legalism

Christ Has Set Us Free From Legalism

1 December 2025

2.8 MINS

Intention

Legalism lurks in every human heart — but Christ died to free us from every form of it.

Scripture

“Therefore do not let anyone judge you by what you eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration or a Sabbath day. These are a shadow of the things that were to come; the reality, however, is found in Christ.” — Colossians 2:16–17

Reflection

Picture a child lying awake long past his bedtime, listening for the sound of his father arriving home. Light spills under the door as footsteps move closer. A shadow stretches across the floor, growing clearer with each step. The door opens, and his father walks in with arms ready for an embrace. Instead, the child keeps staring at the floor, fascinated by his father’s shadow instead of the man standing right there who loves him.

It’s a strange image, yet Paul suggests something similar was happening among the Colossians. They were captivated by shadows — festivals, food rules, sacred days — things that were never meant to hold their gaze. Jesus Christ stood before them, yet their attention was elsewhere.

That same drift still happens in our hearts. We can feel watched, judged, and pressured to measure our spiritual maturity by particular habits or opinions. Legalism slips in quietly, especially when we convince ourselves we’re doing it to please God. A small conviction becomes a rule, a rule becomes a standard, and a standard becomes the way we assess ourselves and everyone around us.

Paul wrote Colossians because believers were being drawn into a mix of worldly thinking and spiritual-sounding demands. They were told to avoid certain foods, observe certain festivals, pursue harsh forms of discipline, and treat personal visions as spiritual credentials. Paul gathers all of it under one banner: “self-imposed religion.” It looked serious and sounded holy, but it was leading them further from Christ, not closer.

Legalism gains strength when we confuse matters of obedience with matters of conscience. In His Word, God speaks clearly about holiness, compassion, purity, and much else besides. Scripture gives us many commands like “do not” and “put to death” and “put on,” drawing clear lines around His moral will. Yet, in many other areas, God is silent. In the silence is where He gives us room for wisdom — and difference. Legalism fills that space with demands. It insists others must live according to our conscience. It watches closely, expecting agreement, and quietly condemns those who don’t comply.

Into that confusion, Paul lifts our eyes to Jesus. “He cancelled the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands… nailing it to the cross” (Colossians 2:14). If Christ has dealt with every charge that was against us, why would we keep inventing new charges for one another? Jesus is the substance behind every impressive-looking shadow. Everything we need for salvation, identity and spiritual growth is found in Him.

Paul warns us of the dangers that grow when legalism takes root. Legalism causes us to miss the point entirely because it keeps us staring at shadows when Christ is the One standing before us. It breeds pride by creating an in-crowd and an out-crowd. It fractures the church and severs us from Christ our Head who gives us life and unity. It offers no power over the flesh because no rules can transform the human heart. And it denies the finished work of Jesus by suggesting there is still something left for us to add.

The gospel tells a far better story. Christ has nailed all our striving to His cross. He has delivered us from darkness and brought us into His kingdom of light, grace and love. When we cling to Him, we discover true freedom. We find the strength to obey God’s clear commands and humility to let others walk according to their God-given conscience. And we find the rest that comes from knowing Christ has done everything needed for our salvation.

The more we rest in Him, the less power legalism holds over us. The shadow fades when our gaze is fixed on Christ.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, thank You for cancelling my debt and setting me free. Reveal any legalism still hiding in my heart. Give me wisdom to walk in Your grace and humility to let others follow their conscience with joy. Help me cling to You, my all-sufficient Saviour.

___

Image courtesy of Pexels.

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7 Comments

  1. 5dd4c623b541696cd7c375d927af6ddff6659d694af96cc2133cf196314e3c97?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Andy 1 December 2025 at 6:59 am - Reply

    the church took some disconnected, obscure proclamations and formulated an entire intellectual universe for attacking and condemming homosexuality

    the movement consumed your incredible message and drove away loving caring people who do not meet your standards or who oppose them as cruel and out of touch with that central message of love

    every time the church flexes anger or intolerance, a loving christian feels a doubt or resolves to be something else, something better

    • f910f8648b50864a0a4fa9cff6838335a9df65757870ba46526d3fd0fd4d5768?s=54&d=mm&r=g
      Ian Moncrieff 1 December 2025 at 1:47 pm - Reply

      Hello Andy. I see your kind and caring heart in your words.
      I wonder though, have you lost sight of Holy Spirit’s conviction taught in James 5 v 19 & 20?
      The truth about homosexuality is very clear in God’s word. One example is 1 Corinthians 6 v 9 – it is sin.

