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At the beginning of Galatians chapter 3 we saw that way back in ancient History, God made an audacious promise to a man named Abram. The promise was that God would be with him, and he would bless him in such a way that the entire world would be blessed through Abram and through his descendants. This week, Paul continues to show from the Old Testament Scripture that because Christianity is fundamentally is about a promise, your security depends on what God has done for you, not what you do (or fail to do) for God.
“After God gave the promise to Abraham, he gave the law to Moses. Why? Simply because he had to make things worse before he could make them better. The law exposed sin, provoked sin, condemned sin. The purpose of the law was, as it were, to lift the lid off our human respectability and disclose what we are really like underneath – sinful, rebellious, guilty, under the judgment of God, and helpless to save ourselves. . . .
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:
By Reformed University Fellowship at UNCWAt the beginning of Galatians chapter 3 we saw that way back in ancient History, God made an audacious promise to a man named Abram. The promise was that God would be with him, and he would bless him in such a way that the entire world would be blessed through Abram and through his descendants. This week, Paul continues to show from the Old Testament Scripture that because Christianity is fundamentally is about a promise, your security depends on what God has done for you, not what you do (or fail to do) for God.
“After God gave the promise to Abraham, he gave the law to Moses. Why? Simply because he had to make things worse before he could make them better. The law exposed sin, provoked sin, condemned sin. The purpose of the law was, as it were, to lift the lid off our human respectability and disclose what we are really like underneath – sinful, rebellious, guilty, under the judgment of God, and helpless to save ourselves. . . .
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS: