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Galatians
Chapter III
VERSE 1.
O foolish Galatians.
The
Apostle Paul manifests his apostolic care for the
Galatians. Sometimes he entreats them, then again he
reproaches them, in accordance with his own advice to
Timothy: "Preach the word; be instant in season, out
of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort."
In
the midst of his discourse on Christian righteousness Paul
breaks off, and turns to address the Galatians. "O
foolish Galatians," he cries. "I have brought
you the true Gospel, and you received it with eagerness
and gratitude. Now all of a sudden you drop the Gospel.
What has got into you?"
Paul
reproves the Galatians rather sharply when he calls them
"fools, bewitched, and disobedient." Whether he
is indignant or sorry, I cannot say. He may be both. It is
the duty of a Christian pastor to reprove the people
committed to his charge. Of course, his anger must not
flow from malice, but from affection and a real zeal for
Christ.
There
is no question that Paul is disappointed. It hurts him to
think that his Galatians showed so little stability. We
can hear him say: "I am sorry to hear of your
troubles, and disappointed in you for the disgraceful part
you played." I say rather much on this point to save
Paul from the charge that he railed upon the churches,
contrary to the spirit of the Gospel.
A
certain distance and coolness can be noted in the title
with which the Apostle addresses the Galatians. He does
not now address them as his brethren, as he usually does.
He addresses them as Galatians in order to remind them of
their national trait to be foolish.
We
have here an example of bad traits that often cling to
individual Christians and entire congregations. Grace
does not suddenly transform a Christian into a new and
perfect creature. Dregs of the old and natural corruption
remain. The Spirit of God cannot at once overcome human
deficiency. Sanctification takes time.
Although
the Galatians had been enlightened by the Holy Spirit
through the preaching of faith, something of their
national trait of foolishness plus their original
depravity clung to them. Let no man think that once he has
received faith, he can presently be converted into a
faultless creature. The leavings of old vices will stick
to him, be he ever so good a Christian.
VERSE
1. Who hath bewitched you, that ye
should not obey the truth?
Paul
calls the Galatians foolish and bewitched. In the fifth
chapter he mentions sorcery among the works of the flesh,
declaring that witchcraft and sorcery are real
manifestations and legitimate activities of the devil. We
are all exposed to the influence of the devil, because he
is the prince and god of the world in which we live.
Satan
is clever. He does not only bewitch men in a crude manner,
but also in a more artful fashion. He bedevils the minds
of men with hideous fallacies. Not only is he able to
deceive the self-assured, but even those who profess the
true Christian faith. There is not one among us who is not
at times seduced by Satan into false beliefs.
This
accounts for the many new battles we have to wage
nowadays. But the attacks of the old Serpent are not
without profit to us, for they confirm our doctrine and
strengthen our faith in Christ. Many a time we were
wrestled down in these conflicts with Satan, but Christ
has always triumphed and always will triumph. Do not think
that the Galatians were the only ones to be bewitched by
the devil. Let us realize that we too may be seduced by
Satan.
VERSE
1. Who hath bewitched you?
In
this sentence Paul excuses the Galatians, while he blames
the false apostles for the apostasy of the Galatians.
As if he were saying: "I know your defection was not
willful. The devil sent the false apostles to you, and
they tallied you into believing that you are justified by
the Law. With this our epistle we endeavor to undo the
damage which the false apostles have inflicted upon
you."
Like
Paul, we struggle with the Word of God against the
fanatical Anabaptists of our day; and our efforts are not
entirely in vain. The trouble is there are many who refuse
to be instructed. They will not listen to reason; they
will not listen to the Scriptures, because they are
bewitched by the tricky devil who can make a lie look like
the truth.
Since
the devil has this uncanny ability to make us believe a
lie until we would swear a thousand times it were the
truth, we must not be proud, but walk in fear and
humility, and call upon the Lord Jesus to save us from
temptation.
Although
I am a doctor of divinity, and have preached Christ and
fought His battles for a long time, I know from personal
experience how difficult it is to hold fast to the truth.
I cannot always shake off Satan. I cannot always apprehend
Christ as the Scriptures portray Him. Sometimes the devil
distorts Christ to my vision. But thanks be to God, who
keeps us in His Word, in faith, and in prayer.
The
spiritual witchery of the devil creates in the heart a
wrong idea of Christ. Those who share the opinion that a
person is justified by the works of the Law, are simply
bewitched. Their belief goes against faith and Christ.
VERSE
1. That ye should not obey the truth.
Paul
incriminates the Galatians in worse failure. "You are
so bewitched that you no longer obey the truth. I fear
many of you have strayed so far that you will never return
to the truth."
The
apostasy of the Galatians is a fine indorsement of the
Law, all right. You may preach the Law ever so fervently;
if the preaching of the Gospel does not accompany it, the
Law will never produce true conversion and heartfelt
repentance. We do not mean to say that the preaching of
the Law is without value, but it only serves to bring home
to us the wrath of God. The Law bows a person down. It
takes the Gospel and the preaching of faith in Christ to
raise and save a person.
VERSE
1. Before whose eyes Jesus Christ
hath been evidently set forth.
Paul's
increasing severity becomes apparent as he reminds the
Galatians that they disobeyed the truth in defiance of the
vivid description he had given them of Christ. So vividly
had he described Christ to them that they could almost see
and handle Him. As if Paul were to say: "No artist
with all his colors could have pictured Christ to you as
vividly as I have pictured Him to you by my preaching. Yet
you permitted yourselves to be seduced to the extent that
you disobeyed the truth of Christ."
VERSE
1. Crucifed among you.
"You
have not only rejected the grace of God, you have
shamefully crucified Christ among you." Paul employs
the same phraseology in Hebrews 6:6: "
Seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh,
and put him to an open shame.
"
It
should make any person afraid to hear Paul say that those
who seek to be justified by the Law, not only deny Christ,
but also crucify Him anew. If those who seek to be
justified by the Law and its works are crucifiers of
Christ, what are they, I like to know, who seek salvation
by the filthy rags of their own work-righteousness?
Can
there be anything more horrible than the papacy, an
alliance of people who crucify Christ in themselves, in
the Church, and in the hearts of the believers?
Of
all the diseased and vicious doctrines of the papacy the
worst is this: "If you want to serve God you must
earn your own remission of sins and everlasting life, and
in addition help others to obtain salvation by giving them
the benefit of your extra work-holiness." Monks,
friars, and all the rest of them brag that besides the
ordinary requirements
common to all Christians, they do the works of
supererogation, i.e., the performance of more than is
required. This is certainly a fiendish illusion.
No
wonder Paul employs such sharp language in his effort to
recall the Galatians from the doctrine of the false
apostles. He says to them: "Don't you realize what
you have done? You have crucified Christ anew because you
seek salvation by the Law."
True,
Christ can no longer be crucified in person, but He is
crucified in us when we reject grace, faith, free
remission of sins and endeavor to be justified by our own
works, or by the works of the Law.
The
Apostle is incensed at the presumptuousness of any person
who thinks he can perform the Law of God to his own
salvation. He charges that person with the atrocity of
crucifying anew the Son of God.
VERSE
2. This only would I learn of you,
Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the
hearing of faith?
There
is a touch of irony in these words of the Apostle.
"Come on now, my smart Galatians, you who all of a
sudden have become doctors, while I seem to be your pupil:
Received ye the Holy Ghost by the works of the Law, or by
the preaching of the Gospel?" This question gave them
something to think about, because their own experience
contradicted them.
"You
cannot say that you received the Holy Spirit by the Law.
As long as you were servants of the Law, you never
received the Holy Ghost. Nobody ever heard of the Holy
Ghost being given to anybody, be he doctor or dunce, as a
result of the preaching of the Law. In your own case, you
have not only learned the Law by heart, you have labored
with all your might to perform it. You most of all should
have received the Holy Ghost by the Law, if that were
possible. You cannot show me that this ever happened. But
as soon as the Gospel came your way, you received the Holy
Ghost by the simple hearing of faith, before
you ever had a chance to do a single good deed." Luke
verifies this statement of Paul in the Book of Acts:
"
While Peter yet spake these words, the Holy Ghost fell on
all them which heard the word.
" (Acts 10:44.) "
And as I began to speak, the Holy Ghost fell on them, as
on us at the beginning.
" (Acts 11:15.)
Try
to appreciate the force of Paul's argument which is so
often repeated in the Book of Acts. That Book was written
for the express purpose of verifying Paul's assertion,
that the Holy Ghost comes upon men, not in response to the
preaching of the Law, but in response to the preaching of
the Gospel. When Peter preached Christ at the first
Pentecost, the Holy Ghost fell upon the hearers, "and
the same day there were added unto them about three
thousand souls." Cornelius received the Holy Ghost
while Peter was speaking of Christ. "The Holy Ghost
fell on all of them which heard the word." These are
actual experiences that cannot very well be denied. When
Paul and Barnabas returned to Jerusalem and reported what
they had been able to accomplish among the Gentiles, the
whole Church was astonished, particularly when it heard
that the uncircumcised Gentiles had received the Holy
Ghost by the preaching of faith in Christ.
Now
as God gave the Holy Ghost to the Gentiles without the Law
by the simple preaching of the Gospel, so He gave the Holy
Ghost also to the Jews, without the Law, through faith
alone. If the righteousness of the Law were necessary unto
salvation, the Holy Ghost would never have come to the
Gentiles, because they did not bother about the Law. Hence
the Law does not justify, but faith in Christ justifies.
How
was it with Cornelius? Cornelius and his friends whom he
had invited over to his house, do nothing but sit and
listen. Peter is doing the talking. They just sit and do
nothing. The Law is far removed from their thoughts. They
burn no sacrifices. They are not at all interested in
circumcision. All they do is to sit and listen to Peter.
Suddenly the Holy Ghost enters their hearts. His presence
is
unmistakable, "for they spoke with tongues and
magnified God."
Right
here we have one more difference between the Law and the
Gospel. The Law does not bring on the Holy Ghost. The
Gospel, however, brings on the gift of the Holy Ghost,
because it is the nature of the Gospel to convey good
gifts. The Law and the Gospel are contrary ideas. They
have contrary functions and purposes. To endow the Law
with any capacity to produce righteousness is to
plagiarize the Gospel. The Gospel brings donations. It
pleads for open hands to take what is being offered. The
Law has nothing to give. It demands, and its demands are
impossible.
Our
opponents come back at us with Cornelius. Cornelius, they
point out, was "a devout man, and one that feared God
with all his house, which gave much alms to the people and
prayed God always." Because of these qualifications,
he merited the forgiveness of sins, and the gift of the
Holy Ghost. So reason our opponents.
I
answer: Cornelius was a Gentile. You cannot deny it. As a
Gentile he was uncircumcised. As a Gentile he did not
observe the Law. He never gave the Law any thought. For
all that, he was justified and received the Holy Ghost.
How can the Law avail anything unto righteousness?
Our
opponents are not satisfied. They reply: "Granted
that Cornelius was a Gentile and did not receive the Holy
Ghost by the Law, yet the text plainly states that he was
a devout man who feared God, gave alms, and prayed. Don't
you think he deserved the gift of the Holy Ghost?"
I
answer: Cornelius had the faith of the fathers who were
saved by faith in the Christ to come. If Cornelius had
died before Christ, he would have been saved because he
believed in the Christ to come. But because the Messiah
had already come, Cornelius had to be apprized of the
fact. Since Christ has come we cannot be saved by faith in
the Christ to come, but we must believe that he has come.
The object of Peter's visit was to acquaint Cornelius with
the fact that Christ was no longer to be looked for,
because He is here.
As
to the contention of our opponents that Cornelius deserved
grace and the gift of the Holy Ghost, because he was
devout and just, we say that these attributes are the
characteristics of a spiritual person who already has
faith in Christ, and not the characteristics of a Gentile
or of natural man. Luke first praises Cornelius for being
a devout and God-fearing man, and then Luke mentions the
good works, the alms and prayers of Cornelius. Our
opponents ignore the sequence of Luke's words. They pounce
on this one sentence, "which gave much alms to the
people," because it serves their assertion that merit
precedes grace. The fact is that Cornelius gave alms and
prayed to God because he had faith. And because of his
faith in the Christ to come, Peter was delegated to preach
unto Cornelius faith in the Christ who had already come.
This argument is convincing enough. Cornelius was
justified without the Law, therefore the Law cannot
justify.
Take
the case of Naaman, the Syrian, who was a Gentile and did
not belong to the race of Moses. Yet his flesh was
cleansed, the God of Israel was revealed unto him, and he
received the Holy Ghost. Naaman confessed his faith:
"
Behold, now I know that there is no God in all the earth,
but in Israel.
" (II Kings 5:15.) Naaman does not do a thing. He
does not busy himself with the Law. He was never
circumcised. That does not mean that his faith was
inactive. He said to the Prophet Elisha: "Thy servant
will henceforth offer neither burnt offering nor sacrifice
unto other gods, but unto the Lord. In this thing the Lord
pardon thy servant, that when my master goeth into the
house of Rimmon to worship there, and he leaneth on my
hand, and I bow myself in the house of Rimmon: when I bow
down myself in the house of Rimmon, the Lord pardon thy
servant in this thing." What did the Prophet tell
him?" Go in peace." The Jews do not like to hear
the prophet say this. "What," they exclaim,
"should this
heathen be justified without the Law? Should he be made
equal to us who are circumcised?"
Long
before the time of Moses, God justified men without the
Law. He justified many kings of Egypt and Babylonia. He
justified Job. Nineveh, that great city, was justified and
received the promise of God that He would not destroy the
city. Why was Nineveh spared? Not because it fulfilled the
Law, but because Nineveh believed the word of God. The
Prophet Jonah writes: "So the people of Nineveh
believed God, and proclaimed a fast, and put on
sackcloth." They repented. Nowhere in the Book of
Jonah do you read that the Ninevites received the Law of
Moses, or that they were circumcised, or that they offered
sacrifices.
All
this happened long before Christ was born. If the Gentiles
were justified without the Law and quietly received the
Holy Spirit at a time when the Law was in full force, why
should the Law count unto righteousness now, now that
Christ has fulfilled the Law?
And
yet many devote much time and labor to the Law, to the
decrees of the fathers, and to the traditions of the Pope.
Many of these specialists have incapacitated themselves
for any kind of work, good or bad, by their rigorous
attention to rules and laws. All the same, they could not
obtain a quiet conscience and peace in Christ. But the
moment the Gospel of Christ touches them, certainty comes
to them, and joy, and a right judgment.
I
have good reason for enlarging upon this point. The heart
of man finds it difficult to believe that so great a
treasure as the Holy Ghost is gotten by the mere hearing
of faith. The hearer likes to reason like this:
Forgiveness of sins, deliverance from death, the gift of
the Holy Ghost, everlasting life are grand things. If you
want to obtain these priceless benefits, you must engage
in correspondingly great efforts. And the devil says,
"Amen."
We
must learn that forgiveness of sins, Christ, and the Holy
Ghost, are freely granted unto us at the preaching of
faith, in spite of our sinfulness. We are not to waste
time thinking how unworthy we are of the blessings of God.
We are to know that it pleased God freely to give us His
unspeakable gifts. If He offers His gifts free of charge,
why not take them? Why worry about our lack of worthiness?
Why not accept gifts with joy and thanksgiving?
Right
away foolish reason is once more offended. It scolds us.
