Sunday, January 26th • Beau Bradberry
"I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me." — Galatians 2:20
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Sermon audio from Sunday services at Willow Ridge Church.
Hi, and welcome to the Willow Ridge Church weekly podcast.
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Thanks for listening.
If you've got your Bibles, going to open up to Galatians chapter 2.
As you turn there, right, it's good for us to consistently build in reminders of where
we're at, of what we're doing, okay?
So I want to thank everybody.
We've had a great opportunity every Sunday morning as we started off this new year to
gather together as a church family, starting at 945, to come together, to have some coffee,
to have some donuts, to have some snacks, to build relationships as we continue to build
our church family.
And I want to challenge you, if you're a part of our family and you haven't had the opportunity
to join us, right?
You don't have to be here at 945, but get here early as an opportunity to continue to build
relationships, to continue to invest as we continue to work toward becoming one family unified in
the gospel of Jesus Christ.
I also want to remind everybody, so next Sunday, it's one of those first Sundays of the month,
and so what that means for us is we'll be taking the Lord's Supper together as a church family,
but we will also be having our first graders all the way through the adults, all of us in
here together, so that we can have a part of the whole family, but then also the church family,
individual families within our church family together.
And so I want to encourage you to be a part of that service with us next week as we take the
Lord's Supper together, as we worship together, and as we have a wonderful time of coming together
and celebrating the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Well, we're going to start reading this morning, Galatians chapter 2.
We're going to read starting in verse 11 and go through verse 21.
God's Word says this,
But when Cephas, and make a note that when it says this name, this is Peter,
came to Antioch, Paul writes and he says,
I opposed him to his face, because he stood condemned.
For before certain men came from James, he was eating with the Gentiles.
But when they came, he drew back and separated himself, fearing the circumcision party.
And the rest of the Jews acted hypocritically along with him,
so that even Barnabas was led astray by their hypocrisy.
But when I saw that their conduct was not in step with the truth of the gospel,
I said to Cephas, again reminding you guys, this is Peter,
Before them all, if you, though a Jew, live like a Gentile and not like a Jew,
how can you force the Gentiles to live like Jews?
This is a key argument that we've been talking about since the beginning of studying and understanding Galatians.
All right, it's how can you impose something that's not the gospel on those converting,
is what Paul is saying.
Verse 15, he says,
We ourselves are Jews by birth and not Gentile sinners,
yet we know that a person is not justified by works of the law,
but through faith in Jesus Christ.
So we also have believed in Christ Jesus in order to be justified by faith in Christ,
and not by works of the law.
This is important, underline this in your Bible,
because by the works of the law, no one will be justified.
Continue on in verse 17,
But if in our endeavor to be justified in Christ,
we too were found to be sinners,
is Christ then a servant of sin?
Certainly not.
For if I rebuild what I tore down,
I prove myself to be a transgressor.
For through the law I died to the law so that I might live to God.
Verse 20,
I've been crucified with Christ.
It is no longer I who live,
but Christ who lives in me.
In the life I now live,
in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God,
who loved me and gave himself up for me.
I do not nullify the grace of God,
for if righteousness were through the law,
then Christ died for no purpose.
Now there's a lot in this passage of Scripture.
In fact, what we're going to get this week
is kind of message 1A,
and then next week as we take the Lord's Supper
and lead into this,
we're going to wrap up this particular passage of Scripture
and get the second half of what's going on.
As Paul is continuing on and concluding the section
as he's sharing his story of what's going on in his life.
And this is the third segment that we've kind of seen in this
as Paul shares.
If you go all the way back to a couple weeks ago,
it was the second week in our study of Galatians,
we see the first section
where Paul talks about his salvation,
his salvation experience,
and an important part for him
that he focuses in on of what God does in that.
That this gospel that he received
was not the gospel of man.
That it didn't come from one man to another,
but that God revealed it to him.
And it's the supernatural aspect of the gospel
of what Paul is implanting,
that for the Jew and for the Gentile,
for every person who has ever lived,
there is one gospel,
and it's important that this gospel comes from God.
It's the establishment of what he lays down before them.
