π± GROWING IN A RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD
βοΈ Lesson 9: Sin, the Gospel, and the Law
π 9.4 The Law and the Gospel
The law shows our guilt β the Gospel shows Godβs salvation through Jesus Christ
π 1. Introduction β Why do the law and the Gospel belong together?
Many people see the law and the Gospel as opposites.
Some emphasize only:
- rules
- obedience
- commandments
Others, however, speak only about:
- love
- grace
- forgiveness
But the Bible connects both inseparably.
The law shows:
π What sin is.
The Gospel shows:
π How God saves the sinner.
Without the law, human beings do not recognize their guilt.
Without the Gospel, they remain hopeless in their guilt.
π 2. The biblical foundation β Jesusβ relationship to the law
Jesus said in Matthew 5:17β18:
π He had not come to abolish the law,
but to fulfill it.
This means:
Jesus confirmed the validity and importance of Godβs law.
At the same time, he revealed its deepest meaning:
- love for God
- love for other people
But Jesus did even more:
He perfectly fulfilled
what no human being could perfectly fulfill.
Where human beings fail,
Christ lived in perfect obedience.
And on the cross he bore the consequences of our transgression of the law.
π 3. Connection to today
Even today, Christians often fall into two extremes:
πΉ Some become legalistic:
They trust more in their own performance than in Godβs grace.
πΉ Others reject Godβs commandments almost completely:
They speak of love
without taking Godβs truth seriously.
Both are dangerous.
Because:
- Law without the Gospel often leads to pride, fear, or condemnation.
- The Gospel without the law easily leads to arbitrariness and spiritual superficiality.
The Bible shows instead:
π True discipleship unites truth and grace.
π‘ 4. Central message of the lesson
π The law shows us our need β the Gospel shows us our Savior.
βοΈ 5. Theological focus
This lesson touches the heart of the Christian faith:
the relationship between the law and salvation.
The law reveals Godβs holy standard.
It shows:
- what is good
- what is evil
- what Godβs character is like
- how far human beings are from Godβs ideal
But the law has no saving power.
It can:
- make guilt visible
- convict human beings
- expose sin
but:
- not forgive
- not justify
- not transform
That is why Paul explains:
π βBy works of the law no human being will be justified.β
The Gospel answers precisely this problem.
Jesus Christ:
- lived without sin
- fulfilled the law perfectly
- died in the place of sinners
- bore humanityβs punishment
Through this, God gives:
- forgiveness
- justification
- reconciliation
- new life
It is important:
Human beings are not saved
because they keep the law.
They keep Godβs commandments
because they have been saved through Christ.
This is a decisive difference.
Theologically speaking:
π Obedience never comes before salvation,
but as the fruit of salvation.
Another central thought:
The Gospel does not abolish the law.
On the contrary:
The cross shows
how seriously God takes sin.
If the law were meaningless,
Christ would not have had to die.
At the same time, the cross reveals:
- Godβs justice
- Godβs love
There, the following meet:
- truth and grace
- law and Gospel
The lesson also emphasizes
that genuine obedience arises from love.
Jesus said:
π βIf you love me, you will keep my commandments.β
Christian obedience is therefore:
- not a work to earn salvation
- not an attempt to deserve Godβs love
- not a religious point system
but a response to Godβs grace.
π 6. Justification, grace, and protection from legalism
A great danger in spiritual life is legalism.
Legalism arises
when people:
- place their hope in their own piety
- raise themselves above others
- view obedience as a means of salvation
As a result, religion often becomes:
- heavy
- cold
- performance-oriented
- driven by fear
But the Gospel brings freedom.
Paul explains:
π Human beings are justified by faith.
This means:
God accepts the sinner,
not because of their performance,
but because of Christ.
The righteousness of Jesus is credited to the believer.
This completely changes the Christianβs motivation.
One no longer obeys God
in order to be saved,
but because one is saved.
This truth protects against:
- pride
- self-righteousness
- religious pressure
At the same time, it protects against indifference toward sin.
Because true grace transforms the heart.
Whoever truly encounters Christ
develops the desire to:
- honor God
- live according to his will
- grow in love
The lesson makes clear:
π The law and the Gospel must never be separated.
Because:
- The law without the Gospel brings despair.
- The Gospel without the law loses its meaning.
Only together do they reveal Godβs complete plan of salvation.
π§ 7. Application in everyday life
Practical questions:
- Do I trust more in my performance or in Christ?
- Do I obey out of fear or out of love?
- Do I understand Godβs commandments as protection for relationships?
- Do I personally experience Godβs grace?
- Does my life show both truth and love?
β 8. Reflection question
How does my view of Godβs commandments change when I realize that Jesus has already paid for my guilt?
π 9. Final thought
The law shows
how holy God is.
The Gospel shows
how far Godβs love goes.
Because:
π At the cross, Godβs perfect justice and his boundless grace meet.
