Sunday, February 9th • Beau Bradberry
"Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us—for it is written, “Cursed is everyone who is hanged on a tree”— so that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles, so that we might receive the promised Spirit through faith." — Galatians 3:13-14
–
Podcast: https://pod.link/willowridgechurch
Website: https://willowridgechurch.org
Instagram: https://instagram.com/willowridgechurch
Facebook: https://facebook.com/willowridgechurch
YouTube: https://youtube.com/@willowridgechurch
Sermon audio from Sunday services at Willow Ridge Church.
Hi, and welcome to the Willow Ridge Church weekly podcast.
This is where you can find audio for our current and past sermons.
We hope that you enjoy this week's installment, and be sure to check back next week to hear
the latest message.
Thanks for listening.
If you've got your Bibles, going up to Galatians chapter 3.
As you turn there, I want to talk about something as we intro into our message this morning,
and it is this, oftentimes in our lives, God gives us and grants us people and situations
to help us see things in ourself that we're incapable to see.
About two months ago, I was standing in our kitchen, I was cooking breakfast.
We were going to have, oh, I'm sorry, I was cooking dinner, but I was cooking breakfast for dinner.
Anybody else like to do that around your house?
So we were cooking breakfast for dinner.
Aaron was running the griddle and cooking bacon and pancakes, because nothing is better than
a pancake that's flavored in bacon, right?
And so I was in charge of the grits and eggs.
And so I'm standing there behind her, I'm at the stove, she's at the aisle, and she's doing
what she needs to do.
And I go, and I grab the canister of grits.
And I began to read the back of them.
And she turned around, and what she watched was this.
She said, I think it's time you go to the eye doctor.
And I said, I've never been to the eye doctor.
I don't need to go to the eye doctor.
And she said, for that very reason, I think it's time that you go to the eye doctor.
So two weeks ago, I go to the eye doctor.
He puts up the screens in front of my face for me to read.
I'm like, that's a little blurry.
I can't really quite make out what's going on.
He said, on what?
I said, on any of them.
And then he started pressing things on the side for these lenses.
And for the first time in forever, I could see.
So then two weeks later, I come back, and my glasses are ready, and I get the glasses, and
I put them on.
And the thought came to myself, how in the world have I been driving, you know?
So nice.
Colors are better, right?
You see people around you.
And I've been reintroduced to these things called words that you can see on paper.
But here's the thing.
If Aaron wouldn't have pointed out to me two months earlier, you need to go to the eye doctor.
If the eye doctor through the exam wouldn't have pointed out to me, you need glasses.
Then more than likely, I would have continued on in a pattern of my life thinking that the
perception around me is what's normal.
That the perception around me is what's right.
When the reality is that God had to use people and individuals and situations to help me see
something about myself.
That I was unwilling to see, or I was incapable of seeing on my own.
As we're going through Galatians, as we're thinking through the power of the gospel, I want to ask
you this question.
Who do you know, maybe who are three individuals that you know that need the gospel?
I want you to think about that for a moment.
Think of three names of people that you're close to, of people that you know that desperately
need the gospel.
Now, if we were to go around the room and were to ask you those names, who would they be?
Here's the part I want to challenge you with this morning.
Here's the part that I think that God is sending us as a church, as for the most part, a group
of individuals of men and women and children who would say that we are a people of faith,
that we have trusted Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior.
Here's what I would say.
If your name is not on your list of people who desperately need the gospel, then your list is
insufficient.
Because what we are finding in this study is that, yes, there are people that we need to take the gospel to,
but it's just as important that you and I, as those of us who are believers in Jesus Christ,
that we also, every single day, desperately need the truth and the transformation of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
That it's not just enough about coming into faith, but it's what a life of faith really, truly begins to look like.
If you were to come to me and say, Bo, help me find a passage of Scripture that says this is what walking with the Lord
looks like on a day-in and day-out basis, I'm brought to the passage of Scripture in the book of Acts.
It's the final part of Acts chapter 15, I'm sorry, of Acts chapter 16, and it says in verse 23
that when they had inflicted many blows upon them, talking about Paul and Silas, they threw them into prison, ordering the jailer to keep them safely.
Having received this order, he put them in the inner prison and fastened their feet in the stocks.
