by Cornelius R. Stam
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The fact that we are given perfect liberty in Christ does not mean that we
should spend our lives in gratifying our own fleshly desires. Just the
opposite is the case. Believers have been delivered from the bondage of
childhood and given the liberty of full-grown sons in Christ
(Gal.3:24; 4:1-7), and this advance from infancy to maturity in itself implies
the acquisition of a sense of responsibility.
The doctrine of our liberty in Christ does not support, it rather refutes, the
false theory that those who are under grace may do anything they please. Paul
was “slanderously reported” in this connection (Rom.3:8), but there were
carnal believers then, as there are now, who actually did use their liberty as
license to gratify their own desires. To turn from liberty to license in this
way is fully as serious an error as to turn from liberty to law.
Many a believer, motivated only by his own fleshly desires and not at all by
love for Christ or others, has indulged in pleasures of the flesh and of the
world, justifying himself on the ground that he is under grace and has liberty
in Christ. Taking others down with him in his spiritual declension he
complains of any who would help him, that, “They are trying to put me under
the law”.
Such are actually guilty of departing from grace, for “the grace of God…hath
appeared”: |
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