If you want to turn in your Bibles
to the book of Galatians, chapter one. What a sweet time of worship
this morning. Praising the Lord and remembering
him. I appreciate so much the wisdom,
Justin, that you gave in explaining communion. I've been, I've told
some of you, I've been listening to this church history. It's
a five volume series. I own the volume, so I can look
at it now and then as well, but I've been listening to it. This idea of the bread and wine
being turned into the actual body and blood of Christ, this
didn't develop until a thousand years after the church was established. We had some strings of that strange
doctrine, but it did not come from the Bible. or from Christ
himself. And that's so important. Because
I want to begin by talking about how the gospel is the DNA of
the church. It's the genetic information
that informs, that makes Christians, that creates Christians. It's
what God, the Holy Spirit, uses to regenerate so that we are
born again and we are given a new nature and new affections and
desires. It's the key to how God changes
us. And the gospel, you know, as
Paul tells us here, as he mentions it in 1 Corinthians 15, verses
3 and 4, he says, for I deliver to you that which also I received,
how that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures,
and that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day according
to the scriptures. That's the gospel. And it is
the DNA of the church. It's the genome of the Christian
life. the shared life of the church
body. It's the basis of all of our
philosophy of ministry. Every ministry of the church
must be based upon the truths of the gospel and a reminder
of the gospel. In fact, long before I get up
to preach on Sunday mornings, you should be well acquainted
with the gospel just by the things that are done in our worship. because Christ is held forth
in our communion. Christ is held forth and his
accomplishments, his works, his persons, as we sing the songs,
as we read the scriptures, as we pray and confess our sins,
as we are called to worship, Christ is held forth. So even
if I never made it to the pulpit, You should know what the gospel
is just because of what we do and how the gospel informs everything
that we do. The gospel harmonizes all the
beliefs of the church. It's not some scattered amalgamation
of different ideas from the Bible and a handful of Bible verses
here and there. It is the doctrine of the gospel
that is taught throughout Scripture, the one story of Scripture. And so it harmonizes our faith,
the faith, our teaching, our worship, our evangelism, our
fellowship. The gospel message shapes the
whole life of the church. It regulates the life of the
church. So the gospel is vital. The gospel
is Jesus Christ, right? We need to keep that in mind.
The message is the message of the person of Christ. And faith
is in the person of Christ. The good news is the good news
of Jesus Christ. and we want to keep him above
everything. We want to keep Christ on the
pedestal. We want to give him the preeminence,
the highest place as the one who is the revelation of God. Well, this morning as we look
at Galatians chapter 1, I want to begin by reminding you of
something we began to talk about last week, and that is that Paul
received the gospel by revelation. So let's go ahead with the first
slide here. Yes, and so hopefully you'll
be able to see some scriptures as we go through this passage. So Galatians chapter 1 and verse
11, I would have you know brothers that the gospel that was preached
by me is not man's gospel. For I did not receive it from
any man. nor was I taught it, but I received
it through a revelation of Jesus Christ. For you have heard of
my former life in Judaism, how I persecuted the church of God
violently and tried to destroy it. And I was advancing in Judaism
beyond many of my own age among my people, so extremely zealous
was I for the traditions of my fathers. But when he who had
set me apart before I was born, who called me by his grace, was
pleased to reveal his Son to me." You notice earlier he said
in verse 12, I received it through a revelation of Jesus Christ.
