Dethroning the FLESH That CHRIST May Be Manifest

“And they that are Christ’s have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts.”

— Galatians 5:24 (KJV)

This single verse should strike holy fear into the heart of every professing Christian. It is not a suggestion, not an ideal for the spiritual elite, but a declaration of fact about all who truly belong to Jesus: the flesh—its deep-seated affections and craving lusts—has been crucified. The old tyrant has been dethroned. Yet for many who bear the name of Christ, this remains a distant doctrine rather than a lived reality. The flesh still rules, the old self still sits enthroned, and the life of Jesus remains hidden rather than manifest.

The gospel is not only about forgiveness; it is about transformation grounded in union with Christ. Christ did not die merely to pardon us while leaving us enslaved to the very sin He conquered. In His death, we too were crucified with Him, so that the dominion of the old self might be broken. Having conquered sin, death, and the powers in our place and on our behalf, God counts that conquest as ours, so that through the death of His Son we stand before Him as more than conquerors (Romans 8:37). He died that “the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our mortal flesh” (2 Corinthians 4:10–11). Yet this manifestation is not automatic; it is worked out through the relentless, Spirit-enabled crucifixion of the flesh. Only as what was accomplished in Christ’s death is continually brought to bear upon the old self does the new life—Christ in us—rise, reign, and become visible.

The Irreconcilable Conflict

Paul lays bare the warfare in Galatians 5:17: “For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the other.” There is no truce, no compromise. The desires of the flesh are not neutral weaknesses; they are actively opposed to the Holy Spirit. Left unchecked, they produce manifest works: adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, hatred, strife, envyings, drunkenness, and the like (vv. 19–21). These are not occasional stumbles but the natural fruit of a life still governed by the old nature. A Christian may be tempted to evade this warning by claiming that such traits belong only to unbelievers and not to the regenerate. But Paul allows no such retreat; this warfare occurs within the believer himself.

And Paul’s warning is severe: those who practice such things “shall not inherit the kingdom of God” (v. 21). This is not a threat against true believers who grieve over remaining sin, but a diagnostic for false profession. If the works of the flesh still characterize a life, the crucifixion of verse 24 has not taken hold. The old man still rules.

A prime example of this is seen in 1 Corinthians 3:1–3, where believers were acting according to the flesh rather than by the Spirit, evidencing immaturity and failure to live in the reality of Christ’s crucifixion. Paul would not have repeatedly addressed the works of the flesh in Romans 8:13–14, Galatians 5, and other epistles if they were trivial or only applicable to unbelievers. James 3 further underscores this truth, showing how the tongue can betray the Spirit’s work when left unchecked, producing discord and sin within the Christian community—a clear sign that the stream of the heart is not flowing clean, but still releasing the stench of the old self that defiles the whole being (Mark 7:20; James 3:6).

It is precisely here that the circumcision of the heart, as Paul describes, stands valid and crucial: only by a heart truly cut off from the old nature and devoted to God can the streams of life flow clean, honoring the Spirit and reflecting the transformation already accomplished in Christ’s death. These warnings make clear that the old self must be reckoned dead, and that walking by the Spirit is the mark of genuine transformation. This reality calls for diligent, Spirit-enabled effort to put off what has already been crucified with Christ. If neglected, these dead things can fester, spreading corruption and the stench of decay throughout one’s life, defiling the whole being.

Having therefore these promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God.

– (2 Corinthians 7:1).

Yet in every regenerated heart, a new principle is planted—the seed of the Spirit’s fruit: love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance (vv. 22–23). This fruit is real, but it begins as seed. It does not burst into full maturity overnight. It requires cultivation: the systematic dethroning of the flesh through the washing of water by the Word, prayer, obedience, and surrender (Ephesians 5:26).

The Crucifixion That Must Become Experiential

Positionally, every believer has been crucified with Christ (Galatians 2:20; Romans 6:6). The old man was nailed to the cross with Jesus; its ruling power was broken. But this positional truth must become experiential reality. Paul does not merely recite doctrine when he declares, “I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me.” He speaks from the depth of personal encounter. The “I”—the self-centered, flesh-ruled ego—had died, and Christ’s life had become the animating force.

1 Peter 4:1–2 says explicitly:

Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind: for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin; That he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God.

