Justification
by Faith Alone
The article of a Standing or Falling Church
We
looked at the doctrine of sin and depravity for two weeks. It is only after we
understand the sinfulness of mankind do we become able to understand how any
human can be justified before God.
God
is holy. Only holy subjects can address him and claim his presence.
Justification is a one-time act of God whereby He declares us to be righteous.
Note, it is not saying He makes us holy, but declares us to be
holy--justification by faith alone deals with our legal standing before God,
the Judge of the Universe.
To
make us holy is a different matter. That will occur at the end of this age or
when God calls for true believers in death when we are remade to be like Jesus.
Justification
is not the infusion of grace into us through obedience. It addresses our
standing only. It does not have anything to do with our spiritual state,
although it lays the foundation for the work of sanctification from start to
finish.
For
whom is this message?
For
all, even for the ungodly. Rom 4:5 tells us that it is God who justifies the
ungodly. So, if you look at your inner life and find no godliness, this message
is for you.
This
message is for those who have been justified by faith to remind you of God's
grace in declaring you to be what you are not in reality--godly.
Justification is the declaring of a person to be just or
righteous. It is a legal term signifying acquittal, a fact that makes it
unpalatable to many in our day. We tend to distrust legalism and thus we
dismiss anything that savors of a legalistic approach. We should be clear that
our hesitation was not shared by the biblical writers. In their day it was
axiomatic that a wealthy and important citizen would not be treated in a law
court in the same way as an insignificant person. Indeed this was sometimes
written into the statutes and, for example, in the ancient Code of Hammurabi it
is laid down that if a citizen knocked out the tooth of another citizen his own
tooth should be knocked out. But if the victim was a vassal it sufficed to pay
a small fine. Nobody expected strict justice in human tribunals but the
biblical writers were sure that God is a God of justice. Throughout the Bible
justice is a category of fundamental importance.
It mattered to the biblical writers that God is a God is a God of
perfect justice, a truth expressed in Abraham's question, "Will not the
Judge of all the earth do right?" (Gen 18:25). God
can be relied on to act in perfect justice and without giving preference to the
wealthy and the highly placed in our human societies. "The Lord takes his
place in court; he rises to judge the people. The Lord enters into judgment
against the elders and leaders of his people" (Isa 3:13-14).
Over and over the punishment of evil is put in legal terms (Exod 6:6; 7:4) and
specifically Israel's sin is brought out with the use of legal imagery (Micah 6:1-2).
Accordingly it is not surprising that salvation is often viewed in
legal terms. The basic question in all religion is, "How can sinful people
be just (i.e., be justified) before the holy God?" Justification is a
legal term with a meaning like "acquittal"; in religion it points to
the process whereby a person is declared to be right before God. That person
should be an upright and good person, but justification does not point to
qualities like these. That is rather the content of sanctification.
Justification points to the acquittal of one who is tried before God. In both
the Old Testament and the New the question receives a good deal of attention
and in both it is clear that people cannot bring about their justification by
their own efforts. The legal force of the terminology is clear when Job exclaims,
"Now that I have prepared my case, I know I will be vindicated" (Job 13:18).
Justification (dikaiosis [])
is connected linguistically with righteousness (dikaiosune []); in the first century it is clear
that all the words with this root were concerned with conformity to a standard
of right. And in Scripture it is not too much to say that righteousness is
basically a legal term. The law that mattered was, of course, the law of God,
so that righteousness signified conformity to the law of God.
The Old Testament. We do not find the full New Testament doctrine of justification
by faith in the Old Testament, but we do find teachings that agree with it and
that in due course were taken up into that doctrine. Thus it is made clear that
sin is uNIVersal, but that God provides forgiveness. For the first point,
"All have turned aside, they have together become corrupt; there is no one
who does good, not even one" (Psalm 14:3). And
when God looks down from heaven he sees that "they have together become
corrupt; there is no one who does good, not even one" (Psalm 53:2-3).
Many such passages could be cited. And for the second point, "If you, O
Lord, kept a record of sins, O Lord, who could stand? But with you there is
forgiveness" (Psalm 130:3-4).
