Sermon Tone Analysis

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Anger
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Series Review
Part two of a series entitled “Understanding how to live Under Grace”
3 Key Developments:
Understanding the fundamentals of law and grace
Understanding of the primary purpose of the law and the way grace corresponds to that purpose
Understanding how to live “Under Grace”
Misunderstood Argument
Christians are not bound by the commands of the law of Moses
Three incorrect views:
View #1: that we are no longer bound by the rules of the Old Testament
View #2: that in the O.T. salvation was obtained by keeping the law of Moses, but in the N.T. salvation is obtained by faith in Jesus
View #3: that Christians who sin are not punished because we are “under grace”
Biblical foundation for argument (Rm 6:14-15)
Three components in the first law of God (Gen 2:17)
command
choice
consequence
Note: the consequence is always severe
Definition of the law of Moses for our study
God’s commands for Israel’s conduct
Introduction to the law of Moses
generally when a person states they are “not under the law”, that person is referring to the law of Moses.
to understand how to live under grace it is necessary to understand what it meant to live under the law of Moses
Timing of the Law of Moses
After God delivered the Israelites from bondage in Egypt
As the Hebrew refugees were transitioning into a nation
As the God of Abraham was revealing Himself to the Hebrews and establishing Himself as the ruler of their nation
Key thought
The law of Moses is based on the principle that God ruled Isreal
Living under the law of Moses meant submitting to God’s rule, obeying God’s command, and reflecting God’s character through your conduct.
How does living under grace correspond to this understanding of living under the law of Moses?
While many think of the law simply as the Ten Commandments, much more than a moral code was included in biblical law.
The Law of Moses had rules for deciding civil and criminal cases.
The Law of Moses ordained a priesthood for Israel, and set out a sacrificial system.
The Law of Moses defined “clean” and “unclean” foods, which could and could not be eaten by Israelites.
The Law of Moses regulated marriage and family life, military operations, worship and religious holidays, borrowing and lending, farming, the care of the poor, relationships with aliens, hygiene, men’s and women’s clothing, the treatment of infectious skin diseases, and many other matters.
All the major events of a person’s life, from birth to marriage to child-rearing to old age and death, were dealt with in Moses’ Law.
Jewish tradition says that there are not just Ten Commandments in Moses’ Law: the Old Testament contains 613 commandments that the Israelites were to observe!
Perhaps the best way to sum up Mosaic Law is to say that it gave complete instructions to Israel on how they were to live in fellowship with God and one another.
Key Thought!
Living under the law of Moses meant every aspect of your life was governed in some way by the law of God.
Living by the law of Moses put God’s wisdom and holiness on display to each other, as well as to other nations.
Living under the law of Moses was NOT a weekly religious act, but a daily righteous life, expressed systematically through ceremonial acts.
Question: does living “under grace” free Christians from expressing God’s character through our personal behavior?No!
Command, Choice, Consequence
Key Thought
You choose your consequence by choosing your behavior!
What was it like to live under the law?
Those who lived “under the law of Moses” were careful to obey God’s commands, or they suffered the sever consequences of God’s wrath!
How does living under grace correspond to this idea of living under the law of Moses?
Key thought
God does not change therefore those living “under grace” must fear, reverence, & obey God just as much as the people who lived “under the law of Moses”
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