"As we have said before, so now I say again: If anyone is preaching to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed." — Galatians 1:9
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Going to open up to Galatians chapter 1.
As you do that, I want to tell everybody, Happy New Year.
Glad that you're here with us as we're starting off a new series, as we're starting off a
new year.
For us, as we're starting off this new One Service, as we gather in here together, we are glad
that you are here and that you are worshiping with us.
You saw it on the screen.
You'll hear it a couple more times.
We want you to come back tonight, all right?
There's a chili cook-off happening, all right?
There's no place that I would rather be this evening than right here gathered with my closest
friends and family and experiencing as many different bowls of chili as absolutely possible.
And so, if you've got one and I want you to bring it, there is a competition.
Not only is there a competition for chili, but there's a competition for desserts, right?
So, whether you're a sweet or a savory person, we've got both of those for you, all right?
So, I want to make sure that you come back, bring something, bring a chili, bring something
sweet, bring one or the other, but the preference is that you would absolutely bring both.
That's my preference, right?
So, come back tonight as we have that time.
You know what God did for us?
It was summer all last week.
God brought the cold.
No better time for chili than when it's cold outside.
So, make sure that you are here with us.
Well, as we're starting off with this new service, I want to kind of remind you guys about the
flow and how things are going and what we're doing.
And we will, together today as a church family, take part in the Lord's Supper together.
And that is going to be something that we do the first Sunday of every month.
And so, if that's an important thing for you like it is for me, then you might want to make
sure that you're here definitely for the first service, or for the first Sunday, not first
service, first Sunday of each month as we have that together.
Something else that maybe you weren't aware of, because on our first Sunday of the month,
we'll have first grade through fifth grade with us in the building.
And so, Dawn and the kids team has put together these kids handouts, all right?
And so, they're going to help the kids track through the message.
They're going to help them follow the points.
It's got the scripture on the back and some extra areas where they can take notes.
And so, kids, if you didn't get one today, that's all right.
Next month, we'll have them available for you as well to kind of help you track through.
Now, kids, here's where you can really benefit with these, all right?
How many of you sometimes for the little kids, you get in the car, and your parents are like,
so what did you learn today, right?
And they give you the test, right?
We do that with our kids.
Kids, next time, next first Sunday of the month, grab one of these.
You're riding home.
Mom and dad are driving.
Pull it out.
So, dad, what did you learn today, right?
You can test them, all right?
This is what we're working toward as a family, but we can grab these and have these together.
So, thank you, Dawn and her team for getting those out for our kids today.
We're going to be studying the book of Galatians over the next several weeks and over the next
several months.
And it's important that we understand what is happening in this letter.
Who's writing it?
Why are they writing it?
And what are they addressing as we go through?
So, this letter is written by the Apostle Paul to the church at Galatia, to the Galatian
people, which is why it's called the letter of Galatians.
Now, what Paul would do is Paul would plant a church, and then he would move on from that
church to plant another church.
If you've ever heard of the phrase church planner, today, Paul was the first church planner
that we see in biblical history as we move forward.
He's the most dynamic church planner that the world has ever known.
And so, what Paul would do is he would plant a church, he would stay there for a certain
time, he would raise up the congregation, he would raise up another pastor, and then he
would leave it, and he would entrust, like he did with Timothy and Ephesus, he would leave
the authority with a pastor there, and then he would move on.
But periodically, from time to time, Paul would check back in with the church, and this
would happen through letters.
Hey, how are things going?
What are the problems?
What are the successes?
What are the wins?
And as Paul would hear back from the church what was happening and taking place, sometimes
he would write letters and he would praise them and praise God for the work that was being
done.
But sometimes Paul needed to instruct or correct things that were happening and things that
were taking place.
And that's what we're going to look at with this letter to the Galatian people.
Now, there were two factors that Paul's going to address throughout this letter that we need
to be aware of.
This letter will address some social and racial divisions that come within the church.
You see, when the church first started spreading, racially speaking, the people that were coming
to faith were of Jewish race.
They were of a Jewish faith, and they left the faith to become followers of Jesus Christ.
