Home V3 (LearnDash) › Forums › Grace 2024/2025 Discussion Board 1
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bright022.
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June 19, 2025 at 3:02 pm #35484
pastorhelen
KeymasterWrite a discussion on: “The Subtlety of Legalism” showing how believers may slip into legalism and what they can do to prevent falling into it.
Essay should be at least 400 words, while your reply should be at least 200 words.
Paste the same submission from the previous step here by clicking on the REPLY link just above. Your submission should be made by Wednesday, the 2nd of July 2025.
Then scroll down to see your peer submissions and click reply to comment on their submissions. You MUST comment on at least one post with a minimum of 200 words by 11:59 p.m. (WAT) on Friday, the 4th of July 2025. Your comments will also be graded.
Your post should be a minimum of 400 words, while your reply should be at least 200 words. -
July 21, 2025 at 7:59 am #35792
ambcovenant
ParticipantThe Subtlety of Legalism
Legalism is not always loud. Often, it creeps in quietly, camouflaged as spiritual discipline, holiness, or moral excellence. It is subtle because it doesn’t always reject grace outright; rather, it adds to grace, suggesting that something more must be done to truly earn God’s approval. Yet, the moment grace is mixed with law, it ceases to be grace (Romans 11:6). Legalism is the false belief that human effort can sustain what only God’s grace has begun.
According to the New Testament, especially in Paul’s epistles, legalism is more than strict rule-keeping—it is a heart posture that shifts trust from Christ to self. In Galatians 3:3, Paul rebukes the church, saying:
> “Are you so foolish? Having begun in the Spirit, are you now being made perfect by the flesh?”
This verse captures the essence of legalism: starting with faith but trying to finish with works. It is an attempt to earn divine favor by performance instead of resting in Christ’s finished work.
How Believers Slip Into Legalism
Legalism does not always start with rebellion. It often begins with sincere desire. A believer sets out to please God, to live righteously, and to grow in spiritual disciplines. However, over time, these practices can become measuring rods of spirituality. When one begins to feel more “accepted” by God because of how long they pray, how often they fast, or how modestly they dress, the focus has shifted from faith in Christ to faith in works.
Additionally, comparison fuels legalism. Like the Pharisee in Luke 18:11–12 who prayed,
> “God, I thank you that I am not like other men…”,
legalism boasts in visible acts of righteousness while despising those who appear “less spiritual.” It thrives on external appearances but ignores the heart. Jesus condemned the Pharisees for this in Matthew 23:27, calling them “whitewashed tombs”—clean on the outside, but dead inside.Another doorway for legalism is fear. Some believers are afraid that grace will lead to complacency, so they impose rigid rules to feel spiritually safe. But fear-based obedience is not the Gospel. “Perfect love casts out fear” (1 John 4:18), and any system that binds the soul in anxiety rather than resting in Christ’s love is not of God.
How to Guard Against Legalism
1. Stay Gospel-Centered
The Gospel reminds us that Jesus did all that was needed for our salvation. As Paul says in Galatians 2:21:> “If righteousness comes through the law, then Christ died in vain.”
The cross is proof that no human effort can ever earn God’s favor—it must be received by grace through faith (Ephesians 2:8–9).2. View Obedience as a Response, Not a Requirement
Holiness is not a tool to earn God’s love; it is a response to already being loved. Legalism says, “I obey, therefore I am accepted.” Grace says, “I am accepted, therefore I obey.”3. Examine Motives Regularly
Ask yourself: Am I doing this to earn approval or from a place of love? Am I serving to gain God’s attention or because I already have it?4. Remain Humble and Grateful
Romans 3:27 asks, “Where is boasting then? It is excluded.” A legalistic spirit thrives on pride. But when we understand that everything we are is because of grace, humility becomes our posture.5. Surround Yourself with Grace-Filled Teaching
Not all preaching builds grace. Some magnify rules and regulations above Christ. Believers must sit under ministries that exalt the finished work of Jesus, not human performance.Conclusion
Legalism is a spiritual cancer that grows silently but kills surely. It replaces intimacy with performance, and relationship with religion. Though it often begins with good intentions, it ends with spiritual bondage. Believers must be vigilant, not only resisting open sin, but also rejecting the subtle pull to trust in self over Christ. The antidote is daily dependence on grace, continual reflection on the Gospel, and deep rest in the righteousness of Christ alone.
> As Paul declared in Philippians 3:9,
“…not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ…”True freedom is not found in rigid rules but in relationship with Jesus, where grace transforms us from the inside out.
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July 24, 2025 at 8:05 pm #35935
bright022
ParticipantLegalism is the belief that a person can earn God’s favor or acceptance through their own works or religious performance. This mindset can subtly creep into a believer’s life, causing them to measure their standing before God by their works rather than Christ’s finished work. According to Ephesians 2:8-9, salvation is a gift of God, not earned by works.
Believers may slip into legalism by thinking that good works directly earn God’s favor, striving in their own strength rather than depending on God’s grace, or comparing themselves to others. This can lead to pride and a focus on human achievement rather than Christ’s work.
To prevent falling into legalism, believers must continually rest in God’s grace, recognizing that their acceptance is based solely on Christ’s finished work. Good works should be seen as a response to grace, not a means of earning it. Believers should also stay humble and dependent on the Spirit, acknowledging that every good work is empowered by God.
The subtlety of legalism lies in its ability to masquerade as sincere devotion. By resting in Christ’s finished work, allowing our works to flow from grace, and walking in humble dependence on the Spirit, believers can avoid legalism and live in the liberty of the gospel. As Galatians 5:1 says, “Stand fast therefore in the liberty by which Christ has made us free, and do not be entangled again with a yoke of bondage.”
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