We could spend an hour explaining what is happening in this prison to Paul and Silas, but it's sufficient to say that they're not in a good spot.
That their circumstances are not what they would desire for them to be.
That it's not where they woke up that morning hoping they would find themselves.
But when we continue on reading, what we see is the power of the gospel in the life of a believer.
That they've taken the gospel and they've dove down into in that situation.
That in that moment, as bleak as it seems.
That in that moment, as awful as it seems.
That in that moment, they don't know if they're going to lose their life.
That in that moment, the gospel penetrates and what comes from that is the fruit of faith in the life of the individual.
It continues on, verse 25.
It says,
About midnight, Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God.
That's what it looks like.
That's what faith is.
That's what living for the Lord looks like.
That in the middle of all the devastating news.
In the middle of all that's gone wrong.
In the middle of everything that is falling apart.
That my positioning and my posturing before the Lord is filled with prayers and praise.
And as a result of that, it says,
And the prisoners were listening to them.
Oh, wow.
Faith.
A life that's impacted.
A life that's counting.
A life that matters.
A life that is central and centered in to the gospel.
So what does that begin to look like for us in our life?
Well, the individual who this is happening to, Paul, is the author of the letter that we are reading.
And so join me as we read Galatians 3, 1 through 5.
Paul is done with this section of his autobiography of what's going on.
And he says this starting in verse 1.
Oh, foolish Galatians, who has bewitched you?
It was before your eyes that Jesus Christ was publicly portrayed as crucified.
Let me ask you this.
Did you receive the Spirit by works of the law or by hearing with faith?
Are you so foolish, having begun by the Spirit?
Are you now being perfected by the flesh?
Did you suffer so many things in vain, if indeed it was in vain?
Does he who supplies the Spirit to you and works miracles among you do so by works of the law or by hearing with faith?
And so we see this argument being proposed from Paul to the church at Galatia,
which is the same argument that you and I, as believers, if we're not careful,
is the same argument we need to hear,
and that we need to be drawn to our attention,
and that we need to be brought before ourselves.
And it is this, the concept or the idea of chasing our own perfection.
The understanding that so many times,
as we want to be a people of faith,
as we've surrendered our life to Christ to save us,
is that we walk out of that moment chasing something.
Not chasing after the glory of God.
Not chasing after Him.
But chasing our own perfection in who we are and in what we can do.
Paul's accusation of them in verse 1,
O foolish Galatians, who has bewitched you?
Here's Paul's struggle with the church.
They have heard the gospel.
They know the gospel.
They have responded to the gospel,
and yet their life does not mirror the truth that they know.
He says, O foolish Galatians, because they're not ignorant.
It's not a group of people who would say,
we've never heard that.
It's not a group of people who would say,
no, this is different from what we understand.
It's not a group of people who wouldn't even say,
we believe differently.
It's a group of people who have checked all of those boxes in their life,
of what they know, of what they believe, of what they understand.
But when it comes to the application of the gospel as believers in their life,
they have fallen short.
And so Paul comes to them and he says,
look, if you know what the gospel is,
if you agree with what the gospel is,
then why can't we apply what the gospel is?
He says to them,
if you came to salvation through faith,
through hearing,
through the power of the Spirit,
then why is it now?
Why is it now as children,
as believers,
why is it now that your trust has moved to your works,
to the law,
and to the flesh?
You see, because if you know the gospel,
right, so to know the gospel means that we have a head agreement
of this is what the gospel is.
But then you agree with the gospel,
meaning that as you know the gospel,
there is something within you that says this is true.
Not that this is a truth,
but that this is true.
Then what should result from knowing the gospel
and to internally agreeing with the gospel,
that what should come from that
is the application of the gospel.
But for us,
for you and for me so many times,
that becomes void in our life.
You would seem silly.
It would seem foolish.
If I were to say to you,
I desperately need glasses.
I know that I need glasses.
I agree that nothing I can do
is going to help me get better within this,
but I refuse to put them on.
But the truth for us within the gospel
is that it isn't just enough to know it.
It isn't just enough to agree with it.
But even as believers,
the application of the gospel in our life.
I read a commentator this week that says this.
He said,
the same way that the Spirit of God entered your life
is the same way the Spirit of God advances in your life.
Through faith.
