Four Antilegalistic Strategies
by Charles R. Swindoll
by Charles R. Swindoll
Grace killers cannot be mildly ignored or kindly tolerated. You
can no more allow legalism to continue than you could permit a rattlesnake to
slip into your house and hide. Before long, somebody is going to get hurt. So
then, since liberty is worth fighting for, how do we do it? Where can our
personal grace awakening begin? I can think of four strong strategies:
Keep standing firm in your freedom. I'm
reminded of what Paul wrote in Galatians
5:1: "It was for freedom that Christ set us free; therefore keep
standing firm and do not be subject again to a yoke of slavery." Stand
your ground. Ask the Lord to give you courage.
Stop seeking the favor of everyone. This
may be a stubborn habit to break, but it is really worth all the effort you can
muster. If you're in a group where you feel you are being coerced to do certain
things that are against your conscience or you're being pressured to stop doing
things that you see no problem with, get out of the group! You're unwise to
stay in situations where your conscience tells you it is not right. That is
nothing more than serving men, not God. I don't care how spiritual sounding it
may be. Stop seeking the favor of everybody.
Start refusing to submit to bondage. Call
it what it is: slavery. It's trying to be "spiritual" by performance.
Think of how delightful it would be to get rid of all the anxiety that comes
with the bondage to which you have submitted yourself; think how clean you
could feel by being real again, or perhaps real for the first time in your
adult life.
Continue being straightforward about the truth. That
means live honestly. If you don't agree, say so kindly but firmly. If you are
the only one, be true to yourself and stand alone. When you blow it, say,
"I blew it." If you don't know, admit the truth. It's okay not to
know. And the next time your kids spot hypocrisy, even though you may feel
embarrassed, agree with them, "You know what, kids? You're right. I was a
first-class hypocrite. What you saw and pointed out is exactly right."
Tell them that. It may sound embarrassing to you now, but they will admire and
respect your admission. And they won't grow up damaged. Best of all, they will
learn to model the same kind of vulnerability and honesty, even if you are in
vocational Christian work . . . especially if you're in vocational Christian
work. Nobody expects perfection, but they do and they should expect
honesty.
We need affirmation and encouragement to be all we're meant to
be, and because so many are rather delicate within, they need those who are
strong to assist them in their fight for liberty. And so, if for no other
reason, liberty is worth fighting for so others can breathe freely.
If fighting for liberty sounds too aggressive to you, perhaps
too selfish, then think of it as fighting so others can be set free—so others
can be awakened to the joys and privileges of personal freedom. Those who do
that on real battlefields are called patriots or heroes. With all my heart, I believe
those who square off against legalism should be considered the same.
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