The end of Micah's prophecy emphasizes that God is a God "who pardons sin
and forgives the transgression of the remnant of his inheritance" and that
he "delights to show mercy" (7:18-20).
Sometimes we find the thought that God imputes righteousness to
people. He did this to Abraham, who believed God "and he credited it to
him as righteousness" (Gen 15:6). Again
Phinehas took decisive action so that the plague was checked and "This was
credited to him as righteousness" (Psalm 106:31;
Phinehas is described in the words, "as zealous as I am for my honor among
them, " Num 25:11). And
the prophet can say, "He who vindicates (or justifies) me is near" (Isa 50:8).
The New Testament. When we turn to the New Testament we must be clear that the
righteousness and justification terminology is to be understood in the light of
its Hebrew background, not in terms of contemporary Greek ideas. We see this,
for example, in the words of Jesus who speaks of people giving account on the
day of judgment: "by your words you will be acquitted, and by your words
you will be condemned" (Matt 12:37; the
word NIV translates "acquitted" is the one Paul normally uses for
"justified" ). Those acquitted on the day of judgment are spoken of
as "the righteous" (Matt 25:37;
they go into "eternal life, " v. 46 ).
The verb translated "to justify" clearly means "to
declare righteous." It is used of God in a quotation, which the New
International Version renders "So that you may be proved right when you
speak" (Rom
3:4; the NRSV has more exactly, "So that you may be justified in your
words" ). Now God cannot be "made righteous"; the expression
obviously means "shown to be righteous" and this helps us see that
when the word is applied to believers it does not mean "made
righteous"; it signifies "declared righteous, " "shown to
be in the right, " or the like.
Paul is fond of the concept of justification; indeed for him it is
the characteristic way of referring to the central truth of the gospel. He
makes much more use of the concept than do the other writers of the New
Testament. This does not mean that he has a different understanding of the
gospel; it is the same gospel that he proclaims, the gospel that the death of
Christ on the cross has opened a way of salvation for sinners. But he uses the
concept of justification to express it whereas the other writers prefer other
terms. He says, "Just as through the disobedience of the one man the many
were made sinners, so also through the obedience of the one man the many will
be made righteous" (Rom 5:19). We
should not understand "were made sinners" in any such sense as
"were compelled to be sinners." It signifies "were constituted
sinners, " "were reckoned as sinners." Paul is saying that the
whole human race is caught up in the effect of Adam's sin; now all are sinners.
Paul speaks of God "who justifies the wicked" (Rom 4:5): it is
not people who have merited their salvation of whom he writes, but people who
had no claim on salvation. It was "while we were still sinners" that
Christ died for us (Rom
5:8). But the effect of Christ's saving work is that now all believers are
"made righteous, " "accepted by God as righteous."
Paul insists that people are not justified by what they themselves
do. Justification is not the result of the infusion of new life into people, but
comes about when they believe. The apostle points to the important example of
Abraham, the great forbear of the Jewish race, as one who was not justified by
works (Rom 4:2-3).
And, of course, if Abraham was not justified by works, then who could possibly
be? Specifically Paul says, "a man is not justified by observing the
law"; indeed, "by observing the law no one will be justified" (Gal 2:16; cf.
also Gal 3:11).
There is something of a problem in that, whereas Paul says quite
plainly that justification is by faith and not by works, James holds that
"a person is justified by what he does and not by faith alone" (2:24). James
chooses Abraham and Rahab as examples of people who were justified by works (2:21, 25).
He points out that Abraham "offered his son Isaac on the altar" and
that Rahab lodged the spies and sent them away.
But we should notice that both these Old Testament worthies are
elsewhere singled out as examples of faith. Paul cited Abraham to establish the
truth that we are justified by faith rather than by works. Indeed, he quotes
Scripture, "Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as
righteousness" (Rom 4:3, citing Gen 15:6; he
cites it again in v. 22 ). In Romans 4 Paul has a strong argument that it was
not works that commended the patriarch to God, but faith: Abraham is, for Paul,
the classic example of a man who believed and who was accepted by God because
of his faith. And the writer to the Hebrews says plainly that it was "by
faith" that Rahab welcomed the spies (Heb 11:31).