He's speaking here of his Damascus Road conversion. He said he was
pleased to reveal his son to me in order that I might preach
him among the Gentiles. When Paul was saved, he was also
called to be an apostle. He was entrusted with the gospel,
the gospel was revealed to him, and he was called. And God said
to him from the very beginning that you are my chosen instrument,
you shall stand before the nations, you shall take the gospel to
the Gentiles. You can read about his testimony
in Acts 22, Acts 26, as well as Acts 9 where these things
actually took place. Paul refers to it here. He says,
I did not immediately consult with anyone, nor did I go up
to Jerusalem to those who were apostles before me, but I went
away into Arabia and returned again to Damascus. The gospel
was revealed to Paul and it did not come through any human agency
or angelic mediation. It was the Lord Jesus himself
who revealed his person and work to the Apostle Paul transforming
his life. Now that's the gospel revelation. But now number two is the gospel
affirmation. the gospel affirmation. So as
we're looking here at verse 18 of Galatians chapter 1, I hope
you're following in your Bibles as well. Paul has already started
preaching. He started preaching right away
when he was in Damascus after he was converted. As soon as
he was able to, he took a little food, was strengthened, and he
was baptized, and he went straight to the synagogue and began preaching
the gospel to the Jews there, and he was proving that Jesus
was the Christ, and they were scratching their heads saying,
isn't this the guy that was killing people who believe this? And
here he is, he's persuading us, and nobody could resist the wisdom
with which he spoke about these things from the Old Testament,
showing them from the Law and the Prophets that Jesus is the
Messiah. He's the Savior that was sent
by God the Father into the world. And so all of that came by revelation. Now, there is an affirmation
here. He says, Then after three years,
I went up to Jerusalem to visit Cephas, and remained with him
fifteen days. But I saw none of the other apostles
except James the Lord's brother. And I'm not lying about this,
he says in verse 20, the Lord knows. Now, I want you to notice
in verse 18, he's giving us a little bit of a timeline here. So after
his conversion, three years later, he has not met or talked with
any apostles. He goes to Jerusalem and he visits
Peter. Now this word visit, I would
underline it in your Bibles because it is an unusual word. It is
the word historio, historio. You can kind of hear our word
history. The noun, a histore, was a person who was commissioned
by a king to go out into a new land and to map the land, to
find out its resources, discover its rivers, discover its mountains,
to bring back some sort of a graphical representation of the land that
they would like to conquer or that they wish to take or inhabit
or whatever it might have been. That was the work of a histor
in the service of a king. This word doesn't just mean visit. It means to examine, to ask questions
about. In other words, when Paul spent
15 days with Peter, he was doing the work of an investigative
reporter. You can imagine all the questions
he had because Peter had been with the Lord from the beginning.
And so he was listening. They probably talked into the
night. I used to do that. I can't do it anymore. Now if
I'm awake at night, it's because I don't want to be. But I used
to stay up at camp work. My friend Jim Stewart and I,
we'd teach all day, stay up all night talking. I remember his
wife coming in the living room of the house we were staying
in. She said, you guys are still, you know it's 3 a.m. And Jim
said, well, I was coming to bed, but Bob won't stop listening.
We had such fellowship. I am sure these guys talked as
much as they could. What amazing fellowship they
must have had as he listened to Paul's story of his own conversion,
which I'm sure that he had heard. as well as the revelations that
he was receiving from the Lord, because Paul frequently received
revelations from God, and we read through his letters, you
can read about that. And Paul was there investigating
the stories of Christ in his incarnation. And he was all tying
together everything that the Old Testament teaches about the
Messiah. The mind, that great analytical mind of the Apostle
Paul was drawing the lines of Scripture from beginning to end,
from creation to Christ. from the line of David to Christ,
from Abraham to Christ, from the priesthood to Christ, and
he was seeing how Christ is the very center. Now he knew these
things, but it was affirmed, right? So his time with Peter
was a time of gospel affirmation. And he tells us then in verse
21, of chapter 1, then I went into the regions of Syria and
Cilicia. He's preaching the gospel in
these places. He no doubt suffered and was beaten in these areas.
He gives us a list of his beatings in 2 Corinthians chapter 11,
I think. And when he gives that list,
it's much more than is contained in the other stories. It's very
likely that he experienced those things and perhaps shipwreck
as well because he experienced those. He suffered for the sake
of the gospel. And he tells us that he was still
unknown to the churches in Judea. He had been to Jerusalem, but
they did not trust him because he was known for deceiving people
into thinking he was a Christian just so he could bind them and
put them in prison or have them killed or stoned like Stephen.
But anyways, the Apostle Paul tells us here, he says, those
churches were hearing that the one who once persecuted us is
now preaching the faith. Did you see that in verse 23? He's preaching the faith, the
gospel, The faith, the same thing. Sometimes Paul will use the expression,
the truth. He means the same thing. The
gospel is the substance of the faith that we believe, the doctrines
that we hold to and cling to. And it is the substance that
he preached. He preached the faith. And they
said he's now preaching the faith that he once tried to destroy.
And notice this in verse 24, they glorified God. because of
me." They didn't meet him, they just were hearing. The one who
was the enemy is now a gospeler. Then we come into chapter two
and here we see gospel authentication. We have two or three slides on
this. We want to look at some of these
verses. Here we see Paul's gospel not
only corroborated by Peter, but for the first time, he meets
more of the apostles. Verse 1 in chapter 2, then after
14 years, finally. I mean, he is called as an apostle. He's verified as an apostle.
He's been preaching the gospel. He and Peter compared notes.
His gospel was affirmed as he walked through that process with
Peter, but now he finally goes to Jerusalem and he's meeting
the apostles. Finally, that's what I wrote
in my Bible, finally. I went up to Jerusalem with Barnabas
taking Titus along with me. Very important. He says, I went
up because of revelation. God told him to go up. And I
sat before them. And you know, if I was going
to translate this word for set before, I laid it out. That's
what he's saying. I laid it out. I told them. This is what God told me. He
says, I laid it out. I set before them and I did it
privately. before those who seemed influential.
