
Read the following statements. If one of the following pertains to you, you are disqualified as being a Christian.
I am wondering if you got emotionally stirred as you were reading the above list. You may be thinking, “Where did this list come from? Who set up these disqualifications?” Some of you may be also thinking, “This is legalism!”
There was also legalism during the days of Jesus Christ. Read through the following list.
The word “legalism” does not occur in the Bible. It is a term Christians use to emphasizing a system of rules and regulations for achieving both salvation and spiritual growth. Doctrinally, it is a position essentially opposed to grace. A pastor I know gave this definition:
“Legalism is the conviction that law-keeping
is the ground of our acceptance with God.”
We are instructed not to be legalistic but to be gracious to one another: The apostle Paul wrote, “Accept him whose faith is weak, without passing judgment on disputable matters”.
Sadly, there are those who feel so strongly about non-essential doctrines that they run others out of their fellowship, because of ‘rigidly’ adhering to their own biblical interpretations and to their own ‘religious’ traditions.
Mark Ballenger writes “The way to avoid legalism in Christianity is to have good deeds with good motives, to obey God’s law out of a relational love for him” ( Apply God's Word The Teaching Ministry, June 30, 2016).
To avoid legalism we need to be asking ourselves the following questions:
For this activity: