The Gospel and New Life
Sermon Big Idea:
The cross frees us from the world and gives us a new life that extends far beyond it.
Sermon Outline:
- THE COUNTERFEIT LIFE (6:11-13)
- THE CRUCIFIED LIFE (6:11-14)
- THE NEWLY CREATED LIFE (6:15-16)
- THE MARKED LIFE (6:17-18)
Sermon Overview:
In Poway, California, Pastor Jason begins by identifying a universal human struggle: the instinct to boast. From childhood races to modern social media feeds, we naturally crave the approval of others by highlighting our achievements and status. This outward "boasting" is often a mask for inward insecurity and a desperate search for acceptance. However, as the Apostle Paul concludes his letter to the Galatians, he offers a radical redirection of this instinct. He suggests that the problem isn't the act of boasting itself, but rather the object of it. Instead of boasting in ourselves, we are called to boast exclusively in the cross of Jesus Christ.
A primary warning in the message focuses on the danger of "counterfeit Christianity." Paul’s opponents in Galatia sought the benefits of Jesus without the sacrifice of the cross, pushing for outward rituals like circumcision to gain social standing and avoid persecution. Today, this persists in "progressive" or "filtered" movements that hollow out the gospel, treating Jesus as a mere moral example rather than a substitutionary savior. Authentic Christianity is inherently offensive to human pride because the cross tells us we cannot save ourselves; it unmasks our empty religious performance and confronts our self-sufficiency with a gift we could never earn.
Paul the Apostle then explores the "crucified life," showing how the cross is a multidimensional experience with "triple crucifixion." First is the crucifixion of Jesus for our sins; second is the crucifixion of the world’s system of values to the believer; and third is the believer’s own death to the world's influence. This isn't just a theological concept but a daily reality. To live the crucified life means being severed from the world's system of approval and reordering our ambitions. It is an ongoing process of dying to self-interest so that we might truly live for Christ, regardless of the social cost.
Transitioning from death to life, the message highlights that the cross is the gateway to "new creation." Paul dismisses old religious debates, stating that neither outward rituals nor their absence matters—only being a new creation in Christ. This new life is not something we merely wait for in eternity; it has "broken into" the present age. Every act of grace, every burden carried for another, and every moment we choose Christ over worldly approval is a small "eruption" of God’s future kingdom appearing here and now. We are invited to participate in a new category of humanity defined by freedom and divine purpose.
Finally, Pastor Jason concludes with the concept of the "marked life." Just as Paul bore physical scars from his devotion to Jesus, believers today bear "marks" of authenticity. These marks may not be physical wounds, but they are found in changed friendships, refused compromises, and invisible service that costs us something. These scars tell a story of belonging to Jesus that words alone cannot. The message ends as the letter began—with grace. While the crucified life is costly, it is sustained by an unending, redeeming grace that offers a life far more substantial than anything the world can provide.