And that's where the church first began and first took off.
But as the church began to grow and began to expand, Gentiles started coming in, those who
weren't of Jewish faith before, those who weren't of Jewish race before.
And so with more and more culturally Jews and with more and more culturally Gentiles coming
together, there began to be some problems and some divisions within the church.
And so as Paul was going to point out about how the gospel unifies in so many different
ways, Paul, throughout this letter, is going to address some social issues and some racial
issues and even some culture issues that we're going to dive into.
But the primary thing that Paul is going to address in this is the nature of the gospel.
This is going to be the theme that overwhelmingly takes and continues on for the Galatian people
for their foundation of not only their faith, but of their life.
And it's why I love that we're starting off this series at the beginning of the year, this
time of year, because what will be a reminder for us is the foundation for which we set our
lives on, the foundation for which we live our lives on, but then the foundation for which
we continue our lives with.
That the gospel will infiltrate all of these aspects of our life.
And it's what rings true for the Galatian people.
Specifically, the issue that Paul was having to work through with the Galatian people is
the concept that the gospel wasn't enough.
For them, they were teaching that it was Jesus, it was the gospel, but then it was all of these
other things as well.
Remember, I said earlier that primarily that the followers who had largely become Christians
first were Jewish believers.
And so what would typically happen in their faith was they would receive the gospel of
Christ, but then they would continue on in a lot of their Jewish customs or their lot of
Jewish traditions.
And that's fine.
There's nothing wrong with that as long as it's the understanding that the gospel in and
of itself only is what saves you.
But not only what saves you, but what keeps you.
And what is beginning to happen in Galatia is they say to these Gentile believers, look, look,
it's not just enough that you're saved, but then culturally speaking, you also need to adapt
these things in if you are going to be saved.
And so Paul addresses that.
Paul's going to begin this letter by addressing the heart of the gospel, the point of the gospel,
and what we respond to the gospel.
So here's going to be the foundation of this sermon series as we go through this.
Number one is this, is that the gospel is how we enter into the kingdom.
That's the first thing I want us to understand about the gospel.
That the gospel is how everyone in the world gets saved.
It's how you enter into the kingdom.
It is the gospel and the gospel alone that saves us.
And Jesus is himself the heart of the gospel.
If you remove Jesus from gospel, it's not gospel.
If you remove his birth from the gospel, it's not gospel.
If you remove his crucifixion, it's not gospel.
If you remove his resurrection, it's not gospel.
That Jesus is and of himself the heart of the gospel.
And it's why he says that he is the way, that he is the truth, that he is the life.
And that no one, in all-encompassing word, that no one comes to the Father except by him.
No other works.
No other ways.
No other gods.
No other faiths.
in Jesus alone. And so when we talk about eternity, when we think about heaven, when we think about
the eternal kingdom of God, the entrance into that is found in Jesus, in Jesus alone.
So the gospel is how we enter. But then also is this, the gospel is how we live as a part
of the kingdom. And that's the other thing that Paul's going to work through in this letter,
that not only is what the gospel does is to bring you into the kingdom, into the future of the hope
that we sing for, of what we raise our hands in proclamation of what the future holds for us
in the coming of Christ and the calling of the saints to him, but that also that the gospel is
doing something here with us, that the gospel is actually working in us now, and that we need
the gospel here. That not through some morality, not that through some religious rules, not through
some works, but that the gospel is how we live. It's why it's so important that for those of us as
believers, that we think that the gospel is for non-believers. And so we proclaim and that we
teach and that we explain the gospel to them in hopes that they might be saved. But then we fill
up churches all over the world that says, well, the gospel is for them. Give me something for me. But it
all rests in and roots in the gospel, that the gospel for you and I as believers in Jesus Christ is how
we live as a part of the kingdom. So the gospel for me is just as important now, 19 years after I got
saved, as it was in the moment when I got saved. That the gospel is how I live as a part of the
kingdom. That for me in my life, the gospel sets the standard. For me in my life, that the gospel is at
work in us now and that the gospel is what works through us. It is the power and it is the nature
of the gospel. I heard a pastor say one time that as followers of Jesus Christ, that we should be so
filled with the power of the spirit and living in the gospel that when people see us, they see the gospel.
