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2 La Ley en la vida Cristiana.

June 27, 2004


I Timothy 1:6-11
The Law in the Christian Life
Dr. J. Ligon Duncan
If you have your Bibles, I invite you to turn with me to I Timothy,
chapter one, and well be looking at verses six through eleven today.
Were continuing to work through this book, which is the first of the
Pastoral Epistles. It's written by an apostle who was a pastor, a
missionary, and a church planter, to a young man who was a church
planter and settled pastor in Ephesus. He's writing in the context of a
congregation that was troubled by false teachers. We learned that in
verses three and four, although Paul has not told us what that false
teaching is yet. Hell tell us today, when we get to verses six through
eleven.
We also said that in this book, and in these booksI and II Timothy
and Titus, together the Pastoral Epistleswe learn what church life is
supposed to be like in the local congregation, because Paul is not
merely giving wise advice from an aged and learned and
experienced pastor to a young without as much age or experience or
learning, he is giving commands on how God wants the church to
be. And so, just as Paul's words were helpful to a local congregation
of Christians who had gathered less than thirty years or so after
Jesus had ascended on high, after His earthly ministry, life and
death and resurrection, he's also giving these words to us, who live
2,000 years after that time, seeking to be faithful Christians gathered

in a local congregation to do His will and to give Him glory. So let's


give close attention to God's word in I Timothy, chapter one. Before
we read and hear God's word proclaimed, let's look to Him in prayer
and ask for His blessing.
Lord God, You have already told us through Paul that the preaching
of your word is designed to establish us in real Christian love: love to
God and love to fellow Christians, love to neighbor, and love to our
enemy, even. Grant, then, that as we hear Your word read and
preached today, our hearts desire would be to be transformed by
that same word. And by the grace of Your Spirit, we ask that You
would indeed transform us. We ask this in Jesus' name. Amen.
Hear the word of God:
For some men, straying from these things, have turned aside to
fruitless discussion, wanting to be teachers of the law, even though
they do not understand either what they are saying, or the matters
about which they make confident assertions. But we know that the
Law is good, if one uses it lawfully, realizing the fact that the law is
not made for a righteous man, but for those who are lawless and
rebellious, for those who kill their fathers or mothers, for murderers
and immoral men and homosexuals and kidnappers and liars and
perjurers, and whatever else is contrary to sound teaching according
to the glorious gospel of the blessed God, with which I have been
entrusted.
Amen. And thus ends this reading of God's holy, inspired and
inerrant word. May He write its eternal truth upon our hearts.

In this passage, Paul is addressing the issue of the law, and


especially of the law in the Christian life. And the reason is, he
identifies for us, in verses six and seven, the nature of the false
teaching that was troubling the Ephesian church. There were people
who claimed to be expert teachers of the law, and by that they meant
the Mosaic Law, especially the moral law of the Decalogue. These
are not exactly like the Judaizers found elsewhere, agitating for
circumcision and the ceremonial law; these are people who are
teaching certain things about the moral law which contradicted Paul's
preaching of the gospel. And so, Paul is warning Timothy, and the
church in Ephesus, about their teaching. He is positively setting
forth the proper understanding of the law; and then he is
reminding us that the gospel is the measure of all teaching as
to whether it is sound.
In fact, it is precisely those three things that you see in the passage
before you.
(1) In verses six and seven, Paul speaks of the misunderstanding of
the law that was being propagated by these false teachers.
(2) In verses eight through ten, he speaks of the true nature and
function of the law; and then,
(3) In verse eleven, he reminds us that the gospel itself is the
measure of sound teaching.
I want to look at those three things with you today, because Paul
believes that the understandinga right understandingof the law is
important, indeed, essential to the Christian life. Because
understanding the law correctly impacts how one understands the

gospel and how the gospel relates to the law in the Christian life. So
let's look together at these words of instruction from Paul.
I. False teaching fails in the arena of true edification.
First of all, in verse six and seven, Paul tells us that we must be on
guard for misunderstandings about the role of the law in the
Christian life. And Paul's great point in these two verses is simply
this: False teaching always fails to edify. Remember what Paul had
just said in verse five? Sneak a peek, because what he says in
verses six and seven is simply elaborating a point that he made in
verse five. In verse five, he says that the goal of our instruction --he's
saying, Timothy, the goal that you and I are trying to aim for in our
preaching, in our teaching, in our instruction of the people of God in
the truth of Holy Scripture-- the goal that we're aiming for is love
from a pure heart, and a good conscience, and a sincere
faith. In other words, the goal of our teaching is to edify the people
of God so that they will not simply know more things, but so that their
lives would be transformed so that from the inside outfrom a pure
heart, a heart made clean by the work of the Holy Spirit, by the
regenerating work of the Lord Jesus Christwith a good conscience
and a sincere faith, they would love (they would love God, they would
love one another, they would love their neighbor, they would even
love their enemies) because that practical manifestation of love is
what? It is the supreme expression of the grace of the Spirit in
the life of a believer.Paul says in I Corinthians thirteen that faith,
hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is
love. Because in heaven, faith will be no more. It will be replaced by
sight. And hope will be no more, having been fulfilled. But love will
go on forever.