"When you say that a person can do nothing to obtain
the grace of God, you foster carnal security. People
become shiftless and will do no good at all. Better not
preach this doctrine of faith. Rather urge the people to
exert and to exercise themselves in good works, so that
the Holy Ghost will feel like coming to them."
What
did Jesus say to Martha when she was very "careful
and troubled about many things" and could hardly
stand to see her sister Mary sitting at the feet of Jesus,
just listening? "Martha, Martha," Jesus said,
"thou art careful and troubled about many things: but
one thing is needful; and Mary hath chosen that good part,
which shall not be taken away from her." A person
becomes a Christian not by working, but by hearing. The
first step to being a Christian is to hear the Gospel.
When a person has accepted the Gospel, let him first give
thanks unto God with a glad heart, and then let him get
busy on the good works to strive for, works that really
please God, and not man-made and self-chosen works.
Our
opponents regard faith as an easy thing, but I know from
personal experience how hard it is to believe. That the
Holy Ghost is received by faith, is quickly said, but not
so quickly done.
All
believers experience this difficulty. They would gladly
embrace the Word with a full faith, but the flesh deters
them. You see, our reason always thinks it is too easy and
cheap to have righteousness, the Holy Spirit, and life
everlasting by the mere hearing of the Gospel.
VERSE 3. Are ye so
foolish? having begun in the Spirit, are ye now made
perfect by the flesh?
Paul
now begins to warn the Galatians against a twofold danger.
The first danger is: "Are ye so foolish, that after
ye have begun in the Spirit, ye would now end in the
flesh?"
"Flesh"
stands for the righteousness of reason which seeks
justification by the accomplishment of the Law. I am told
that I began in the spirit under the papacy, but am ending
up in the flesh because I got married. As though single
life were a spiritual life, and married life a carnal
life. They are silly. All the duties of a Christian
husband, e.g., to love his wife, to bring up his children,
to govern his family, etc., are the very fruits of the
Spirit.
The
righteousness of the Law which Paul also terms the
righteousness of the flesh is so far from justifying a
person that those who once had the Holy Spirit and lost
Him, end up in the Law to their complete destruction.
VERSE
4. Have ye suffered so many things in
vain?
The
other danger against which the Apostle warns the Galatians
is this: "Have ye suffered so many things in
vain?" Paul wants to say: "Consider not only the
good start you had and lost, but consider also the many
things you have suffered for the sake of the Gospel and
for the name of Christ. You have suffered the loss of your
possessions, you have borne reproaches, you have passed
through many dangers of body and life. You endured much
for the name of Christ and you endured it faithfully. But
now you have lost everything, the Gospel, faith, and the
spiritual benefit of your sufferings for Christ's sake.
What a miserable thing to endure so many amictions for
nothing."
VERSE
4. If it be yet in vain.
The
Apostle adds the afterthought: "If it be yet in vain.
I do not despair of all hope for you. But if you continue
to look to the Law for righteousness, I think you should
be told that all your past true worship of God and
all the afflictions that you have endured for Christ's
sake are going to help you not at all. I do not mean to
discourage you altogether. I do hope you will repent and
amend."
VERSE
5. He therefore that ministereth to
you the Spirit, and worketh miracles among you, doeth he
it by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?
This
argument based on the experience of the Galatians, pleased
the Apostle so well that he returns to it after he had
warned them against their twofold danger. "You have
not only received the Spirit by the preaching of the
Gospel, but by the same Gospel you were enabled to do
things." "What things?" we ask. Miracles.
At least the Galatians had manifested the striking fruits
of faith which true disciples of the Gospel manifested in
those days. On one occasion the Apostle wrote: "The
kingdom of God is not in word, but in power." This
"power" revealed itself not only in readiness of
speech, but in demonstrations of the supernatural ability
of the Holy Spirit.