These are leaders. He says, I set before them the
gospel that I proclaim among the Gentiles in order to make
sure I was not running or had run in vain. Now Paul has the
greatest confidence that he is preaching the true gospel, but
he still meets with these apostles and he is wanting for the sake
of the church for his message to be authenticated. Because
there were people coming through the province of Galatia and telling
the churches that Paul, he's not preaching what they preach
at Jerusalem. He's changed the message and
it's not Jewish anymore. It's a Gentile message and he's
abandoned Moses and the law and he's not teaching them, they
have to keep the law, because they were teaching a false gospel. And so here he tells us, hey,
I went to Jerusalem, here, 17 years after his conversion, and
he says, and I met with those influential apostles there, verse
three, but even Titus, who was with me, was not forced to be
circumcised, though he was a Greek. So you see there's an accountability
here and this is important. You need to hold me accountable
for preaching the doctrine of scripture. Listen, the teaching
of God's word is how we remain pure as a church and how we keep
the main things the main things. And if we abandon the doctrines
for some other message, or for some watered-down form of the
message, then it will gradually be leaven that leavens the whole
ministry. That's why we want to keep Christ
at the center, and we want the gospel to inform. It's the DNA. It's the genome. And so he says,
I want you guys to know in Galatia that I took Titus with me. He's
a Greek and the apostles did not circumcise him. They do not
believe that circumcision is necessary for salvation. That's
what the false teachers were saying. You must be circumcised
and keep the law. You must keep the commandments,
the traditions of the father. Celebrate the feast of Israel. You must do these things in order
to be saved. And he said, if you go that direction,
he warns them, listen, Christ will profit you nothing. If you
add to Christ, then Christ profits you nothing. It has to be Christ
alone. And incidentally, if you want
to know about the gospel, Over here, you can see the five solas
represent the doctrines that are implicit in the message of
the gospel over here. And as we're coming up on Reformation
Sunday, the last Sunday of October, we want to take special note
of what we have received from the apostles and the reformers,
and that we cling to it and pass it on. And so he tells them that
even Titus, And then he says, yet because of false brothers,
yet because of false brothers secretly brought in, who slipped
in to spy out our freedom that we have in Christ Jesus, so that
they might bring us into slavery, to whom we did not yield in submission
for even a moment, so that the truth of the gospel might be
preserved for you. When this took place, Paul was
not, he had not yet gone on his first missionary journey. The
churches in Galatia didn't exist at this time. But when he met
with the apostles, there were those present who were Judaizers,
who were attempting to corrupt the gospel, who were trying to
enslave people to keeping the law as a means of being saved. And Paul says that we, me, and
Peter and James and John and the other elders and apostles
in Jerusalem. We did not have Titus circumcised
and we did not submit for one moment to these false teachers.
We rebuked them, we withstood them, we fought against them,
we were a unit. We battled false teaching together. The other apostles and myself
stood together against the false teachers that are trying to infiltrate
and destroy your faith." He says, they and I teach the same gospel. See, that's the point here of
gospel authentication. The gospel he preached is the
gospel the apostles preached in Jerusalem as well. And he
says, we didn't yield to them In fact, he says, everything
we talked about did not add anything new. They didn't nuance Paul's
gospel. They didn't inform Paul's gospel
in any way. The gospel that Paul preached
was the complete gospel, and it matched perfectly with the
gospel being preached by Peter in Jerusalem. And then he says
there in verse 7, On the contrary, when they saw
that I had been entrusted with the gospel to the uncircumcised,
the nations, the Gentiles, just as Peter had been entrusted with
the gospel to the circumcised, for he who worked through Peter
for his apostolic ministry to the circumcised worked also through
me for mine to the Gentiles. And when James, Cephas, who's
Peter, and John, who seemed to be pillars And before I forget,
I need to just point out that word pillars, because he's describing
the church as the temple of God. In visiting the church, he visited
the spiritual temple of God, and these apostles were pillars
in the church. Christ is the cornerstone, he
tells us. But these men were pillars, the
apostolic ministry in the church. They laid the foundation. And
that's what we read in Ephesians. And so he says here, they were
pillars they perceived, they discerned. The gospel gives us
discernment so that we know the truth when we see it, and we
also recognize what is false. In the last few years, we have
a new pastor that had come into this area. He's in a church that
I would regard as preaching a false gospel, but there are some saved
people in it as well. He wanted to get in on some of
