Galatians 5:5
"For through the Spirit, by faith, we ourselves eagerly wait for the hope of righteousness."
The whole concept is, how does one establish righteousness before God. The Judaizer party (Jewish legalists who infiltrated the Galatian churches) were making the rounds among the new Christian communities, trying to entangle them again into the bondage of the flesh locked yoke of "the law". They insisted that Gentile believers needed to adopt elements of the Mosaic Law; especially circumcision and other works of the law, to truly be right with God and complete their salvation.
In other words, the Judaizers sought to manufacture their own righteousness now through law-keeping, but Paul says believers don’t strive to earn or establish it, we rest in Christ’s righteousness and look forward in hope, empowered by the Spirit.
If you're still uncertain about this truth, answer this simple question:
How can you be in fellowship with God if you're unrighteous?
There are really only two answers to that question.
1. Say, "these are the rules for being righteous, X,Y,Z." And everytime you get one of these right you get a gold star, which entitles you to claim communion with the Holy One. And at the end of each day you collect and store up all your gold stars and keep that record of your relationship with God's law. This collection then becomes your ticket to ride on the road to righteousness and fellowship with God.
But what comes of your ticket, and your trip, if even one gold star slot isn't completed? What if you have an entire book of gold stars but one page is missing just one gold star because on that day you really messed up?
James 2:10
"For whoever keeps the whole law but fails in one point has become guilty of all of it."
One missing star, one stumble, one moment of anger equated to murder in the heart, one impure thought, and the entire record crumbles. The law isn’t a partial-credit program; it’s all or nothing.
What then?
Are you righteous?
Obviously not. You've violated the whole law by not keeping it all.
2. Be accounted as righteous through the righteousness of Jesus. Righteous because you believe. This depends upon and is predicated on God's righteousness. Through faith you are given the right to be called sons of God. We’re adopted as sons and daughters, given the Spirit as a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance, and brought into true fellowship, now and forever.
And what Paul is saying here today in this chapter of Galatians is you can't do both. You can't be given the gift of faith which works in love, and adopt the life of striving after fulfilling the points of the law.
Fellowship with a holy God demands perfect righteousness, because as Habakkuk 1:13 declares, "His eyes are too pure to look on evil, and He cannot tolerate wrongdoing."
Attempting to add law-keeping to faith for righteousness, severs us from Christ and causes a fall from grace.
So you're saying you can fall from grace? Does this mean a true believer can lose their salvation, "fall from grace," and be eternally severed from Christ?
The overwhelming testimony of Scripture, and the careful context here, points to no. "Fallen from grace" means falling away from the principle or sphere of grace as the basis for justification and living. Paul is speaking to the ideas that capture the thoughts of the people. Thoughts that have always been the same throughout the history of man. Thoughts that are rooted in the past and persist even now. These are the age old thoughts that drift back toward self-reliance, performance, and legalism rather than resting fully in God’s unmerited favor.
These age old thoughts were founded in the garden in the very beginning. Self-justification, autonomy, and earning your own way didn’t start with the Judaizers in Galatia or even with the Pharisees. They were founded in the garden itself, in Genesis 3, at the very dawn of human rebellion. It's always been about dethroning God and enthroning yourself.
In the garden the serpent questioned God’s Word ("Did God really say…?" ), and sowed doubt in God’s goodness. He said, "God knows that when you eat…you will be like God", and dangled the ultimate lure...moral independence.
"You will be like God, knowing good and evil"
You'll be living on your own terms, defining right and wrong apart from God. You'll be the arbiter of righteousness rather than receiving it from the Creator. Adam and Eve’s fall wasn’t mere disobedience; it was an attempt to establish their own righteousness by grasping autonomy to satisfy their desires. They rejected God’s boundaries, and sought to become their own gods, thereby giving themselves the right to decide what is right.
The result?
Shame, hiding, blame-shifting, and permanent rupture in fellowship with God.
That is, permanent until God makes a way. Even in judgment, grace breaks through. Right there in the garden, God doesn’t abandon them to their self-made ruin. He pronounces the so called "protoevangelium"; the first gospel promise, in Genesis 3:15:
"I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel."
The serpent’s apparent victory would ultimately be temporary; the woman’s Seed (Jesus Christ) would deliver the fatal blow. The rupture wasn’t final because God, in His sovereign grace, initiated redemption. This was the beginning of the good news. And the autonomy they grasped, leading to bondage, is reversed by the gospel.
This garden scene set the stage for everything that followed; the law, the Judaizing party, and our daily battles with those persistent thoughts of self-justification. And the serpent still whispers autonomy today: "Define your own truth, earn your own standing, be your own god." But the Word of God destroys all these myths by casting down that serpent, and crushing his head with the cross.
Those nails that pierced Jesus' hands were nails in Satan's coffin. They were the decisive blows that nailed shut the serpent’s ambitions, sealing his doom in the coffin of defeat. The same autonomy that led to shame and hiding in Eden is undone when we look to the crucified and risen Christ, clothed not in fig leaves of our own making, but in His righteousness alone.
Every drop of blood Jesus shed was slamming the door shut on the rebellion of Satan. The serpent who once dangled godlikeness as a lure now lies crushed under the foot of the true God-man who humbled Himself to the point of death, and was exalted above every name.
Praise God!
Hallelujah!
The serpent still hisses today, tempting us toward self-definition, performance, and independence from grace. But every time we rest in Christ’s finished work, refusing to grasp our own righteousness, we participate in that crushing victory.
The cross didn’t just pay for our sin; it demolished the lie that we could ever be our own gods and live by our own terms.
All our gold stars are worthless.
Why?
Because we gave them to ourselves. Not because the effort was small or insincere, but because they were self-awarded, self-manufactured, and self-glorifying. And there is the rub.
Dwell on these things today.
And do well by having faith in the One who is righteous. The One who covers you with HIS righteousness earned by HIS perfection, and HIS defeat of evil.
Amen?