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The Five-fold Function of Law (Romans 7:7–13)

The Five-fold Function of Law (Romans 7:7–13)

Published 4 hours ago
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A simple “No” can light up something in us that we didn’t even know was there. Tell people not to feed the bears, and suddenly the bears look hungry. Put up a “stay off the grass” sign, and the lawn starts calling your name. We use that everyday tension to unpack Romans 7 and a hard truth: God’s law doesn’t create evil, but it does expose how deeply our hearts resist limits, and how quickly forbidden things can feel irresistible.

We talk through Paul’s own story of being confident, moral, and deeply religious, only to be brought to zero when the commandment truly lands and he meets the Lawgiver. That moment doesn’t just reveal “mistakes,” it reveals a condition. From there we face the deception of sin head-on: the promises of satisfaction that never last, the illusion of safety, the myth of secrecy, the rewriting of shame, and the false security that says grace means nothing really matters. If you’ve ever thought, “It’ll be different for me,” this will hit close to home.

We also make the case that the law is holy, righteous, and good because it reveals God’s character, but it cannot heal what it diagnoses. The law works like an X-ray, not a cure, pushing us away from self-righteousness and toward redemption at Calvary rather than confidence at Sinai. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the biggest “forbidden fruit” temptation you’ve seen play out in real life.

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