Between Two Worlds: A Mix of Theology, Philosophy, Politics, and Culture



Friday, June 22, 2007

Four Classes of Legalism

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Jollyblogger: "C. R. Biggs at Reformation Theology quotes a great passage from Dan Doriani on different types of legalists":

Prof. Doriani writes:

"Class-one legalists are auto-soterists; they declare what one must do in order to obtain God's favor or salvation. The rich young ruler was a class-one legalist.

Class-two legalists declare what good deeds or spiritual disciplines one must perform to retain God's favor and salvation.

Class-three legalists love the law so much they create new laws, laws not found in Scripture, and require submission to them. The Pharisees, who build fences around the law, were class-three legalists.

Class-four legalists avoid these gross errors, but they so accentuate obedience to the law of God that other ideas shrivel up. They reason, 'God has redeemed us at the cost of his Son's life. Now he demands our service in return. He has given us his Spirit and a new nature and has stated his will. With these resources, we obey his law in gratitude for our redemption. This is our duty to God.' In an important way this is true, but class-four legalists dwell on the law of God until they forget the love of God. Worshiping, delighting in, communing with, and conforming to God are forgotten.

Class-four legalists can preach sermons in which every sentence is true, while the whole is oppressive. It is oppressive to proclaim Christ as the Lawgiver to whom we owe a vast debt, as if we must somehow repay him- - repay God! -- for his gifts to us.

I count myself a member of the legion of recovering class-four legalists. We slide into a 'Just Do It' mentality occasionally, dispensing commands just because they are right.


5 Comments:

Anonymous jmoore said...

When I read what he describes as class four legalism, I captures what I like to call "Grit your teeth and bear it" Christianity.

I am daily waging the battle against class four legalism.

Praise God for the provision of the Holy Spirit!

6/22/2007 09:44:00 AM  
Blogger Standfast said...

Thanks very much for this, and all the other references you provide. I profit enormously from them.

6/22/2007 11:14:00 AM  
Blogger James said...

Who doesn't get mired in spiritual battle and forget sometimes (not intellectually so much but perhaps more affectively) the love of God in Christ?

The antidote to class four legalism isn't less love for the law, but more meditation on the cross!

And at the end of the day, I'd rather be a class four legalist than a fourth class antinomian (the kind who convinces himself that it's not good to dwell upon, meditate, even obsess about obeying our Redeemer King)!

I don't remember... does Doriani cover classes of antinomianism to avoid in our preaching too?

6/22/2007 11:30:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

A message by Piper on saving faith is helpful regarding the class 4 legalist. In this message he discusses faith as receiving what Christ accomplished for us objectively AND subjectively delighting in, savoring, enjoying, treasuring etc. Christ. His point being that most people (believers and unbelievers want what Christ accomplished objectively (sins forgiven, freedom from hell, freedom form wrath, eternal life etc. who doesn't want those things) but only believers subjectively enjoy, delight in, desire, treasure Christ for who he is. It's well worth listening to. (http://www.desiringgod.org/ResourceLibrary/ConferenceMessages/ByDate/2166_The_Nature_of_Saving_Faith/)

6/22/2007 03:25:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

James

I think what you write is important...we have to be realistic, sometimes, or maybe its just me, it is only duty that stops me from sinning, its only the thought of offending God that prevents me from giving in to lusts, and its only the thought that Christ died for me that saves me from shame...and if that is legalism then I'm glad of that kind of legalism in one sense....yes I might desire that everything I do is done in the joy of the Lord, but I'm a sinner, and it's not!

J

6/22/2007 06:11:00 PM  

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