Episode 119

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Published on:

7th Jul 2025

Freedom vs. Religious Control (Galatians 5)

What if the very system you trust to bring you closer to God is actually pulling you away from His grace—and true freedom is found somewhere you might not expect? In Galatians 5, Paul reminds us that true freedom comes not from religious rule-keeping or law-based performance, but from living by the Spirit through faith in Christ alone.

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Galatians 5 | True Freedom in Christ

Section 1: Stand Firm in Freedom (Galatians 5:1-6)

Galatians 5:1-6 (NLT)

Christ has truly set us free. Paul urges us to stay free and not get tied up again in slavery—this time, not slavery to old sinful habits, but to religious legalism. Both are equally destructive.

Many Mormons follow rules, believing this makes them justified before God. Paul, once a Pharisee, believed the same until he encountered Christ:

Philippians 3:7-9 (NLT): Paul calls his former religious achievements "garbage" compared to knowing Christ.

Relying on works, like circumcision in Paul’s day or LDS temple worthiness today, cuts people off from Christ and God's grace. True righteousness comes by faith alone.

Big Idea: Christ set us free—don’t return to a system of religious control.

Illustration: Jesus didn’t come to give us a new set of religious rules. He came to set us free (Matthew 11:28-30).

Section 2: The Danger of Legalism (Galatians 5:7-12)

Galatians 5:7-12 (NLT)

The Galatians were running well until false teachers led them astray, adding law-keeping to the gospel. Paul warns that even small false teachings spread like yeast.

Who holds Mormons back today? Consider the "Four Horsemen" of LDS control:

  1. LDS Leadership
  2. LDS Scriptures
  3. LDS Temple System (worthiness interviews, temple recommends)
  4. LDS Culture and Social Pressure

All these create a performance treadmill, keeping people from the simple gospel of grace.

Paul is blunt: False teachers deserve judgment.

Section 3: Freedom Isn’t a License to Sin (Galatians 5:13-15)

Galatians 5:13-15 (NLT)

Freedom from the law doesn’t mean freedom to indulge the sinful nature. It leads to loving and serving others.

Key Point: True freedom leads to love and service, not selfishness.

LDS Misconception: Evangelicals are often accused of "cheap grace."

Examples:

  • Bruce R. McConkie (Book: Mormon Doctrine (2nd ed., 1966), p. 671) : “One of the most pernicious heresies of modern Christendom is the concept that man is saved by grace alone... This concept, as interpreted by modern Christians, removes all the restraints which encourage personal righteousness and offers salvation to the sinner merely for confessing Christ.”
  • Spencer W. Kimbal (Book: The Miracle of Forgiveness (1969), p. 206) : “One of the most fallacious doctrines originated by Satan and propounded by man is that man is saved alone by the grace of God; that belief in Jesus Christ alone is all that is needed for salvation.”
  • True to the Faith (A Gospel Reference (Official LDS Manual, 2004, p. 77): “The phrase ‘after all we can do’(2 Nephi 25:23) teaches that effort is required on our part to receive the fulness of the Lord’s grace and be made worthy to dwell with him.”

Paul anticipates this: True gospel freedom produces holiness, not lawlessness (Romans 6:1-2).

Biblical Truth: The Holy Spirit empowers believers to live differently—not to earn salvation, but because we already have it.

Section 4: The Flesh vs. The Spirit (Galatians 5:16-26)

Galatians 5:16-23 (NLT)

The Christian life is Spirit-led, not law-driven. The Holy Spirit guides us, gives us new desires, and directs our lives.

Without the Spirit, we live in the "works of the flesh" (Gal 5:19-21): sexual immorality, jealousy, fits of anger, selfishness, etc.

With the Spirit, we see the "fruit of the Spirit" (Gal 5:22-23): love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.

Key Point: Fruit is evidence of a Spirit-led life—not a behavioral checklist for worthiness.

LDS Misunderstanding: Mormonism often presents the fruit as a checklist for earning God’s favor.

Biblical Application: True Christian living is not about trying harder but walking closer with Christ (Gal 5:25).

Galatians 5:24-26 (NLT)

Those who belong to Christ have already crucified their old sinful nature. This is positional truth—the old life is dead.

Now we walk in the Spirit daily—this is practical sanctification: living out the reality of what Christ has already done.

The LDS Contrast: No Finished Work, No Assurance

In Mormonism, justification and sanctification blur together. There’s no "it is finished" moment of assurance (John 19:30). Worthiness is always in question.

Example (Gospel Principles, Chapter 47): "We must strive continually to remain worthy…"

Key LDS mindset: Salvation is always future-oriented and uncertain.

In contrast:

  • Biblical Christianity offers freedom through faith in Christ.
  • True fruit is produced by the Holy Spirit, not by works.
  • Salvation is by grace alone, not grace "after all you can do."
  • Obedience flows from love, not fear or duty.
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About the Podcast

Unveiling Mormonism
Pulling Back the Curtain on the LDS Church
Join Ross Anderson and Bryan Dwyer, pastors with over 50 years of combined ministry experience in Utah, as they take a deep dive on everything Mormon – from theology to history to culture. New topic every Monday.

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Bryan Dwyer