Law vs. Faith

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Galatians 3:23-29
June 23, 2013


Now before faith came, we were imprisoned and guarded under the law until faith would be revealed. Therefore the law was our disciplinarian until Christ came, so that we might be justified by faith. But now that faith has come, we are no longer subject to a disciplinarian, for in Christ Jesus you are all children of God through faith. As many of you as were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus. And if you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s offspring, heirs according to the promise.

            How often have you had a conversation with someone who said something along the lines of, “It all boils down to following the 10 Commandments”? Or, “If people would just follow the Bible,…”?

            Among Christians, you hear a lot of comments that are similar to these, suggesting that if we would just follow the Commandments and the law of the Bible, then we would be right with God, and the world would be right with God. The problem is that they are wrong,... at least according to the apostle Paul.

            There are a lot of Christians who want to take us back to pre-Christ days, to a day when the expectations of faith were very different, although they don’t realize it. These Christians teach a Christianity that is all about following the biblical law found in Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. They believe that true religion is all about doing the right things, following the law, and living in the right, proscribed way.

            So what’s wrong with that?  What’s wrong with following the law? Isn’t the law good? According to Paul, it’s not bad to follow the law, but it is limited, and ultimately impossible. Following only the law is limited because it turns religion into a matter of obeying an overlord disciplinarian, rather than God. You heard Paul say as much in our passage:  “Therefore the law was our disciplinarian until Christ came, so that we might be justified by faith. But now that faith has come, we are no longer subject to a disciplinarian,…” He is saying that the law ultimately failed because it’s role was to discipline our lives, not necessarily to open us up to God. The focus was on serving the law, not God, even though the law came from God. We too easily turn the law into a God-substitute.

            Actually, what Paul says is even more dynamic and powerful. He goes on to say that because we live a life of faith in following Christ, instead of following the law, we are now able to do what the law prevented us from doing. He says this when he says, “There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.” This phrase is a powerful one because it goes beyond the law. The Jewish law proscribed differences between people. It outlined who is good and who is bad. For instance, it stated that Jews were to have no interactions, or at least limited interactions, with Gentiles (what Paul calls “Greeks”). It supported the idea that women were less than men, and that they were chattel, much like sheep and goats. It supported the idea of slavery. Paul’s statement is that there is now a life in Christ that takes us beyond these separations to make us one with each other and with God. Women are equal to men. Gentiles and Jews are now part of the same life. Slaves are now equal to their masters.

            Paul presents a different vision for how to live as a Christian, one that is focused on following in faith rather than following the law. What’s the difference between the two? The difference is that one leads to spiritual energy, the other to spiritual exhaustion. Let me show you the difference.

            Paul’s point is that following the law is an effort bound for failure because we tire of living that disciplined, and modern psychology is showing how true this idea is. In a book titled, Switch, by Chip and Dan Heath (two business and marketing researchers), they talk about an experiment done in a university to test the ability of people to follow the rules. They invited college students to be part an experiment that they said was testing the ability to remember and describe the taste of certain foods. They asked the students to show up for the experiment without having eaten in at least three hours. When the students showed up, the rooms smelled fantastic because the experimenters had just baked chocolate chip cookies.

            The students were individually placed in a room with a bowl of radishes and a bowl of cookies and chocolates. One-half of the group was asked to eat only cookies and chocolates, while ignoring the radishes. The other half were asked to eat radishes, but to leave alone the cookies and chocolates. Then the experimenter would pretend to have an issue requiring her or him to leave the room suddenly, with instructions to just eat one, not the other. The students were left alone in the room for 15 minutes. The good news is that the cookie eaters didn’t cheat and sneak radishes, but also, surprisingly, the radish eaters didn’t sneak and eat the cookies.