And then he jumps in scripture,
tells us 14 years later in his story,
and he begins to talk about the Jerusalem council.
And at the Jerusalem council,
it's determined,
this man named Titus,
that even though he is a Gentile,
that he is a full believer of Christ
with nothing else added to that
for him required to do,
that he's a full believer of Christ,
even though he does not follow
all of the customary Jewish laws
or traditions that are there living in the culture.
That now we see the establishment
and the confirmation of what Paul knew
as God imparted the gospel to him,
as God called him to the Gentiles,
that it is one unified gospel
for the Jew,
for the Gentile,
for everyone,
for every nation,
for every tribe,
every tongue.
It's the foundation of the hope that we have
that we're called to share.
It's the reminder that regardless of what we look like,
regardless of what we say,
that there is one gospel,
the gospel of Christ.
And now what we're going to get
is we're going to get the third part.
We're going to get the third part of his story.
And as we see,
it's the culmination of what Paul is drawing together
as he explains that it is the gospel
who saved Titus.
It is the gospel who would save Peter.
It's the gospel who would save Paul.
It's the gospel who would save you.
It's the gospel who would save me.
But that even after salvation,
it's the gospel that keeps us.
It's the gospel that's the standard.
That when we are saved,
it's not then we walk away
and carry the gospel just to share it.
But we walk away,
we carry the gospel to share it,
but also the gospel to live by.
And we see the transforming power of the gospel.
Well, here in the third section
of what we read this morning
is Paul addresses an issue
that he had with Peter.
Now before,
back in the Jerusalem council,
Peter was there.
And he and Peter were unified
concerning Titus and the gospel.
But now they're no longer in Jerusalem.
They're in Antioch,
a largely Gentile city.
And Paul stands in opposition to Peter.
He rebukes him.
He calls him out.
He challenges him.
So what in the world was going on?
You see, to simplify it,
Peter had changed his eating habits.
Peter had changed his social status
when he would eat,
before he would eat with the Gentiles.
But now he has stopped his eating with them
and in doing so,
stopped his fellowship with the Gentiles.
You see, there begins to now be a break
in what was fought for to be unified.
Not only is the gospel unified in message,
but it's always important
that the gospel is also unified
in its application.
And Peter had walked away from that.
And so Paul is addressing him.
So why would he do this?
Why would Peter, who knows,
why would Peter,
who with boldness,
would proclaim who Christ is,
why would Peter,
one of those closest,
to have walked with Christ,
the leader of the core of what was there,
being willing to charge
a Roman centurion
with a knife to set Jesus free,
why would Peter,
who would write scripture,
why would Peter,
who would be such a foundational leader
in the church,
why would he break away from this?
Why would he head down this path?
It's because of the sin
that was in his life.
You see, let me explain to you
Old Testament,
what we're going to call clean laws.
The Old Testament clean laws
found in Leviticus
were a series of regulations
for worshipers to follow.
And God had put them in place
for them to be ceremonial clean
and acceptable
in the presence of God for worship.
And so a handful of them were,
they were required to eat certain foods
and not eat certain foods
because the certain foods
they were not eat
were deemed to be unclean.
They were not allowed
to touch dead things.
If someone had a disease,
they were not allowed to touch them.
Or if you had a disease,
that you were forbidden
from touching others
and there were many other
clean laws that are there
that are found in Leviticus.
And God is doing these
to teach his people something.
God is doing this
to teach them something
about themselves,
but also God is doing this
to teach them something
about himself.
And what God wanted to show
with the clean laws
was that a sinful people,
everyone,
needed to be clean
in order to enter
into the presence of God.
It's a beautiful picture
of what would take place
of the work of Christ
to allow you and I,
sinners,
to be brought into
a right relationship
with the Holy God.
What we would see
in the know
of the hope of the gospel
was that in order
to be made clean
is not found
in anything that we do,
but it's found
in the work of Christ,
of what Christ does
on our behalf.
And Jesus comes
and he addresses
the clean laws.
In Mark chapter 7,
Jesus says that
even with his arrival
that these laws have passed.
And then there's
a wonderful picture
in the book of Acts
where God sends a vision
to Peter of all people
specifically to show him
why this law has gone away.
