Man-made rules can feel “spiritual,” but they quietly steal joy and replace grace with performance. Dr. Michael Youssef exposes the trap of legalism and points you back to the only hope that saves and sustains: Christ’s righteousness, not yours.
Do you feel constantly troubled by your sin—driven to create new “lines in the sand” just to feel good enough? In today’s episode of the MY Devotional Podcast, Dr. Michael Youssef warns that when we try to earn God’s acceptance, we trade Gospel freedom for spiritual exhaustion—shackling ourselves with legalism and elevating our own rules to the level of God’s commands.
Jesus confronted this very mindset in the Pharisees, who were meticulous about external religious behavior while neglecting the weightier matters God desires—mercy, faithfulness, and justice (Matthew 23:23). Their outward appearance looked impressive, but Christ exposed the inner reality: hypocrisy and emptiness (Matthew 23:27–28). Dr. Youssef explains that legalism always leads to discontentment because it makes salvation feel like “grace plus something”—church attendance, rituals, moral checklists, reputation, or performance.
But the Gospel is better: Jesus did it all on the cross. Peace with God comes by grace through faith—God’s gift, not our achievement—so no one can boast (Ephesians 2:8–9). If a legalistic mindset has shifted your focus from God’s grace to man-made rules, this devotional calls you to repent of self-righteousness and rest in Christ’s finished work.
Prayer: Father, thank You for Your grace. Help me to be on guard against legalism in my life, allowing You to sanctify me from the inside out instead of trying to change myself from the outside in. I pray in the name of Jesus. Amen.
“For sin shall no longer be your master, because you are not under the law, but under grace” (Romans 6:14).
Learn more in Dr. Michael A. Youssef’s sermon series Got Freedom?: LISTEN NOW