      To love homosexuals enough to tell them that, is what we Christians should do – as Jesus does in Revelation 2 v 14, and as revealed in Mark 7 v 20 to 23.
      The good news is that homosexuals can be forgiven just as much as all the other sinners listed in 1 Corinthians 6 v 9 to 11.

  2. 5dd4c623b541696cd7c375d927af6ddff6659d694af96cc2133cf196314e3c97?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Andy 1 December 2025 at 7:30 am - Reply

    kurt, im hetrosexual
    so is my wife of 20 years and my two children
    we have gay friends, we have straight ones
    i know all sorts of people from different cultures and religions,
    i grew up in the suburbs with all sorts of kids, met their families, ate their food
    played soccer with the guys i went to church with
    i had the quintessential aussie experience, i still do

    this place hasnt changed that much, australia makes australians of us all eventually

    i started out as a paperboy, worked all sorts of jobs that let me meet people and did mostly unskilled manual work with other poor people

    immigrants, the mentally unstable, criminals, the illiterate, drug users, ignorant and genius swaggies

    i was encouraged to better myself by john green a c of c pastor and john steinbeck, a writer

    i attended university because it gave me the knowlege to go out and more effectively help people
    i becamed a registered nurse and served 30 years with the mentally ill, rural poor, drug addiction and inpatient care of the elderly and grossly disabled

    i thought it was cool they were paying me

    what compelled me?
    honestly?
    it was those words, some of them only heard or read once, maybe from mum, maybe from some stranger but you knew where it came from

    i remain compelled and the words flow and you can see the truth in them

    i call for gentleness and caring and an end to hostility in a sea of annoyance and pettyness and blamelaying

  3. 012b5d581a4ca46f6c90e05b0731147a597d555b00d395534a265f7a5a4d7365?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Pauline Tondl 1 December 2025 at 10:48 am - Reply

    Hey Kurt, thanks so much for this discipling article pointing to Christ’s truth and grace in abundance for whoever will accept Him.
    May every reader of it be refreshed anew in the hope, joy and peace that come with setting our hearts and minds on Jesus Christ alone.
    Praise be to Him for being sufficient for all our needs at all times.

  4. 649ac95822475362db98c73b9cc3fa5a408c7b10067b91a5065a2f73f4c9cfe6?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Simon 1 December 2025 at 1:44 pm - Reply

    How then would you interpret 1 John 1:9?

  5. f910f8648b50864a0a4fa9cff6838335a9df65757870ba46526d3fd0fd4d5768?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Ian Moncrieff 1 December 2025 at 1:51 pm - Reply

    Thank you Kurt for making me more aware of the subtleties of the sin of legalism.

    I especially love the solution you enumerated:
    “When we cling to Jesus, we discover true freedom. We find the strength to obey God’s clear commands and humility to let others walk according to their God-given conscience.
    And we find the rest that comes from knowing Christ has done everything needed for our salvation”.

  6. 5088d005092eb79d788d2488fd329c398f9d4ca058f62ed38e136b35c84f504d?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Jon D 1 December 2025 at 2:35 pm - Reply

    God has set clear standards in His Word on the way the Church is to be structured, the roles of men and women, what should and shouldn’t be tolerated, how we should speak and act, modesty in dressing along with other clear instructions.
    Unfortunately in the ecumenical church world today and the liberal “we are free to do what we want” and the “it depends how you interpret it” crowds anything that even suggests that God has in His Word given clear instructions on those things meets the cry of “oh but your being legalistic, Jesus freed us from following rules and ways, every day is the Lords day, don’t judge people”. If anyone can say that the Bible all through the New Testament doesn’t clearly show that God has requirements upon how He is to be worshiped, how we should act, speak, conduct ourselves around His code of Christian conduct and living then they are not reading a real Bible and are snubbing their nose at the God of all creation. The Old Testament laws and ceremonies were in many ways done away with through Christ, but to think we are now unshackled to do as we wilt and interpret the Holy Scripture in our own individual ways ignoring the clear instructions given to us to follow and keep us from straying into our own wills and not Gods is folly on a grand scale.
    Many say “oh but they were for back then in their culture not ours”. So we for some unknown reason now have so advanced that the instructions in the New Testament given under direct influence from the Holy Spirit are now void!?
    We are better than them? More Holy? No longer needing the Bible, Gods, Christ’s guidance? We do our own will now and make up our own manual of conduct?
    Preposterous and blasphemous. Ecumenicalism at its finest rejecting Gods Word and replacing it with ones own.

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