And then in a wonderful part
where Peter understands this,
he meets a Gentile
named Cornelius
who gets saved.
And Peter says,
these are Peter's words,
truly I understand
that God shows
no partiality,
but in every nation
anyone who fears God
is acceptable to him.
See the beautiful hope
of the great commission
call of the gospel
to take it outside
of a race,
to take it outside
of a nationality,
and to spread it
to the hope
of the nation.
But after this,
we begin to see
that in spite of criticism,
Peter continues
to eat with Gentiles.
In spite of all
of these things
of what could take place,
Peter pushes forward.
But in Antioch,
it changes.
In Antioch,
we see a different reaction.
Why?
What would cause Peter,
someone who understands
the gospel,
what would cause Peter,
someone who teaches
the gospel,
what would cause him
to break away
from what he knew,
to abandon
the implications
of the gospel
on his life?
You see,
Peter hasn't walked away
from what he knows
will save him,
but what he has walked away
from in this moment
as he refuses
to eat with Gentiles
is what the gospel
does in his life
every single day.
And when I look around
the room
and I look in the mirror,
what I know with us
of what we do
when we fall into
patterns of sin
is you and I,
we do not walk away
from the reality
that the gospel saves us,
but all too often
we walk away
from the application
of what the gospel
calls us to
every single day
in our life.
So what would cause
Peter to do this?
Look back at verse 12.
Paul says,
for before certain men
came from James,
he was eating
with the Gentiles.
But when they came,
he drew back
and separated himself.
Why?
Because fearing
the circumcision party.
It was fear.
Fear is what
crept into him.
Fear of criticism
from others.
Fear of judgment
from others.
Fear of abandonment
from his culture.
And what we find
in the life of Peter,
what we find in verse 12
is so often
what rings true
in our life today
is this,
is that oftentimes
fear is what
pulls us away
from obedience
to God.
We become
the insecure
child
who's afraid
of losing
what's all around
them
as opposed
to being obedient
to the God
who saves us.
And fear
creeps in.
What are they
going to think
about me?
What are they
going to say
about me?
What are they
going to exclude
me from?
What is going
to happen
to me?
And fear
pulls Peter.
Fear pulls
me.
Fear pulls
you
away
from obedience
to the gospel.
And so Paul
addresses him.
Paul's like,
we're going to deal
with this.
And we're going
to look at
two ways
in which Paul
addresses him
this morning.
The first thing
that Paul does
is Paul reminds
Peter of walking
in the gospel.
Look back
at verse 14.
He says,
but when I saw
that their conduct
was not in step
with the truth,
underline that
in your Bible,
was not in step
with the truth
of the gospel,
I said to Cephas
before them all,
if you,
though a Jew,
live like a Gentile
and not a Jew,
how can you force
the Gentiles
to live like Jews?
Here's Paul's issue
with Peter.
It's not that he's
not being a good host.
It's not that he's
breaking protocol.
It's that Peter's
actions and life
are not reflective
of the truth
of the gospel.
Because for the message
of the gospel
to be made known,
it is fully in
what we say
and what we do.
You see,
we can't separate
our actions
from our message,
from our words.
It is all tied
into this.
And so Paul's like,
Peter,
you can't proclaim
this with your mouth
or write this
with your pen
but yet live
different from what
the gospel implies
for your life.
And so in the separation,
in the removal,
I have to address this.
By Peter doing
what he is doing,
it actually says
the opposite
of the gospel.
And what Peter
is doing
is he is no longer
walking in the gospel.
He's no longer
walking in what
saves him
but he is walking
in the world.
He's walking
in the culture.
He's walking
in the standard
that others
have set for him
and not the standard
by which God
has set
before him.
Let me ask you this
this morning, church.
How do you walk?
How do you walk?
In every aspect
of your life,
how do you walk?
He addresses Peter.
He calls him
a hypocrite.
And let me tell you,
let me explain
one of the criticisms
from the outside
of the church
is that gathered here
in this place
and in every church
that the church
is filled
with a bunch
of hypocrites.
And let me say,
as the world
looks at us,
they're right.
They're right.
