wisdom, that they may make all that I have commanded thee.”
Chapters 37 and 38 of Exodus give details about all of the things Bezaleel built in the tabernacle, concluding in Ex. 38:22. “And Bezaleel the son Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah, made all that the LORD commanded Moses.”
Moses had a vision and a dream from God, but he needed coworkers to carry it out. I believe he was the greatest leader we know of in human history, guiding about three million Israelites through the wilderness over four decades. God gave him direction regarding the tabernacle but said he would not do any of the actual labor. How would it get done? God sent some men that were trained and gifted in the areas that were required for this project.
Your church will make its mark for Christ in your community because the Lord has sent you some Bezaleels. I have a vision for our church, and some of it scares me sometimes, but God will provide the laborers we need when we need them.
You are a Bezaleel also. God has wired you to do something important for Him and for your church, and you are different from others in your congregation. I am a big-picture guy who hates details, but I have been blessed at my church with some key people who love details and are good at dealing with them. Each of us as Christians has a Bezaleel-type skill that is to be utilized for the cause of Christ. God did not give you that ability so you could sit on the sidelines. He expects you to serve Him with it and bring Him glory through it. You need to be in a church that encourages this and stirs you up to do something for God.
Do you realize that we would not have a New Testament if Paul had to write it himself? He needed other people to write down what he said. It is recorded in his epistles that he frequently asked for certain people to come because of the ways in which they could help him. Subsequently, he and his coworkers turned their world upside down for Christ.
The latter portion of verse 2 refers to the CHURCHES. These were the people who had been saved, baptized and were serving the Lord in that city. The churches were scattered all over the region in the various cities Paul had visited on his missionary journeys. Each one is what we know today as a “local church.”
God’s plan for this age is to use the local church. Television, radio, the Internet, and anything else you can think of that is effective in spreading the Gospel is meant to be a tool of the local church. I am tired of people thinking that Christianity is some huge invisible kingdom out there to which you have no personal connection. That is not true. You are accountable to the local church. We are all part of the family of God, and I am thankful for that, but each of us is responsible to a specific local church.
We are to send out missionaries through the local church, and their task is to evangelize their portions of the world by organizing new local churches. Every worthwhile ministry has some kind of connection to the local church. When someone wants to do something outside the local church, it is often to avoid accountability.
Some of what we waste our money on and call “missions” is ridiculous. There are times when, instead of sending our money all over the place, we should be channeling it to reach our own communities through our own churches.
Some people don’t like the local church because they know that if they aren’t there one week, they’re going to get a phone call. Someone is going to check up on them. We’re not trying to control your life, but we know how the devil works, and when you miss one week it gets easier to miss a second, third and fourth time. Before long you’ve been gone a decade, and that is a decade of your life you will never get back.
I am tired of people trying to “fix” our church. We’re doing just fine. If you don’t like the way our church operates, that’s OK. There are hundreds of other churches in our area, and you should be able to find one to your liking. I would prefer that you stay, but not with a critical spirit or a gossiping spirit. All that does is destroy lives and hurt the cause of Christ. The local church is a family, and we should treat each other that way.
Look at verses 3-5 and see the CHARGE from Paul. “Grace be to you and peace from God the Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ, Who gave himself for our sins, that he might deliver us from this present evil world, according to the will of God and our Father: To whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.”
God wants us to have grace and peace in our lives. Do you have that? I sleep like a baby at night because I don’t worry or get stressed out about things. When you worry about everything, you make yourself (and everyone around you) miserable. As we see from this verse, God does not want us to be miserable. He wants us to have the grace and peace that can only come from Him.
Grace and peace can only come from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Some people don’t have grace and peace because they have never been saved. This includes a lot of church members. Those of us who are born again know that, as verse 4 says, we have something much greater to look forward to after this life, so there is no need to be terrified by what is going on in the world today.
How do we have grace and peace? It is simple:
·        We have been delivered from sin’s penalty.
·        We are being delivered from sin’s power.
·        One day we will be delivered from sin’s presence.
All of this is done for one reason: So that God can be glorified for ever and ever.
When you realize that God wants to give you things you cannot even imagine, you will see how futile it is to worry, whine and complain. Do you have that relationship with God through Jesus Christ? Do you know that your sins are forgiven? If the doctor came to you tomorrow and said you have about 30 days to live, it would change your perspective about eternity.
My desire for my church, like Paul’s for the Galatians, is that they live in grace and peace by knowing Christ and walking in fellowship with Him. There is no more joyous Christian in the world than a Christian who serves and walks with God. Likewise, there is no more miserable person alive than a Christian who does not do those things.
I have no desire to build a big church just for the sake of having a big church. I don’t need to be known nationally or be “number one” in anything. I just want my people to get a taste of what it feels like when you are right with God and serving Him. There is nothing greater in the entire world. So many Christians just don’t get it, and they languish through life in misery.
The late Tom Malone used to say, “I can drink all I want to, I can dance all I want to do, and I can run around on my wife all I want to. The trouble is, I just don’t want to.” He had found something so much better.
What a great church you could have if your congregation just decided to serve God and didn’t get caught up in petty problems and a critical spirit. Anyone can tear something down; it takes character to build something up. When we understand that, we can do something great for God.