This does not happen automatically. Spiritual maturity is a journey of growth, pruning, and yielding. We must daily take up the cross (Luke 9:23), reckon ourselves dead to sin (Romans 6:11), and by the Spirit put to death the deeds of the body (Romans 8:13). We sow to the Spirit through diligent engagement with Scripture, allowing it to expose and supplant the old affections. Only as we participate—cleansing ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit (2 Corinthians 7:1)—does the seed of the new life develop into full fruitfulness. We must replace the law of sin and death that still dwells in our members with the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus, allowing His Spirit to bring freedom, vitality, and obedience to bear in every part of our being—so that the life of Jesus may also be made manifest in our mortal flesh (2 Corinthians 4:10–11).

The body of sin (soma) is reckoned destroyed in Christ through His crucifixion (positional), yet its full essence will not be fully realized as vanquished until the discarding of the mortal tent, when the believer is fully glorified and the old creation is finally consummated. Until that day, the sarx—the flesh in which the law and sin dwell—must be continually put down through Spirit-enabled mortification and obedience (experiential).

The Refiner’s Fire and the Fullness of God

Our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, but temples must be purified before the glory descends. Just as a house has many rooms, the heart too contains chambers that may still harbor the old self. Like the refiner’s fire and fuller’s soap (Malachi 3:2–3), the Spirit sits to burn away the dross in every corner and thoroughly purge His floor, so that His glory may fill the entire temple. And this is precisely where the baptism with fire, which Jesus administers, comes in—refining, testing, and sanctifying every room of the heart through His Spirit – Luke 3:16. The cleansing must go deeper than outward behavior—into the spirit realm: hidden motives, pride, unbelief, self-will. Only a vessel emptied of self can be filled with all the fullness of God (Ephesians 3:19).

The deeper the death, the richer the life. As the dying of Jesus is borne in our bodies, His resurrection life breaks forth. The consolation of Christ—the comfort, strength, and intimate presence of the Comforter—increases in direct proportion to this inner crucifixion. Death works in us, but life in others (2 Corinthians 4:12). The world sees not us, but Him.

Where self is emptied, glory rests.

A Call to the Crucified Life

Believer, do not settle for a nominal Christianity where the flesh still reigns and Christ remains veiled. Examine yourself: Are the affections and lusts of the old nature being nailed daily to the cross? Is the fruit of the Spirit increasing? Can you say with growing authenticity, “Yet not I, but Christ liveth in me”?

The promise is staggering: Christ in you, the hope of glory (Colossians 1:27). But the path is the cross. Let the Refiner have His way. Yield to the Spirit’s sanctifying fire. Dethrone the flesh relentlessly, that Christ may be manifest gloriously.

He who began this good work will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ (Philippians 1:6).

He must increase, but I must decrease – John 3:30.

Press on, beloved.

The fullness awaits those who die that He might live.

 

You Want to Be Slaves Once More: The Shocking Pull of Bondage in the Heart of the Regenerate

“How can you turn back again to the weak and beggarly elemental spirits, whose slaves you want to be once more?”

Galatians 4:9 (RSV)

Pause on that question. Really pause.

Paul is not writing to pagans. He is writing to believers—people who know God and, even more astonishingly, are known by God. These are regenerated sons and daughters, heirs of the promise, people who have received the Spirit of the Son crying, “Abba! Father!” (Gal 4:6).

And yet Paul asks, in stunned grief: Why do you want to be slaves again?

Not “Why are you being deceived?”

Not “Why are you ignorant?”

But “Why do you desire this?”

The Greek is blunt: thelō douleuein—you want to be enslaved again. This is not accidental drift. This is volitional. This is desire.

That single phrase exposes something unsettling about the human soul even after new birth: regeneration imparts new life, but it does not instantly erase every inward pull toward bondage.

Slavery Feels Safer to the Old Self

Why would someone redeemed by Christ still feel a gravitational pull toward chains?

Because bondage offers what freedom threatens.

Slavery promises clear rules and predictable outcomes. It offers measurable righteousness and the illusion of control—something the flesh knows how to manage.

Freedom in the Spirit offers none of that. It demands raw trust. It exposes motives. It requires the relinquishment of self-mastery and a daily dependence on grace that feels far more dangerous than law.