If we examine
the way that we walk
and we're not
walking in line
with the gospel,
they are right.
You see,
hypocrisy comes
when you intentionally
walk some
with the gospel
and some
in the world.
Let me ask you this.
As a church member,
as a Christian,
do we walk
in the gospel
in the areas
that we select?
So when I step here
in this place,
I want to walk
in line
with the gospel
and the things
that I say
and the things
that I do
and how I live
and how I interact
and how I greet
that in this place
I walk in line
with the gospel
that when I interact
with my wife,
when I interact
with my family,
when I interact
with them,
I want to walk
in line
with the gospel.
Does it mean for us
that when we walk
with our children
and we want to mold
and shape
and develop them
that we want
to walk in line
with the gospel?
Can I tell you
in those three things,
if you want to walk
in line
with the gospel,
praise God.
But if we walk
out of here
and we don't want
to walk in line
with the gospel
as a coach,
if we don't want
to walk in line
with the gospel
on social media,
if we don't want
to walk in line
with the gospel
at work
or in our cul-de-sac,
if we don't want
to walk in line
with the gospel
in our hunt club,
if we don't want
to walk in line
with the gospel
in the social settings
with our friends
who maybe many of them,
and let me tell you this,
I hope most of your friends
are not believers
because God's planted you there
to be a missionary
for them.
If we're not walking
in line with the gospel
in those settings,
then we are a hypocrite.
What is good
for your house
and what is good
for here
is not what's good
for you there.
But we must walk
in line.
We can't have a foot
in both worlds.
I started taking my kids
hunting with me
at a really early age.
Probably too early.
I think Grayson was three
the first time
he went with me.
There was not a deer
within five square miles
of us
that did not hear him
in that deer stand.
And I'll never forget,
I got a picture of it
that Aaron took of us
in our kitchen
that afternoon
as we were going
to go hunting
and I'm bent down
and he's there
probably like 35 pounds
and he's ready to go
and he's got his toy gun
on his shoulder.
And we head out there
and of course we didn't.
We didn't see a deer.
And we get ready
to walk back
and I pull up my phone
because that's where
my flashlight's on.
And as I turn
on my flashlight,
it's pitch black dark,
we hunt on a piece
of property
called Gum Swamp.
There's alligators.
There's rattlesnakes.
There's water moccasins.
There's wild hogs.
I go to walk
out of there
and I go to turn
on my flashlight
and my flashlight dies.
And now I've got
a whole bunch of stuff
because you got to take
a three-year-old
a lot of things
to stay engaged, right?
So I've got like
two bags,
I've got my rifle
and I've got my son.
And I look at him
and I said,
buddy,
we're going to walk
back to the truck.
We got to walk
past the swamp.
There's some stuff there.
Here's what I need
you to do.
For you to be safe
where I walk,
you walk.
Don't go to the side
of me.
Don't try to get
around me.
But where I place
my feet,
you place your feet.
And we'll work
our way.
And even though
we,
even though you and I
can't see what lies
ahead of us,
I will make
a path for us
and the path
will be safe
for you
as long as you
stay
on the path.
And he looked at me
and said,
okay,
he asked if he could
hold my hand.
And I said,
absolutely.
And so for about
500 yards
through the woods,
I walked like this
as my three-year-old son
walked behind me,
putting his foot
in my footprints.
Church,
God set a path
for us.
And he says
if we're going to walk
in the gospel,
it's not one foot
on his path
and one foot
on our path.
It's not that
at home
this is how I walk,
but when I'm out
at work,
when I'm over
with my friends,
when I'm doing
all the things
that I want to do,
then I choose
my own path.
That's not
gospel living.
And it's not
who he has
called us
to be.
It's not
what he has put
within our hearts
to do.
It's not the
transformation
that's there.
You see,
here's the truth
about the path
of the gospel.
Here's the part
that my story
doesn't tell.
Sometimes the path
is still hard.
Sometimes there
will still be things
to try to lead us
off of the path.
Sometimes our culture,
sometimes our friends,
sometimes those
we trust the most,
sometimes even others
that are gathered
in here
will try to pull us off.
But it's why
it's so important
that the people
in this room
are not our standards.