If we look more closely at what James says we see that he is not
arguing for works in the absence of faith, but rather for works as the evidence
of faith. "Show me your faith without deeds, " he writes, "and I
will show you my faith by what I do" (james 2:18)
and goes on to cite the demons who believe that there is one God as examples of
the kind of faith he deprecates. James is sure that saving faith transforms the
believer so that good works necessarily follow; and he complains about people
who say they have faith, but whose lives show quite plainly that they have not
been saved. When people have saving faith God transforms their lives and James'
point is that in the absence of this transformation we have no reason for
thinking that those who profess to be believers really have saving faith. We
should not overlook the fact that James as well as Paul quotes Genesis 15:6 to
make it clear that Abraham was justified by faith. And we should bear in mind
that this was many years before he offered Isaac on the altar; indeed it was
before Isaac was born. While the offering of Isaac showed that Abraham was
justified, his justification, even on James' premises, took place long before
the act that showed its presence.
And we must say much the same about Paul. He certainly calls
vigorously for faith, but he calls equally vigorously for lives of Christian
service. And when he writes, "The only thing that counts is faith expressing
itself through love" (Gal 5:6), he is
saying something with which James would surely agree. For James says, "I
will show you my faith by what I do" (2:18).
Paul continually emphasizes the importance of justification by
faith. In his sermon at Antioch in Pisidia he points out that "through
Jesus the forgiveness of sins is proclaimed to you" and immediately adds,
"Through him everyone who believes is justified from everything you could
not be justified from by the law of Moses" (Acts 13:38-39).
More than once he quotes the words from Habbakuk 2:4, "the righteous will
live by faith" (Rom 1:17; Gal 3:11; cf.
also Gal 2:16; Heb 10:38). He
says explicitly that justification is by faith and not by observing the law (Rom 3:28), or
simply that "we have been justified through faith" (Rom 5:1).
Paul does not, of course, argue that faith is a meritorious act
that of itself brings about justification. He is not saying that if we believe
strongly enough we somehow get rid of our sins. But real faith means trust in
God and when we trust God we are open to the divine power that works in us to
make us the sort of people we ought to be and to accomplish the divine purpose.
When we insist on our own moral performance we cut ourselves off from the good
that God works in believers.
At the center of Paul's religion is the cross of Jesus, and faith
means trusting the crucified Lord. Thus Paul says that Jesus "was delivered
over to death for our sins and was raised to life for our justification" (Rom 4:25). We
should not, of course, put too strong a distinction between the effects of
Jesus' death and the effects of his resurrection. Paul is saying that Jesus'
death and resurrection meant a complete dealing with sins and a perfectly
accomplished justification. We are "justified freely by his grace through
the redemption that came by Christ Jesus" (Rom 3:24), which
means that Jesus' atoning death is critically important in our justification.
Similarly we are justified "by his grace" (Rom 3:24),
"by his blood" (Rom 5:9),
"in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Cor 6:11),
and "in Christ" (Gal 2:17), which
are all ways of saying that it is the saving work of Jesus that brings about
the justification of sinners.
Salvation by the way of the cross was so that God would be
"just and the one who justifies the man who has faith in Jesus" (Rom 3:26). This
will be in mind also in the reference to God as presenting Christ "as a
sacrifice of atonement (better, "a propitiation") through faith in
his blood" (Rom
3:25). That we are "justified by his blood" (Rom 5:9) points
to the same truth: It is the death of Jesus that makes us right with God. This
is the meaning also when we read that we are "justified by his grace"
(Titus 3:7).
It was God's good gift that brought justification, his "one act of
righteousness" in Christ that effected it (Rom 5:16,18).
Another way of putting it is that the saved are saved not because of their own
righteousness (they are sinners), but because of the righteousness that is from
God and which they receive by faith (Php 3:9; cf. 2 Col 5:21).
It is plain from the New Testament teaching throughout that
justification comes to the sinner by the atoning work of Jesus and that this is
applied to the individual sinner by faith. That God pardons and accepts
believing sinners is the truth that is enshrined in the doctrine of
justification by faith.
No comments:
Post a Comment