Through faith.
So what you and I need
is continual gospel application of that.
And when the gospel is heard,
both for the lost and for the saved,
the posturing of what it brings us to,
the positioning of our heart that it draws us to,
is to a point of repentance,
is to a point of brokenness,
to realize that I need this both for salvation and my life.
And when the gospel is applied to sin for me as a believer,
what it brings me to is to the point of repentance
that in my life that I understand
that the only way that I grow from the sin of my life
is through the work of God through faith.
And so we begin to see this for you and I.
We begin to see where this comes from
is in our life tangibly.
When you see victory over sin,
where does the credit and where does the power come from?
Where does the credit go to?
When we all battle the things that we do in our life,
of all of the sins that we face,
of greed, of lust, of lies,
of anger, of deception,
over being unwilling to submit to authority,
or being an abuser in authority.
When we begin to see that we're treading in a way
that more in lines with scripture,
then where is the credit given?
Where is the power noticed from?
Is it something that we've willed ourselves into existence?
Or do we give credit from where it begins?
You see, because when it is us doing it
in and through our own power,
we're masking the things in and of ourself that we do.
But when it is a work that is happening from God
through the power of His Spirit,
in faith in Him,
and in application of the gospel,
what we will know is we are no longer
modifying the behaviors in our life,
but we're being transformed and renewed
by the power of the gospel.
And it's what we begin to live in
and what we begin to experience
in the authority that rings true in our life.
And we begin to step in
and to experience the life of faith.
Let's keep reading about this life of faith
starting in verse 6 of chapter 3.
It says,
Just as Abraham believed God
and it was counted to him as righteousness,
know then that it is those of faith
who were sons of Abraham.
And the scripture foreseeing that God
would justify the Gentiles by faith,
preached the gospel beforehand to Abraham saying,
In you shall all the nations be blessed.
So then those who are of faith
are blessed along with Abraham,
the man of faith.
And so what you and I want to be known for,
what you and I want to be said about ourselves,
what you and I want to have seen in our life
is what does it mean being a person of faith?
To where our faith in God,
our faith in the gospel
is what is known and what is there.
Now Paul here is largely talking to a Gentile audience,
a non-Jewish audience,
and he gives them the example of Abraham.
Why in the world would he choose Abraham?
Why not someone else?
Well, what we see in verse 6
is quoted from Genesis 15 verse 6.
It says this,
Just as Abraham believed God,
it was counted to him as righteousness.
Well, verse 15,
if you remember all the way back
to our Genesis study that we did.
I'm sorry, in chapter 15 of Genesis,
God is establishing a covenant with Abraham.
And the covenant is based in this,
what God is going to do,
the work that God is going to put in place,
and that God will uphold.
And what we find as we continue in reading
in the narrative in the life of Abraham,
of what comes from this,
is all of this takes place,
not because of who Abraham is,
not because of what Abraham does,
but God upholds the covenant that is there
in spite of Abraham's failures and sins.
And so verse 6
is just as much a statement of belief
that brings into salvation
as it is a statement of belief
or a statement of faith
that empowers the life of the believer
for us to live in faith,
that it was counted to him as righteous.
When you see the word counted here,
this is an accounting term
that means to credit.
And so in Genesis chapter 15,
what we see is that Abraham believed in God,
and what God did was God gave credit
or made credit on behalf of Abraham.
So that as Abraham goes forward in life,
there is a credit on him
that comes from God
so that Abraham is not partially,
but so that Abraham is fully seen
both as righteous,
both in his success
and even in his failure.
God says through this word,
what I'm going to do,
because you believed in faith,
I'm going to count it.
I'm going to credit it.
I'm going to pay ahead of what is there
so that in who you are,
it is established as righteousness forever.
And then it happens in faith
and through faith alone.
And so being a person of faith
means that we rest in the knowledge
that our standing
of who we are,
of what we have received,
has been given in credit.
So what does that mean
to be a person of faith?
What does it mean
as we look at the life of Abraham?
How do we take that,
how do we apply that to your life?
And it's believing fully
in the gospel promise.
Fully.
Fully, not just partially
in that God saves,
but in the full gospel promise
that what God does through faith
is that God saves,
that God keeps,
and that God grows.