It's why it's important
that the rules
of our culture
are not what sets
our path.
But it's why
it's important
that an understanding
and an application
of God's word
is what's laid
down before us.
So God set
our path.
Make it clear.
And as the gospel
transforms us,
we keep going on.
So Paul reminds him
of the path.
But Paul also
addresses for Peter
what I'm going to refer to
as hidden sin.
Hidden sin.
Acceptable sin.
It's okay sin.
Sin that as he does it,
the culture that's around
embraces it
and says,
that's fine.
That's who we are.
That's fine.
That's what we do.
That's fine.
That's the way
things are done
around here.
You see,
what Peter is struggling
with in this moment,
it is the sin
that has been
accepted in his culture.
It's the,
Peter is struggling
with the way
that he was raised.
Peter is struggling
with the things
that have been imparted
to him,
the things that have
been taught to him.
He's struggling
with a layer
of nationalistic pride.
He's struggling
with a layer
of racism.
He's struggling
with a layer
of elitism.
He's struggling
with being able
to implement
the gospel
in every aspect
of his life
because of fear.
And what we see
is the hidden sin
that begins
to come out.
You see,
Peter struggles
that when he walks
in the room,
that when he's there,
what's socially
required of him,
what's culturally
required of him
is to think
Jew
over Gentile.
But he knows
the difference.
But he chooses
not what he knows
from the gospel,
but Peter
chooses what he knows
from culture.
He chooses
what he's comfortable
with.
He chooses
what he feels
is best.
What he chooses
is his people.
What he chooses
is his race.
What he chooses
is his nation,
not the gospel.
And it's the gospel
over all things.
I want you to think
about a time
in your life
when you've walked
into a setting
that culturally
was difficult
for you.
Maybe it took place
in another country.
Maybe it took place
from a co-worker
who's maybe
from a different country
and they invite you
over for a meal
and you walk in
and cultures
are different.
Maybe it happened
in a friendship
or a relationship
of a neighbor
that you have.
I want you to think
of a point in time
and a moment
for you
where you felt
awkward culturally.
You felt
uncomfortable
culturally
because you
were different
than everyone else
who surrounded you.
Now,
think about
Jesus.
Jesus was always
different
than every person
that he ever met.
Every man,
woman,
and child
that Jesus
ever encountered,
he was different then.
He was different
from his neighbors.
He was different
from his mom.
He was different
from his siblings.
What made him
different?
The lack
of sin
and the presence
of holiness
in his life.
And in spite
of fear,
in spite
of criticism,
in spite
of persecution,
when Jesus
walked into
a room
where he was
different than
everyone who was
there,
what rang
true
was the gospel
in spite
of what
awaited him?
He went
to the home
of Zacchaeus,
a betrayer,
a tax
collector,
a thief,
and he had
dinner with him.
He sat
there
in the midst
of those
that would
surround him
in their
self-proclaimed
righteousness
and let what
the Bible
describes
as a sinful
woman
wash his
feet
with her hair.
He's walking
down the road
with a group
of people
who were
surrounding him
and out of
his corner
of his eye
he sees
Matthew,
a tax
collector,
another crook,
another thief,
someone that
culture said
was lower
than a dog
and he said,
hey man,
come follow
me.
Not only
follow me
but be my
closest friend,
be my
closest ally,
be my
disciple.
He sat
there
during the
middle of
the day
when it
was hot
outside.
He sat
there at
a well
with a
woman of
a different
race,
with a
woman of
questionable
moral standing
and said,
hey,
can you
give me
some water?
I'm thirsty.
And she
says,
why would
you talk
to me?
Because he's
the savior
of the
world.
The gospel
is him
and he
shared with
her the
hope that
he had.
You see,
Paul addresses
the hidden
sin in the
life of
Peter.
And Jesus
taught and
Jesus showed
what it
meant to
look past
nationalistic
pride,
to look
past
race,
to look
past
social
standing,
to look
past
the sinful
living of
others
and a
desire
to love
others
and a
hope
to bring
the gospel
to them.
