“And when the Pharisee saw it, he marvelled that he had not first
washed before dinner.” - Luke 11:38 -
The New Covenant is a covenant of rest; it is living and acting from
our place in Christ.Everything we need has been provided by God, through grace. God anticipated all our needs; he acted independently of us, before we were born. We cannot move God to do anything, because he has already done everything we need through Christ. In Christ we have received every spiritual blessing we will ever need or desire.
How we perceive God and what he has provided for us by grace is faith.
All we need has been given to us we just activate it into reality from the
spirit realm by believing and receiving.
Good works, doing the right things, trying to make God to move by our
acts, is all self-righteousness and is rooted in unbelief.
Saying thank you and resting in all Christ has freely given by grace is
the essence of faith and walking in the spirit.
Andrew Wommack explains that grace is the key to the Christian life and
believing that God has already done everything through Christ.
“A sure sign of the error of legalism is misplaced priorities, as we
see here with these Pharisees. It is not recorded in Scripture that the
Pharisees marveled at the wonderful works of Jesus. They were too busy looking
for something to criticize (Mark 3:2). But they marveled at Jesus not washing
His hands. This is a classic example of straining out a gnat and swallowing a
camel (Mt. 23:24).
Those who seek to earn righteousness through keeping the Law are
consumed with “doing,” while those who receive righteousness by faith are simply
confessing what has already been done. This is a simple and yet profound
difference. If we are still “doing” acts of holiness to get God to move in our
lives, then we are still operating under a “Law” mentality that is not faith
(Gal. 3:12). When we simply believe and confess what has already been provided
through Christ, that’s grace.A person who is living under the Law and a person who lives under grace should have very similar actions of holiness, but their motivations are completely opposite. The legalist has their attention on what they must do, while the person living by faith has his attention on what Christ has already done for him. For instance, the Scriptures teach us to confess with our mouths and believe with our hearts, and we will receive from God. The legalist thinks, That means I can get God to heal me by confessing, ‘By his stripes I am healed.’
However, the person who understands God’s grace will not confess the Word to get healed. They will confess, “By His stripes I am healed” because they really believe it has already been done.
Analyzing our “mind set” is the simplest way of discerning whether we are operating in true Bible faith or a legalistic counterfeit. If the motive for our actions is to be accepted with God, that’s legalism. If we live wholly out of faith and gratefulness for what God has already done, that’s grace. Grow in grace!”
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