that there's living evidence of the fruit within us. So yes, we look different. Yes, we do things
different. Yes, we talk different. Yes, we treat each other different. Not because we're better. Not
because we've done anything, but because of the gospel. Because he's so much better. And so that's
going to be the foundation of this. That's what Paul's trying to impress on the hearts of the Galatian
people. And what Paul's impressing on the hearts of us today is that we enter into the kingdom through
the gospel, but that we also live through the gospel. And so let's start reading Galatians chapter 1,
starting in verse 1. Paul writes,
to the churches of Galatia, grace to you and peace from God, our Father and Lord Jesus Christ, who gave
himself for our sins to deliver us from the present evil age according to the will of God and Father,
to whom be the glory forever and ever. Amen. Paul says, I'm astonished that you were so quickly
deserting him who called you in the grace of Christ and are turning to a different gospel.
Not that there is another one, but there are some who trouble you and want to distort the gospel of
Christ. But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we
preached to you, let him be accursed. As we have said before, so now I say again, if anyone is preaching
to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed. And so Paul begins, he opens it up,
he addresses, he greets them, and then he gets to the heart of what is taking place. I want to say
this church to all of us as individuals, to all of us who wrestle with our faith, to all of us who dive
into scripture, for all of us who sit under teaching, or wherever we are, what we have to understand,
what Paul does as he addresses this to the church, but as the individuals within the church, is this,
what you believe matters. What we believe matters.
When it comes to faith,
can we say that it's not just enough to say,
I believe in God?
When we really get down to it,
it's not just enough
to say we believe in
Jesus.
Because it's in the details of who we believe him to be.
It's in the details of what we trust him with our life,
that when it gets down to understanding
what the gospel is,
and what the gospel does,
what Jesus we believe in matters.
And so what you believe,
and what I believe matters.
And Paul's passion,
and his heart for addressing this church,
is to make sure that there's this understanding
that the Jesus they believe in,
the Jesus they follow,
the Jesus they trust,
is an authentic Jesus.
It's an authentic gospel,
and that it's not counterfeit.
And the problem is,
is that there are those then,
and there are those today,
who are trying to sell a counterfeit Jesus.
They're trying to sell a counterfeit gospel.
And so Paul brings it back to the heart.
He says, look,
there are those who will trouble you
by distorting the gospel.
Now he doesn't say,
there are those who will trouble you
by completely destroying it,
and throwing it to the side.
He doesn't say,
there are those who will try to trouble you
by trying to lead you
to something completely different.
See, there's something sneakier
that is happening and taking place here.
He says,
what they're doing
is they're taking the gospel,
and they're just turning it.
They're just modifying it.
They're making it a little bit easier to hear.
They're making it a little bit more simple.
They're making it a little bit
where it's not as harsh.
They're making it a little bit
where it doesn't call,
where it doesn't talk about grace
or the cross.
He says,
they're distorting you.
They're troubling you
by distorting the gospel.
And church,
when the gospel is distorted,
when the gospel is distorted,
it's no longer the gospel.
When the gospel is changed,
when we take it and we make it ours,
when we move it away
from the gospel laid forth by God,
in that moment,
it ceases to be the gospel.
You see,
here's the trick of Satan.
Satan cannot change the narrative.
Satan cannot change the story.
Satan cannot change what has happened.
But where Satan attacks
is he attacks the narrative
that's being told about the truth.
And so he takes
and he adapts to make it his.
He sets it onto the minds
of those who are evil
for those who are corrupt.
And they modify it
and they mold it
to fit their agenda.
And the false gospel
doesn't save you.
A distorted gospel
doesn't save you.
Instead,
the harsh part,
the reality that we're dealing with,
if it doesn't save you,
it condemns you.
And it's why this is so important.
And it's what we understand.
And it's why it's so valuable,
kids,
that you are in here today.
And it's why it's so important
that at every age
and every language
and every people
that we don't hear a gospel
but that we hear the gospel
and that we have the opportunity
of salvation
because the key is the true gospel.
It saves us
and it transforms us.
And Paul gives the severity
of what he's talking about.
He gives here twice
what's called the threat of the accursed,
that if anyone comes
and tells you anything different
than what's been preached,
if anything different
than what God has said to them
in that,
let them be accursed.
And Paul says,
look, look, look,
if it's any of them
who do it,
if it's any of us,
he says,
we, Paul,
in the leadership,
if we do it,
or in the level of severity,
Paul says,
if angels come to you
and they share with you
a distorted point of the gospel,
a distorted narrative of the gospel,
Paul says,
if any of us,
if anyone,
no one rises above this,
let them be accursed.
It's interesting,
this word accursed,
it's not a word
that we use very often.
But the concept
of what Paul's communicating
with accursed
is what you can read about
and what you can find
in Leviticus chapter 27.
And it deals with the concept
of removal of someone
or excommunicating someone.
So what Paul says to them is this,
if there's any of us
that try to bring
this false gospel into you,
then it's not just a warning,
it's not just a hard conversation,
lead them out.
They are accursed.
They are excommunicated.
They are banished
and they are banned.
An interesting part of this
is in order to get
the penalty
of being accursed,
what the person
must have been doing
must have been dealing,
or I'm sorry,
they must have been devoted
to death.
So what Paul says is this,
if there's someone
bringing a false gospel,
if there's someone
bringing a false narrative,
then what they are devoted to
is death,
not life,
and remove them immediately.
The seriousness of what's there,
of what is ringing true.
So what is the true gospel?
What is this that I'm talking about?
And we're going to understand it more
over the coming weeks,
but this morning
I want to give us a snapshot.
A brief snapshot
before we partake
in the Lord's Supper
of what is
the true gospel.
The first thing is this,
the true gospel
tells us who we are.
The true gospel
tells us who we are.
Verse four
says that Jesus
came to deliver us.
He came to deliver us.
Literally breaking
that word down
means that he came
to rescue us.
How many of you
in your life
have ever needed
to be rescued from something?
Raise your hand.
Yeah, yeah.
Me too.
I remember
one time I was in fifth grade
and me and some friends,
we were back in the woods
and we had thousands of acres
back behind our house
and we got lost
and we couldn't find our way out
and they had to send people
to come and rescue us.
Now, over time,
eventually,
could we have stumbled out?
Probably, absolutely.
But right,
we're 10 years old.
We're petrified.
We're crying
and it's a great moment
when your parents
have to send law enforcement
into the woods
to come bring you out, right?
Those long conversations
that we had
with my mom and dad.
Hey, kids, don't do that.
But y'all would just
go on your phones
and call your parents
to come and get you, right?
Drop a pin
right where you're at.
Come find me.
But they had to come rescue us.
Here's the thing.
If you need to be rescued,
do you know
what you can't do
for yourself?
You can't save yourself.
You can't rescue yourself.
So what the Bible tells us
in the heart of the gospel
is that we needed
to be rescued,
which means this,
that you and I,
we couldn't save ourselves.
That what God had to come
and do for us
was something
that we were incapable
of doing.
we needed to be saved.
The true gospel
tells us who we are,
but the true gospel
also tells us
what Jesus did.
Paul says in verse 4
that Jesus gave himself
for our sins.
That Jesus gave himself
for our behalf.
Now, it's very important
that we understand this,
that oftentimes
that we talk about,
and I've said it
a million times,
that Jesus came
as a sacrifice.
And let me tell you this,
in repentance mode,
fully now right before you,
is that true?
Yes, but there's more to it.
There's a part
that we're leaving out
that Jesus came
to do more
than just to be
a sacrifice.
That Jesus came
to be a substitutionary
sacrifice.
That he didn't just come
to do something,
but he came
to do something
on our behalf,
which meant this,
there was something
that we needed to do,
but we were incapable
of doing it,
so Jesus came
and did it for us.
And then that was the cross.
And then that was
the resurrection.
And then that was
the power.
So you see what
the gospel begins to do
is the gospel addresses
who we are,
but the gospel also addresses
what Jesus did.