So, love is the supreme expression of the work of the Spirit in the life
of the believer. And Paul is saying to Timothy in verse five, that's
what we're shooting for in our teaching. We don't want our people
just to be smarter; we don't want our people simply to know more
things; we don't want them to simply be more discerning, although
we want all three of those things. We want them to know more and
understand better and be more discerning. Those are important
things, because we want them to be discerning against the false
teaching that is pervasive in the world. But more than that, we want
to see their lives transformed so that they are edified, so that they,
themselves, actively and tangibly love.
You remember what Jesus said would be the thing that would serve
as a witness to the world that we were His disciples? He says this in
John 13 and following. He says that it will be the way that we love
one another. Do you remember when the lawyer comes to Jesus and
says, Jesus, what's the greatest command? And Jesus response
is, Love God and love your neighbor. And on these two things hang
the whole of the law and the prophets. The goal for which that
prophetic teaching aimed was the creation of a people that would
love God.
Well, Paul makes that point in verse five. But then he says in verse
six, there are some men who claim to be teachers of the law who are
straying from that very teaching. Some men, he saysthis refers to
the false teachers about which he's already warned us in verses
three and foursome men have been theologically sidetracked.
Notice what he says: They've turned aside to fruitless
discussions. Now, notice the contrast. The goal of our instruction,
Paul says, is what? Love! From a pure heart and a good

conscience and a sincere faith. What's the result of their teaching?


Fruitless discussion.
Notice the difference? Fruitfulness, love from a pure heart and a
good conscience and a sincere faith; fruitless they speculate, they
talk about things that they don't really understand, it doesn't edify the
people of God.
It makes perfect sense, doesn't it? You can't edify the people of God
unless youre teaching the people of God the truth of God, for only
the truth of God can edify the people of God. Because they don't
understand the law (even though they teach about it a lot), they can't
edify the people of God! And so, in verses six and seven, Paul is
saying the mark of these false teachers is theyre not really edifying
the people of God. Theyre not turning the people of God into those
who love God more, and who love one another more, and who love
their neighbors faithfully in accordance with God's Word. These men,
in verse seven, he says, want to be thought of as experts on the law.
They want to be people that you go to, to answer hard
questions. But they don't really understand the law. And Paul says
they show that in both their life and their teaching. In verse seven, he
says all you have to do is listen to them to know that they don't know
very much about the law of God.
But furthermore, if you noticed in verse six, he even says that their
lives show that they don't understand the law of God. Look at that
interesting thing that he says in verse six: For some men, straying
from these things Well, what's the these things from which they
are straying? It's what he had just said in verse five. What were they
straying from? Love, from a pure heart and a good conscience and a
sincere faith. In other words, even in their lives, you could tell they

really didn't understand the law of God. The law of God convicts us
of sin. The law of God restrains us from sin. The law of God impels
us to grow in grace. But they weren't. They were straying from
growth in grace. They were not growing in love, as Paul said his
teaching aims for.
What Paul is dealing with here is legalism, or moralism. Now it's
very important for you to understand that Paul is not saying that
these people are legalists in the sense that they care too much about
God's law. Oftentimes, well use the phrase legalists in that way.
You just care too muchyoure too nit-picky about God's law. Youre
a legalist. Jesus and Paul never use the language of legalism in that
way. Legalism doesn't mean caring too much about God's law. Could
anybody ever care too much about God's Word? Can you imagine
God rebuking somebody on the last day: You just cared too much
about My Word! That's the problem with you! God will never say that
to anyone! That's not true of anyone! Nobody has ever cared too
much about God's Word. No. This legalism is a legalism that does
not understand the necessity of God's grace in order that we might
obey the law. This legalism says How can a man be right with God?
Obey the law, it says.
You remember back in the Gospel of Luke? Turn with me there, to
Luke 18. In Luke 18:9, Jesus tells that famous story of the Pharisee
and the Publican. And He, Luke gives us this preface, He told this
parable to certain ones who trusted in themselves that they were
righteous. So the whole point of the parable was to disabuse this
Pharisee from believing that he was righteous. He thought of himself
as righteous. Then He goes on to tell the story, in verse eighteen, of
a rich young ruler. And you remember what question that rich young

ruler asked Jesus? Good teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal


life? And Jesus says to him, You know the commandmentskeep
them. And you know what the rich young ruler says? Oh, I've
already done that! And that's all you need to know, to know that he
hadn't!
You know, if anything, he's just broken the commandment not to lie,
or bear false witness! I've done that since I was a kid. I've kept all
the commandments. You see, Jesus very point in saying this to him
was to see whether he had discovered himself enough to know his
need of forgiveness. He had not. Jesus had even tipped him off,
because the man had said to Jesus Good teacher,and Jesus
first words to him were Why do you call Me good? There is only
One who is good. God. And then He asks this young man, Have
you kept the commandments? And the young man says, what? I'm
good! That's what the young man says! Yes! I'm good! After Jesus
had just said there's nobody good but God. It's a wonderful play on
words going on there.
The point, you see, is to make it clear to that young man that
the law cannot make him good. The law can restrain him from sin;
the law can show him his sin; but the law, in and of itself, cannot
make him good. These false teachers in Ephesus were purporting to
bring a deep teaching of the law which would show the people of
God how they could be good. And Paul is saying they don't
understand what the law is, and they don't understand what it's for.
And, consequently, they can't edify the people of God. And there's
Paul's big point in verses six and seven: False teaching always
fails to edify. Only the true, sound teaching of the gospel can
edify the people of God.

II. False teaching misunderstands the nature and use of the law.
The second thing we see is in verses eight to ten. There we see the
true nature and function of the law. These men who were teaching in
Ephesus didn't understand the law, even though they claimed to.
Now Paul says, Let me explain to you what the law is and how it
works. False teaching, you see, misunderstands what the law is and
how it works. It misunderstands the nature and the function of the
law, but Christians need to know what the law is and what it's for.
And Paul begins by saying the law is good! It's so important for you
to understand that Paul isn't anti-law. A lot of people read this
passage and think that what Paul is saying is that the law isn't for
Christians. Well, look. Every time you hear Jesus say something like
He says in Matthew 22, that the greatest commandments are to love
God and to love neighbors, He's simply summarizing for you the
whole goal and focus of the law. He's not against the moral law of
God. When Paul says that the greatest of these is love, he's just
summarizing the law. In fact, he's aboutin these versesto
summarize The Ten Commandments for us. Paul's not against the
law. When Paul speaks about the law, he always speaks of it highly.
Here he said it's good. In Romans 7 He says it's holy and it's
spiritual.
But here's the problem: the law has to be used rightly. And these
men were not using it rightly. They didn't understand it. And so Paul
says in verse eight, we know that the law is good, if one uses it
lawfully. In other words, if you use the law in the way God intended
the law to be used, in accordance with its nature.
Those who see the law by itself as the solution to the problem of our
unrighteousness, those who think that the law itself, by our obeying

of it, can make us right with God, are deluded. That is legalism. And
Paul is rejecting that. You have to know what the law is for.
And so, in verses nine and ten, is, Paul basically gives you a
summarization of The Ten Commandments. If you look at these
series of parallel terms, the law is for (in verse nine) the lawless and
rebellious, ungodly and sinners, unholy and profane. That covers
the first four commandments. Then, notice how he picks up with the
fifth commandment, those who kill their fathers or mothers the
ultimate expression of not honoring your father or motherand he
runs you through the ninth commandment. He doesn't outline for you
the tenth commandment, but he covers nine of the ten
commandments here in verses nine and ten. And he says, Now
look: why would God have needed to write down those laws and give
them to the people of God through Moses, unless we were sinners
and needed to be restrained from our sins? Adam had the law
written on his heart. Paul says that even as fallen human beings, we
all know right from wrong, and we know that God is going to bring
punishment.
So why did the law need to be written down? To restrain sin.
Therefore, it can't be the answer to the problem of sin. It's there
because of the problem of sin, not as the final answer to the problem
of sin. The final answer to the problem of sin is the gospel! It's the
person and work of Jesus Christ, in His life and death and
resurrection on our behalf, and our embrace of that by
faith. That's the good news that deals with sin.
But the lawno, the law is there because of the problem. It's there to
restrain us from sin. Paul is speaking of what the Reformers used to
call the first use of the law here. He's not saying everything that