And so
Paul says
to Peter,
when you
walk in
the room
and you
create the
divide,
when you
walk in
the room
and you
and your
sin
chooses
who's
better,
when you
walk in
that,
the gospel
that has
saved you
is not
the gospel
that you're
displaying.
I'm just
going to ask
you guys
this.
What path
are you
walking on
this morning?
What path
are you
walking on?
Is your
life,
as Paul
says,
in step
with the
gospel,
flowing to
the rhythm
of what God
has called
you to?
To the
hope of
what has
saved you?
To the
hope of
what's
transforming
you?
Or are
you on
another path
altogether,
walking on
the path
of the
world,
figuring it
out yourself,
trying to
understand how
to make
your own
self
righteous?
Or are
you like
so many
of us,
living your
life as
a hypocrite?
Sometimes I'm
on this
path,
sometimes I'm
on the
other.
It all
depends on
who I
want to
be.
Would you
pray with
me?
God, we
come to you
this morning.
Lord, and I
just ask you,
Lord, through
the power of
your spirit,
through the
conviction of
who you are,
Lord, to lay
out before us
our path.
Lord, as you
gave Peter a
vision in
Acts, Lord, I
pray that your
Holy Spirit would
speak to our
hearts.
Show to us as
individuals,
Lord, what
path we are
on.
Lord, show us
what we
choose.
Lord, for
those of us
who proclaim
that it's the
gospel of
Christ and
Christ alone
that has
saved us.
Lord, show us
where we have
wandered off of
the path.
Lord, show us
and how your
grace can
show us
as only you
can, where we
have embraced
hypocrisy, where
we are not who
we have claimed
to be, where
we are not
walking in the
boldness of
faith.
Lord, and I
pray for those
of us who
were there
that this
morning, through
the grace of
your heart,
through the
kindness of
your spirit,
Lord, that you
would bring us
to the sweet
spot of
repentance.
Lord, if it's
a, if it's
like Peter, if
it's a heart
of racism, or
to help us
understand that
you heal all
things, that
you restore all
things, and that
we will no longer
see people as
defined by their
culture, as
defined by their
skin color, as
defined by their
language, or
but that we
would see them as
individuals created
by God, who
either need the
gospel, or who
are already
fellow brothers
and sisters of
the gospel.
Lord, change the
way we see.
Lord, heal us.
Bring us back.
Lord, maybe we're
wandering off
another path because
of fear.
Fear that if I'm
not this way, then I
won't be accepted.
If I'm not this way,
then I won't have
my job.
If I'm not this way,
then I won't be
useful.
If I'm not this way,
then the world will
no longer need me.
Lord, set us free
from that.
Lord, bring in line
in every aspect of
our life.
May our walk at
church, may our walk
with our spouse, may
our walk with our
kids, may our walk
with our friends, may
our walk with our
coworkers, may our walk
with our neighbors, may
our walk by
ourselves be on the
path of the gospel
and step with who
you are.
Lord, and for those
of us in this room,
we're completely on
another path.
Lord, bring us back
to the very important
thing that we began
with, that it's Christ
in Christ alone.
With every head
bowed and every eye
closed, whatever
brought you here,
whatever sin or
failure that you may
feel that you have,
whatever pursuit
you've been on,
there's one road.
It's the road that
leads to Jesus.
We'd like to talk to
you this morning about
a relationship with
Him.
We'd love to show
you what a relationship
with Him looks like
so that you may walk
out of here on a
path of the gospel.
Jesus, do what you're
going to do, or draw
our hearts to you, and
we'll praise you for
it.
And it's in Jesus' name
we pray.
Amen.
Just a moment, we're
going to stand and
we're going to respond.
We've got prayer
encouragers on either
side of the auditorium.
Pastor Dave is back
here at the tables.
I will be down
front.
If you'd like to talk
to someone about a
relationship with the
Lord, if you'd like
to talk to someone about
a struggle that you're
going through, we'd
love to talk with you,
we'd love to pray with
you, but please don't
respond to us.
Respond to God and how
He's leading you this
morning.
Would you stand as we
worship Him?
thanks again for listening
to the Willow Ridge
Church weekly podcast.
We hope that you enjoyed
listening to this week's
message.
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more about who we are or
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