Also within here,
the true gospel
tells us what God did.
What God did.
Think about this.
The beauty of this truth.
In the substitutionary sacrifice,
God accepted it.
God accepted it.
Verse three.
Grace and peace
to you from God.
So now,
as followers of Jesus Christ,
now as those
who needed to be rescued,
now because Jesus came
and did the rescuing,
that we are no longer enemies
because God accepted the work.
And so now,
what should have come toward us
was his anger
and his wrath,
but now what comes to us?
The grace
and peace
from God.
The true gospel
tells what God did.
God accepted it,
but also,
the true gospel
tells us
why God did it.
This is so important.
I think this is the part
of the gospel
that we don't talk about enough.
This is the part
of the gospel
that we don't think
about enough.
The true gospel
tells us
why God did it.
That God willed it.
That we didn't ask for it.
That we didn't cause it.
That we didn't plan it.
And that we didn't deserve it.
Jesus says as much.
Jesus says,
look,
you don't take my life.
I lay it down
for the will
of the Father.
Reread verse four
with me.
Jesus who gave himself
for our sins
to deliver us
from the present evil age.
Look at this.
According to the will
of God,
our Father.
That God
willed it.
that God
set the plan
in motion.
That what broke
the heart of God
was purposed
by God
to redeem
his people.
That God
willed it.
The true
gospel
tells us
why
he did it.
But it also
tells us
what he gets
from it.
what God
gets from it.
In verse five
tells us
that God
gets glory
forever.
Forever.
You see
the heart
of salvation,
the focus
of eternity
is the praise
and the glory
of God.
That what just
happened here
a moment ago
and I want to tell you
getting all the feels
this morning
standing over here
when the band
kind of backed off
and I heard
everybody singing
and the hairs
on the back
of my neck
started standing up
and for some reason
water kind of
started filling my eyes
up a little bit.
Maybe I got some
sawdust in there
or something.
I don't know, right?
But in that brief
moment
as the saints
gave glory to God
and then it hit me
of an eternity
with that.
An eternity
of all
devotion
devotion
to Him.
The gospel
the true gospel
that you and I
we need to be rescued.
In just a moment
we're going to
partake in the Lord's
Supper together
as a family.
We're going to have
the opportunity
for you and I
who are followers
of Jesus
to take a moment
and pause
in gratitude
of what He's done
and in a reflection
in our response
to it.
Would you pray
with me?
God, I thank you
so much
for the work
of Christ.
Thank you so much
Lord
for this opportunity.
God, of where
we were
and we were
broken
we were dead
in the trespasses
and sins
there was
nothing
that we could
do
for ourselves
and so
you sent
your Son.
Lord
and we thank you
Father
we thank you
that as you
sent Christ
that He
gave Himself
for our behalf
the sacrifice
that we
couldn't make
He
substituted
and became
the sacrifice
so that we
find life
in Him
and Him
eternal.
God, we thank you
that you
accepted it
and as a result
Lord
that you
extend grace
and peace
from you
to us.
Lord
and it's
the standing
that we now
have.
Lord, we thank you
that it was
in your perfect
plan
it was in your
perfect time
in the evidence
of the gospel
it's enough
for us to trust
you with all
that we have
and all that we
are.
So Lord
may we live
lives
not just
in eternity
but may we
live here
now
for your
kingdom
and for your
glory.
And it's in
Jesus' name
we pray.
Amen.
As the elements
are being passed
out this morning
I want to ask
you this question.
I want you
to think about
this.
Have you been
transformed
by the gospel?
Has it
changed your
today?
Has it
changed your
tomorrow?
Has it
changed your
there of what
awaits you?
And has it
changed your
here
right
now?
has the gospel
fully
transformed
you?
The reality
is that God
loves you
and I
too much
to save
us
and then
leave us
right where
we were.
That God's
been in this
19 year
journey
with me
since the
moment of
my salvation
to mold
me
and to
change
me
and to
shape
me
into more
of a
heart
like his
and like
him.
And so
as the
elements
are
passed
out
let me
ask you
what does
that
transformation
look like?
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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like to
learn more
about who
we are
or explore
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