The Danger of Legalism
As Seventh-day Adventist Church believers, we cherish God’s law. We believe the Ten Commandments still matter, that obedience is important, and that God calls His people to holy living. But whenever people take truth seriously, there is always a danger of drifting into legalism—quietly beginning to trust in obedience instead of trusting completely in Jesus.
Legalism often begins subtly. We may never say out loud that we are earning salvation, but sometimes we act as though God loves us more when we perform well and less when we fail. We can start measuring spirituality by outward behavior while forgetting that salvation has always been a gift of grace.
A powerful thought experiment is to imagine standing before God in judgment. Every action, every hidden motive, every careless word is revealed before a perfectly holy God. In that moment, what would give us confidence? Our Sabbathkeeping? Our diet? Church attendance? Bible knowledge? Good behavior?
None of those things can erase sin.
The reality is that even our best obedience is imperfect. The law is holy and good, but its purpose is not to save us—it reveals our need for a Savior. The law is like a mirror: it shows the stain, but it cannot wash us clean. Only Jesus can do that.
That is why our only hope in the judgment is the perfect righteousness of Christ. Jesus lived the life we could never live and died the death we deserved. When we place our faith in Him, His perfect record stands in place of our broken one. We are accepted by God not because we performed flawlessly, but because Jesus did.
This does not make obedience unimportant. In fact, grace produces deeper obedience than legalism ever could. A heart transformed by Christ desires to obey Him out of love, gratitude, and surrender—not out of fear or an attempt to earn salvation. Obedience becomes the fruit of salvation, not the root of it.
The closer we come to Jesus, the less confidence we place in ourselves and the more confidence we place in Him. Like Paul, we learn to say that we want to “be found in Him, not having my own righteousness” (Philippians 3:9).
Our safety is not in trying harder to save ourselves. Our safety is in clinging daily to Jesus, who alone is righteous enough to stand before the Father on our behalf.
Prayer
Father, thank You that my salvation does not rest on my imperfect efforts but on Jesus’ perfect righteousness. Keep me from pride, comparison, and legalism. Teach me to obey You from a heart filled with love and gratitude. Help me trust completely in Christ as my only hope in the judgment. Amen.
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