I've said this quote here,
I don't know,
probably a thousand times,
but that God loves us too much
to save us
and then leave us right where we are.
But that God
in his full love for us,
he saves us,
he takes us in,
and he grows us
in our faith through him.
And so to believe in God,
to place our faith in him,
to trust the gospel
is an area for our life
where we believe in the saving,
praise God for it.
But we believe in the keeping,
that that which he loves,
he holds on to dearly and forever.
But then he also grows.
That he grows you
and that he grows me.
And so we see a miracle happen
when we're broken free from our sins,
when we see the victories that take place.
It's the power of God
and the miracle
just as he multiplied the fish
to feed the thousands
as he is when he sets you free
from your lust.
He sets you free from your anger.
He sets us free from our pride.
It's in who he does.
But to be a person of faith
is believing in God's provision
and not our performance.
Abraham,
Abraham is promised a great nation.
Abraham is promised
that from his line,
from his lineage,
this will come.
But the problem is
he has no kids.
And the provision
and the belief
comes from God
and not from Abraham.
When Abraham takes matters
into his own hands,
what we see is failure.
When Abraham takes the situation,
control,
and says,
well,
then this is what I'm going to do,
then it's found in disobedience.
But when it is found in God
and who God is,
what we see
is the provision
of the gospel
that rings true.
We'll conclude
with reading verses,
starting in verse 10.
Paul writes,
he says this,
for all who rely
on works of the law
are under a curse.
For it is written,
curse be everyone
who does not abide
by all things
written in the book of law
and do them.
I want to read
that verse again.
I want to let that sink in
to our minds
and to our hearts.
Cursed be everyone
who does not abide by,
if you've got your Bible out,
circle it,
all,
all things
written in the book of the law
and do them.
Now it is evident
that no one is justified
before God by the law
for the righteous
shall live by faith.
But the law
is not of faith,
rather the one
who does them
shall live by them.
Verse 13,
underline this,
Christ redeemed us
from the curse
of the law
by becoming
a curse for us.
For it is written,
cursed is everyone
who is hanged
on a tree
so that in Christ Jesus
the blessing of Abraham
might come
to the Gentiles
so that we
might receive
the promised spirit
through faith.
And so we see Paul
come before
the old foolish Galatians
to bring a need
aware to themselves
of the battle
that is before them
and the battle
they're going to face.
And he draws a picture
of two people,
one who's going
to find it
in themselves,
one who's going
to find it
in their faith,
one who's going
to find it
in the works
that they do,
and one who's going
to find it
in the work
that Christ has done.
And so my question
for you this morning
is this,
who are you
going to be?
Who are you
going to be?
Yes,
yes it is faith
that saves us,
but it's the faith
that we live
through.
In verse 12
he says that the person
that relies on the law,
he says this,
they live
by them.
And the result
of living by them,
of the continuation
of works-based
righteousness
is what Paul says
is to be under a curse.
And so if a person
says,
I'm going to live
by the law
and desires
to be blessed
by God
to live a life
of faith,
to not live
in the reality
of the circumstances
that surround them
or the demand
that is there
or everything,
they can never
rise above
because they live
in their own perception,
they live
in the impossible task
and they're living
as a person
who's being cursed.
And so what God does,
what God says,
is that those
who live by faith,
not just for salvation,
but those who live
by faith
and being kept
by the hand of God,
that those who live
by faith
and growth
in the hand
of God,
that Christ
redeemed us
from the curse
by becoming
a curse
for us.
It's a beautiful phrase
that is used
in talking about
substitutionary atonement
of Christ
and it's called
the great exchange,
that Jesus Christ
as our substitute
and we begin
to think
about this exchange,
about what He did
and about what
we've done,
about what we deserve
and about what
He deserved.
We begin to see
this void
that separates
the two,
the void
that Scripture
says that in
this place
and throughout
the world
that there is not
one that is righteous
in themselves
other than
through Him.
That there's not
one who's fulfilled
the law
other than Him.
There's not
one who is perfect
other than Him
and so in the
great exchange
is He received,
Jesus received
what we deserve.
Punishment.
Death.
Let's don't forget
this wasn't just
the means.
It wasn't just
what needed
to happen.
