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Index
Publication Details
PREFACE
INTRODUCTION
LAW AND GRACE
Paul’s letter to the Galatians
The letter to the Hebrews
Law and grace in church history
The law and legalism
Grace
THE PURPOSE OF THE LAW
The law in the teaching of Jesus
The law in the teaching of Paul
The law in legalism today
Evangelical/Pentecostal taboos
Pulpit punishments
The peoples traditions
Performance Christians
Unfulfilled expectations
The charismatic drama
Man made revival preaching
“Discipleship covering”
“Holiness teaching”
THE GRACE OF GOD IN JESUS CHRIST
The nature of grace
1. Grace is unmerited favour (Romans 4.4)
2. Grace is a free gift (Romans 5.15)
3. Grace is grounded in the freedom of God’s sovereignty and election (Ephesians 1.3‑8)
4. His grace is based on the work of Christ
5. God’s justifying grace is instantaneous and eternal
6. Grace cannot be mixed with anything else
7. Grace can only be truly understood as something extreme and extravagant on the part of God (Ephesians 1.6; 2.8)
Our response of grace
The superabundance of grace
The similarities between Christ and Adam
The contrasts between Adam and Christ
The inequality, or one‑sidedness of the contrast
The supremacy of grace
The Fruit of Grace
Our position in Christ
Our experience in Christ
THE NATURE OF CHRISTIAN FREEDOM
Introduction
I Corinthians 8-10
The historical context
The Corinthian argument
The outline of 1 Corinthians 8.1-11.1
A summary of Paul’s argument
Drawing lessons from 1 Corinthians 8.1-11.1
Romans 14:1-15:13
What the text teaches
Concluding principles
BIBLIOGRAPHY
FOOTNOTES
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