Israel longed for Egypt’s leeks and garlic when the wilderness felt too uncertain. The Galatians, freshly liberated from idols, began to desire Torah-observance as their new ground of identity. Believers today drift toward systems, formulas, and performance metrics for the same reason: at least in Egypt we knew how life worked.

The elemental spirits (stoicheia) Paul warns against are not merely pagan idols “out there.” They are any principle of life organized apart from intimate sonship. Even religious law-keeping, when it becomes the ground of security and standing, belongs to the same family of bondage.

Paul’s shock is not that believers are tempted, but how quickly we exchange vulnerability for structure.

The Indwelling Threat: Romans 7 Removes Every Comfort Zone

Paul refuses to let us settle into complacency. In Romans 7 he speaks with brutal honesty:

“I find then a law, that, when I would do good, evil is present with me.” (Rom 7:21)

“I see another law in my members… bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members.” (Rom 7:23)

This is not pre-conversion chaos. This is the regenerate apostle—the renewed inner man—encountering a resident, opportunistic power still operating in the flesh.

Paul does not excuse sin. He distinguishes. There is an “I” that delights in God’s law, and there is an invasive principle that wages war against it.

The point is devastating and clarifying all at once: knowledge of God does not guarantee victory. Good intentions are not enough. Even God’s perfect law, when handled by the flesh, cannot restrain indwelling sin.

Romans 7 shatters three comforting illusions:

We are never “beyond” serious struggle.

Sincere desire does not guarantee obedience.

Self-confidence is not maturity—it is spiritual suicide.

Anyone who feels safely immune to sin’s sway has not understood Romans 7. Anyone who feels daily dependence has.

The Love of Egypt: Influence Can Become Captivity

That lingering love for Egypt is not mere nostalgia. It is a quiet reorientation of the heart away from sonship and back toward servitude.

The old powers no longer own the believer—but they can still influence, entice, and reclaim ground when left unchallenged. The flesh supplies the inclination. The elemental principles supply the framework. Neglect supplies the permission.

There is no neutral spiritual plateau. Either the Spirit is renewing the inner man day by day, or old habits, loves, and reflexes are silently reasserting themselves.

Paul’s command is therefore active: “Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh” (Gal 5:16). Not think. Not agree. Walk.

Sanctification is not optional maintenance. It is surgical cooperation with the Spirit’s fire. The fire does not punish—it purifies. It burns false dependencies, loosens emotional loyalties, and trains the senses to discern good and evil (Heb 5:14).

Avoid the fire, and Egypt stays warm inside the heart.

The Most Dangerous Bondage Wears Scripture

Of all the forms this pull can take, one is uniquely lethal: the desire to be under the law.

“Tell me, you who desire to be under the law, do you not hear the law?” (Gal 4:21)

Paul places this desire in the same family as every other slavery. It appeals to familiar instincts—structure, measurable righteousness, the flesh’s need to contribute.

But it is worse.

Pagan idolatry enslaves behavior while leaving a person obviously lost. Legalism attacks the very basis of union with Christ while persuading the person they are most faithful.

“You are severed from Christ, you who would be justified by the law; you have fallen away from grace” (Gal 5:4).

When law becomes identity, security, or standing, Christ is reduced to a supplement—an assistant to human effort. That is no Christ at all.

The allegory cuts deep: Hagar is Mount Sinai. Promise approached apart from promise produces slaves, not sons—even when wrapped in Scripture.

This is why Paul’s language turns fierce:

“I am afraid I have labored over you in vain” (Gal 4:11).

“I wish those who unsettle you would emasculate themselves!” (Gal 5:12).

This is not a side issue. It is a Christ-cutting issue.

The Mercy Beneath the Warning

Paul never ends in despair.

The agony of Romans 7 drives the cry: “O wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me…?”

Not what. Who.

“The law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has made me free from the law of sin and death” (Rom 8:2).

Freedom is not the absence of the indwelling threat. It is the presence of a greater Person.

And the anchor is not effort, but memory:

“Because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, ‘Abba! Father!’” (Gal 4:6)

The Spirit keeps saying it until we believe it: You are not slaves. You are sons.

The enemy within must never be trusted. But the Father who dwells within can always be trusted.

That truth keeps saints awake—and alive.