the Bible studies that we were doing here, and he wanted to
talk with me and so forth. And I did talk with him, and
we spent a little time together. But I recognized right away that
his doctrine was strange, and it had been infiltrated by this
same kind of idea that Christ plus something, in his case,
Christ plus baptism. And I told him, I said, I do
not want you to come to any Bible studies at Anniston Bible Church. I do not want to give him a voice
to talk to our congregation, to the sheep that God has put
under the care of the elders here. And just our last pastor's
fellowship, I found that he'd been visiting some of the other
guys as well. And for some of them, it took
two or three times before they said, no, no, you are teaching
something different. And I said, that's what I told
him as well. The gospel gives us discernment
to know the truth and to know what is false. to be able to
tell the difference. And so he says, they perceived,
because they had gospel mindset, he says, they perceived the grace
that was given to me. They gave the right hand of fellowship
to Barnabas and me that we should go to the Gentiles and they to
the circumcised. Only they ask us to remember
the poor. There was a tremendous famine
in the land in Jerusalem at this time. the church was suffering
there. And we read in the book of Acts
how Paul and Barnabas carried relief to them, I think at the
close of chapter nine it is. And so he carried relief to them. He was very much concerned for
helping the church there that had been suffering. And he says,
they gave us the hand of fellowship. They said, your ministry is Christ's
ministry. Your ministry is like our ministry. Your ministry is from God. Your
message is from God. We authenticate your message. You know, what the Lord did here
was so marvelous. I would like for us to look over
here at Ephesians as you look, because Paul is describing for
us here how the gospel shaped the church of Jew and Gentile.
And I think this is an important passage for us to read. So if
you'll turn to Ephesians 2, we're going to look at verse 11, chapter
2 and verse 11 of Ephesians. Paul writes, therefore remember
that at one time you Gentiles in the flesh, called the uncircumcision
by what is called the circumcision, which is made in the flesh by
hands, doesn't make anybody a believer. They had confidence in it, but
it doesn't make anybody believe it. Made in the flesh by hands.
Verse 12, remember that you were at that time separated from Christ,
alienated from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers to the
covenants of promise. Having no hope and without God
in the world. But now in Christ Jesus, you
who once were far off, Gentiles, outside of Judaism, you who once
were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ.
for he himself is our peace who has made us both one. He has made Jew and Gentile one
and broken down in his flesh the dividing wall of hostility
that existed between Jew and Gentile." There was an actual
wall in the temple confines that separated the court of the Gentiles
from the court of the Jews. And he says that Christ, by his
blood in his flesh, so he's speaking about the cross here, he has
broken down this wall of hostility by abolishing the law of commandments
expressed in ordinances. Be circumcised. Keep the law
to be saved. That he might create in himself
one new man. He's talking about the body of
Christ, the church. In place of the two, no longer
Jew and Gentile, so making peace, and might reconcile us both to
God in one body, how? Through the cross, thereby killing
the hostility. So this Jew-Gentile question
is something that was settled at the cross. But it took the
church years to apply the cross to the relationships between
Jew and Gentile. All this is very important to
the story that we're into. And he came and preached peace
to you who are far off. and peace to those who were near.
For through him we both have access in one spirit to the Father."
They have the one spirit, they have one father. So then you
are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are fellow citizens with
the saints, members of the household of God. built on the foundation
of, yes, the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the
cornerstone in whom the whole structure being joined together
grows into a holy temple in the Lord. In him you also are being
built together into a dwelling place for God, the Holy Spirit. God has formed the church through
the person and work of Christ into a spiritual temple of which
Peter, James, and John were pillars there in Jerusalem. The apostles
were part of the foundation of this temple that God was building,
and he had made out of many peoples. He had made one people, the one
people of God, Jew and Gentile. He had destroyed the hostility.
He had removed the dividing wall. All of this was accomplished
by the carpenter on the cross. Colossians says that he took
the writing of commandments that was against us, that is all the
demands of the law, and he nailed it to his cross. That's what
it says. If you wonder when Jesus did a carpenter thing, he nailed
it to his cross and took it away. I love that song, Wood and Nails,
if you've not heard it, Wood and Nails, how he built the church
and he did it with wood and nails. Marvelous what Christ accomplished.