            It’s here that the real experiment took place. The students were then complimented for their honesty, and asked to take part in another experiment. They were taken into another room to solve a puzzle. They were given a certain geometrical design, and asked to turn it into another design by moving the lines, without lifting the pencil from the paper. They were given a stack of clean sheets of paper to attempt their tries. What they didn’t know was that the puzzle was actually unsolvable, and the experimenters were really testing how long the students were willing to try to solve the puzzle before giving up. The students who had eaten only cookies averaged 19 minutes of work, with 34 attempts. Those that had eaten only radishes averaged 8 minutes of work, with 19 attempts. In other words, those who had to demonstrate great willpower and restraint in ignoring the cookies basically ran out of willpower sooner during the puzzle experiment.

            How does this relate to the law? It basically says that obeying the law, which requires great amounts of daily discipline and willpower (much like ignoring cookies), eventually fails because people get discipline exhaustion. People get tired of trying to be disciplined, and there is a limit to their willpower energy. The failure of the law is that eventually even the best law followers get tired, break the law, and fail. Paul understood this, and proposed a different way. His way was to connect people directly with Christ, with the Holy Spirit, and to allow the power of Christ within us to lead us in the right way. This is the way of faith over law.

            Let me give an example of faith over law. As you may or may not know, I often work with other pastors, serving as a counselor, coach, and spiritual director. I help them find a way to become healthier in how they live as ministers and as people. As a result, I get to work with a number of pastors from different Christian traditions who struggle with things that they won’t share with others.

            A number of years ago I worked with a pastor who was coming out of a more fundamentalist denomination than ours. He was struggling with a number of issues, and one of them was a growing obsession with online pornography. Personally, I think the spread of cyber-porn has been a huge problem with men in general, and there are many male pastors who struggle with it, too. With the pastors it’s even more devastating because they know that they are not supposed to be looking at pornographic images, but the stresses of their vocations and lives often make them vulnerable because cyber-porn is so anonymous and easy to do. This pastor was struggling, and he said that the more he tried to stop, the more obsessed he became with it.

            Knowing what I know about how we can suffer “discipline exhaustion,” I took a different approach—one that is in line with what Paul says in our passage today. I told him to quit trying so hard, but instead to turn his obsession into an opportunity for prayer—to give it all to God. We prayed that God would help him and transform him, and then I suggested to him that each time he had the idea to look at porn, to turn this into a time of prayer. Each time, just say to God, “God, you know I’m struggling with my desire to look at porn right now. Please help me to let go of this desire.” I also told him that he was going to fail at times, and that after he got over the disappointment of failing, to turn that over to God, too.

            Over the ensuing months and years, he noticed that his desire diminished dramatically. He said that he still couldn’t help himself two or three times a year, but that this was dramatically different from the daily viewings he had. He also said that even in those two or three times, his online viewing was more glimpsing than viewing.

            The difference was that he shifted from trying to adhere to a law, and instead turned his viewing into an opportunity for prayer and faith. Instead of using willpower, he used the Spirit’s power.

            Paul preached a Christianity of giving to God so that we can discover what’s right directly from God, not from law. The law still has a role to show us how God wants us to live, but Paul’s point is to keep our focus on God, not on turning the law into a false, demanding god.

            The irony about what Paul preached is that it completely goes against what most people think of Paul. Many think of Paul as an Old Testament-type figure, full of judgment and preaching about the law. In fact, Paul was trying to teach people to let go of a focus on the law in order to create a focus on Christ and Christ’s way. The basic gist of his teaching was similar to that found in John’s gospel, which is that grace, Christ, and the Spirit are in you and can transform you, if you let them. We are not apart from God, expected to mold our lives into ones that are appealing and pleasing to God. We are asked and invited to open up our lives to God’s indwelling Spirit, and to allow that Spirit to transform us to transcend the law—to live the way the law intended for us to live, but to be able to do so because the Spirit is alive in us.

            It’s due to this emphasis on following Christ in faith, rather then subjecting ourselves to law, that we preach a life of prayer, love, and service. When we open up to Christ by allowing the indwelling Spirit come alive in us, we naturally live as the law intended us to live, but we do it through the power of God, not the power of will.

            Paul would be the first to say that there’s nothing wrong with law, but there is a better way—a higher way—if we choose it.

            Amen.