It was what
had to happen
because the law
says
that when you
break one,
one,
one thought,
one word,
one deed,
when one
is broken,
guilty,
guilty,
guilty,
guilty.
and the
punishment,
it isn't a
fine,
it isn't a
job to go do,
it isn't going to
make yourself
better,
it's death
for just one,
just one.
And so what
Jesus did
is Jesus said,
not for just one,
but for the many,
for the many,
I'll take it
I'll take it
on.
I'll take it
on.
And so I'm
going to step
out of perfection.
I'm going to
step out
of heaven
and step foot
on the cross
in the great
exchange
for what the
people who
mocked him
deserved,
for what the
people who
spit at him
deserved,
for what the
people who
abandoned him
deserved,
and for what
the people
who were
gathered in
this place
deserved,
and for the
pastor that
stands on this
stage for what
he deserved.
And I will
pay the penalty
on the cross.
It's the great
exchange.
And then the
exchange doesn't
end there,
is that we
gain something.
You and I,
not only is
the penalty
paid for us,
but there's
a reward
given for
a life
lived in
perfection.
And that
reward is
righteousness.
What that
reward is,
is proper
standing before
the Lord.
What that
reward is,
is a credit
that never
ends.
What that
reward is,
is an adoption
that's brought
into a family
where divorce
never is the
case.
What that
reward is,
is what
none of us
deserved.
none of us
deserved
righteousness in
him.
But it's
found,
not in what
we've done,
but what
he's done.
It's not
found in
what we do,
but what
he's done.
And it's
not even
found in
who we
are,
but it is
found in
who he
is.
In just a
minute,
we're going
to go to
the Lord in
prayer.
I want to
ask you this
question this
morning.
If you don't
know Jesus
Christ as your
personal Lord
and Savior,
where it will
begin for
you is
repentance for
who you are
and for what
you've done.
It only takes
one.
And faith
in who he
is.
But for all
of us in
here,
for all of
us in this
room,
chasing our
own
perfection,
determining
what we
are going
to do.
And we
wonder why
in our
life when
the beating
comes.
We wonder
in our
life when
the shackles
arrive.
We wonder
in our
life when
the jail
cell door
spiritually
closes on
us.
We wonder
why our
world falls
apart.
And the
question is
this,
because we've
been chasing
it in
ourselves.
Or is
there rest
in faith
that above
my
circumstances,
above what
I can
understand,
above what
is before
me,
that I
trust God
to save
me,
that I
trust God
to keep
me,
and that I
trust God
to grow
me.
Would you
pray with
me?
Lord, we
come to
you this
morning
thanking you
for who
you are,
thanking you
for what
you've
done.
Lord, may
every day
and every
moment,
may the
clarity of
the gospel
and the
importance
and the
value of
the gospel
rest in
us and
who we
are so
that every
day, every
moment that
we are
people of
faith,
faith doesn't
mean that
we're trusting
as long as
it's good.
Faith does
not mean that
we're trusting
as long as
we understand.
Faith is
not trusting
as long as
we agree,
but faith,
faith, Lord,
give us faith
in every
moment,
in every
battle,
in every
victory,
in every
circumstance
to trust
in you
and in you
alone.
With every
head bowed
and every
eyes closed,
no one
looking around.
If you
don't know
Jesus Christ
as your
Lord and
Savior,
I pray that
today would
be the day
that you
would trust
Him.
If you
do,
if you
do,
and you're
spending so
much of your
life chasing
after something
that you're
never going
to catch,
chasing your
own perfection
that's found
in who you
are and
what you
do and
what you
overcome,
and the
testimony of
your life
may begin
with Jesus,
but it
continues in
you.
Could
today be
the day
of
repentance?
Lord,
give us
the faith
to sing
in the
prison cell
or give us
the faith
to cry
out
in the
midst of
tragedy
or give us
the faith
to trust
in you
fully
to save
us,
to keep
us,
and to
grow us.
It's in
Jesus' name
we pray.
Amen.
Amen.
thanks again
for listening
to the
Willow Ridge
Church
weekly
podcast.
We hope
that you
enjoyed
listening to
this week's
message.
If you'd
like to
learn more
about who
we are
or explore
additional
resources,
visit us
online at
www.willowridgechurch.com
or by searching
for Willow Ridge
Church on
Facebook and
Instagram.