there is to say about the law, but he's just pointing out that as these
teachers come in and say, If you want to be righteous with God, the
way to righteousness is to obey these moral laws. Then you will be
right with God, Paul wants us to know that anybody who can preach
that doesn't know themselves, and doesn't know the law.
You see, true biblical teaching does not mistake the nature and use
of the law. The law restrains from sin; the law convicts of sin. And in
the believer who has been changed by the grace of God,
regenerated by the Holy Spirit, justified by God's grace, and is being
sanctified by the Holy Spirit, the law serves as a guide. It shows us
what true righteousness looks like. But it cannot save us. And these
teachers don't understand that. And so, Paul points out here how
false teaching misunderstands the nature and use of the law.
III. The Gospel itself is the measure of the soundness of all
teaching.
And then, finally, in verse eleven, he explains to us how the gospel
itself is the measure of soundness in all teaching. Look at the end of
verse ten: and whatever else is contrary to sound teaching,
according to the gospel, the glorious gospel, of the blessed God,
with which I have been entrusted. Sound, or wholesome, teaching is
a word that Paul will use over and over in these Pastoral Epistles. It's
a phrase that reminds us that true biblical teaching leads to spiritual
health. It's sound teaching, or wholesome teaching, or healthy
teaching. Were not just teaching so that youll know more things,
we're teaching so that you will have a healthy Christian embrace of
doctrine and experience and practice. We want to edify you with the
Word of God. And so he speaks of this sound teaching.

Well, what about this sound teaching? Well, he tells us that it's
according to the gospel. He's saying that sound, or wholesome,
teaching is always in accord with the good news that displays God's
glory, because it is that message alone that reveals God in all the
fullness of His blessings. Everybody knows that there is a right from
wrong, no matter how much we want to deny it in our practice. No
matter how we practice out of accord with that fundamental reality,
there is not a human being on the planet that doesn't know that there
is a right and there is a wrong, and that there is a God who is going
to judge it. Now, I don't have to know every human being to know
that. I have Romans, chapter one. And Romans, chapter one, tells
met that: that every human being on this planet knows right from
wrong, and knows that God is going to judge wrong. The gospel
doesn't tell me that. The law tells me that. The image of God in me
tells me that.
What the gospel tells me is not simply that there is a just God, but
that there is a merciful God. And that is something that I learn only in
the gospel, that there is a merciful God who will show grace to those
who repent and trust in His own Son. And even though He is just in
all His judgments, He will show mercy to those who flee to Jesus
Christ.
The gospel, you see, is the essence of the saving good news
about the person and work of Jesus Christ, especially in His
death and resurrection, and what that does for our sin, and how
it answers to our need in our sin, for forgiveness and for
cleansing. And Paul is saying that the gospel itself is the
measure of soundness in all teaching. If someone comes and
says obey the law and God will save you, Paul says that person

shows that he doesn't understand the law, and he doesn't


understand the gospel. But when someone comes and says trust in
Christ alone for salvation as He is offered in the gospel, and then live
as only someone who has been freed from sin by the power of the
gospel, then live in accordance with the law, that person
understands both the gospel and the law.
Remember how Paul puts it in Ephesians? He says that you
weresaved by grace through faith, and that not of yourselves, it was
the gift of God. But he goes on to say that you were created in
Christ Jesus for good works. You were not saved by good works,
you were not saved by your law keeping, you were saved by grace,
through faith, and even that faith was a gift of God. But you were
created anew, you were regenerated, you were made to be a new
creaturefor what reason? For what purpose? So that you would do
good works. How do you know what good works are? The Word of
God tells you. The law of God tells you.
So it is not that the law saves you and makes you right with
God, but it is that you are saved in order that you can express
what you were meant to be, as the image of God, by keeping the
law of God. And the gospel thus judges all teaching about the law
and about the gospel. Sound, wholesome teaching is always in
accord with the good news that displays God's glory, because that
message alone reveals God in all the fullness of His blessedness.
And Paul wants Timothy to know that. Why? Because people were
confused about the law in his church. And friends, people are
confused today.
Even in the Reformed community, there are intelligent people who
are suggesting that we need to reinsert the law into our justification,

into our being declared right with God. And the Apostle Paul is
saying, anybody who says that doesn't understand the law; doesn't
understand their sin; doesn't understand the gospel. Because if I am
the solution to the problem of my unrighteousness, well, then, I really
do have a big problem.
It's Jesus keeping of the law. It's Jesus righteousness. It's Jesus
holiness. It's Jesus paying the penalty for my sin that makes me right
for God, and frees me, then, to live in accordance with the guidance
of God's law. And so, God's grace takes priority over my faithfulness.
And if we don't understand that, we haven't understood yet the
freeness of the mercy of God. May God grant us an understanding of
that truth. Let's pray.
Our heavenly Father, a wise old Baptist minister once said that those
who understand the right relationship between law and gospel are
true masters of divinity, and we want to be masters of biblical truth,
masters of teaching about God and His way of salvation. And more
than that, we want to live in accordance with that truth. So help us to
understand the gospel, the good news of Jesus Christ, who came to
die on our behalf, who lived a perfect life in our stead, whose
righteousness is imputed to us and is received by faith alone. And
then, remind us that it is only in that gospel power applied by the
Holy Spirit that the law ceases to be a condemning foe, and
becomes a guiding friend. We ask this in Jesus' name. Amen.

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