Now, that brings us back to Galatians because, man, look at this. Isn't it great? One body, one
family, one Lord, and the apostles are united. They stand strong
against the false teachers. I mean, everything is settled,
right? I mean, it is so good. It can't go wrong here. which
is gospel altercation. An altercation is a public disagreement. Now before I tell you about this,
he tells us that Peter came to Antioch. So after this story
has been told that we have went over about Paul's life, Peter
comes to Antioch. Now you need to know a little
bit about Antioch. So Antioch, had a real mix of
Jew and Gentile. Many synagogues there, and many
Gentiles, non-Jews, had been converted to Judaism. And in
fact, it was cosmopolitan. It was one place where it seemed
like Jews and Gentiles were fairly well connected because of this.
And when Stephen was killed, Paul didn't know he was serving
the gospel at that time. But Stephen's death caused the
saints to be scattered all over, and some went up to Cilicia,
and some went to other parts, and when they came to Antioch,
they preached the gospel not only to Jews, but also to Gentiles,
where there was a real mix here. And they were saved. And the
church began to be formed from the very beginning out of Jew
and Gentile who were born again. They heard about it in Jerusalem
that Gentiles were being saved. They sent Barnabas up, and Barnabas
saw the grace of God. He was just amazed at what God
was doing there among Jews and Gentiles. After he ministered
there for a while, he knew he needed help. So he went to Tarsus
and got Paul and brought him, and he and Paul labored there
for months and months and months. They were teaching in the church,
they were building the church. This was the great missionary
church, Antioch. Well, Peter came up, and man,
Peter is on fire with this too. We're all gospel people. and
he is enjoying table fellowship. The Jews and Gentiles are eating
together, and he is not following Jewish dietary laws. That has
been abrogated, fulfilled in Christ, right? And you can read
about that in numerous places in scripture, Mark chapter seven.
You can read it in 1 Timothy chapter four, the first five
or six verses there, and other places in scripture. If you can
imagine this, They're sitting down to eat, and Peter is saying,
I want another helping of that bacon-wrapped shrimp, right? Amen, yeah, I got you, Michael,
on that. He is eating this food that only
Gentiles would eat, and he's eating it with Gentiles, which
was not allowed under the traditions of the Jews, that you had to
be separate. And so he's having a great time.
But then there are some messengers that come from James, whether
they actually brought a message from him, they represented an
opinion. And they came up to Antioch as
well, and they're shocked by this throwing away of the Mosaic
law, this casting aside of the distinction between Jew and Gentile. They are shocked by this. And
they are warning Peter that the people in Jerusalem are not going
to like this. They may have told him, you're
going to lose your ministry with them by what you're doing. They
may have said that. They may have said, you are abandoning
something that you kept your whole life. Whatever it was,
it was fear, we read, fear of the circumcision. They were the
circumcision party. You can read about them in Acts
chapter 15. They were the circumcision party.
They came up, and their presence there caused Peter to withdraw
from the Gentiles. He's not ordering bacon-wrapped
shrimp anymore, and he's eating kosher, and he's only eating.
And in fact, his presence there, his influence there, causes other
Jews to withdraw as well. The church is starting to crumble
apart. And not only that, but sweet
Barnabas. This is important, but it's a
lesson for Bob. A lesson for Bob, a lesson for
you, because Barnabas did not have the gospel discernment that
Paul had about this situation. He should have. He should have,
but he was carried along by people he respected. And no matter how
respected people are, we need to make our decisions based on
the gospel. We need to be wise in the gospel
and in its application. And he's carried along too. Sweet
Barnabas separates from his brothers and sisters, and the church is
divided. And Paul is not having it, so
he says, Verse 11, but when Cephas came to Antioch, I opposed him
to his face, because he stood condemned. For before certain
men came from James, he was eating with the Gentiles. But when they
came, he drew back. He separated himself, fearing
the circumcision party. It was the fear of man. And the
rest of the Jews acted hypocritically along with him. So even Barnabas
was led astray by their hypocrisy. But when I saw that their conduct
was not in step with the truth of the gospel, I said to Cephas
before them all, if you, though a Jew, live like a Gentile and
not like a Jew, how can you force Gentiles to live like a Jew?
He says, Peter, you have got this all backwards. And what
you're doing here is doing great harm to the one body of Christ,
to the one family of God. You are rebuilding the wall of
hostility between Jew and Gentile. And of course, we know that Peter
took this rebuke to heart and repented, and that Barnabas repented,
even though he does not mention it here. And he goes on to give
us the doctrine of justification by faith, which I will do in
the coming days. But here's the lesson. The gospel
is the DNA of the church. The gospel gives us discernment. The gospel helps us to understand. If there's a person who denies
Christ, he's out. If a person confesses Christ
and believes the gospel, he's in. Whose sins are forgiven? Whose sins are not? The gospel
draws the line because it identifies who is the church. And everyone
who has been received by Christ must be received by the church. Amen.