When
the Gospel is preached unto faith, hope, love, and
patience, God gives His wonder-working Spirit. Paul
reminds the Galatians of this. "God had not only
brought you to faith by my preaching. He had also
sanctified you to bring forth the fruits of faith. And one
of the fruits of your faith was that you loved me so
devotedly that you were willing to pluck out your eyes for
me." To love a fellow-man so devotedly as to be ready
to bestow upon him money, goods, eyes in order to secure
his salvation, such love is the fruit of the Holy Spirit.
"These
products of the Spirit you enjoyed before the false
apostles misled you," the Apostle reminds the
Galatians. "But you haven't manifested any of these
fruits under the regime of the Law. How does it come that
you do not grow the same fruits now? You no longer teach
truly; you do not believe boldly; you do not live well;
you do not work hard; you do not bear things patiently.
Who has spoiled you that you no longer love me; that you
are
not now ready to pluck out your eyes for me? What has
happened to cool your personal interest in me?"
The
same thing happened to me. When I began to proclaim the
Gospel, there were many, very many who were delighted with
our doctrine and had a good opinion of us. And now? Now
they have succeeded in making us so odious to those who
formerly loved us that they now hate us like poison.
Paul
argues: "Your experience ought to teach you that the
fruits of love do not grow on the stump of the Law. You
had not virtue prior to the preaching of the Gospel and
you have no virtues now under the regime of the false
apostles."
We,
too, may say to those who misname themselves
"evangelical" and flout their new-found liberty:
Have you put down the tyranny of the Pope and obtained
liberty in Christ through the Anabaptists and other
fanatics? Or have you obtained your freedom from us who
preach faith in Christ Jesus? If there is any honesty left
in them they will have to confess that their freedom dates
from the preaching of the Gospel.
VERSE
6. Even as Abraham believed God, and
it was accounted to him for righteousness.
The
Apostle next adduces the example of Abraham and reviews
the testimony of the Scriptures concerning faith. The
first passage is taken from Genesis 15:6: "
And he believed in the Lord; and he counted it to him for
righteousness.
" The Apostle makes the most of this passage. Abraham
may have enjoyed a good standing with men for his upright
life, but not with God. In the sight of God, Abraham was a
condemned sinner. That he was justified before God was not
due to his own exertions, but due to his faith. The
Scriptures expressly state: "Abraham believed in the
Lord; and he counted it to him for righteousness."
Paul
places the emphasis upon the two words: Abraham believed.
Faith in God constitutes the highest worship
, the prime duty, the first obedience, and the foremost
sacrifice. Without faith God forfeits His glory, wisdom,
truth, and mercy in us. The first duty of man is to
believe in God and to honor Him with his faith. Faith is
truly the height of wisdom, the right kind of
righteousness, the only real religion. This will give us
an idea of the excellence of faith.
To
believe in God as Abraham did is to be right with God
because faith honors God. Faith says to God: "I
believe what you say."
When
we pay attention to reason, God seems to propose
impossible matters in the Christian Creed. To reason it
seems absurd that Christ should offer His body and blood
in the Lord's Supper; that Baptism should be the washing
of regeneration; that the dead shall rise; that Christ the
Son of God was conceived in the womb of the Virgin Mary,
etc. Reason shouts that all this is preposterous. Are you
surprised that reason thinks little of faith? Reason
thinks it ludicrous that faith should be the foremost
service any person can render unto God.
Let
your faith supplant reason. Abraham mastered reason by
faith in the Word of God. Not as though reason ever yields
meekly. It put up a fight against the faith of Abraham.
Reason protested that it was absurd to think that Sarah
who was ninety years old and barren by nature, should give
birth to a son. But faith won the victory and routed
reason, that ugly beast and enemy of God. Everyone who by
faith slays reason, the world's biggest monster, renders
God a real service, a better service than the religions of
all races and all the drudgery of meritorious monks can
render.
Men
fast, pray, watch, suffer. They intend to appease the
wrath of God and to deserve God's grace by their
exertions. But there is no glory in it for God, because by
their exertions these workers pronounce God an unmerciful
slave driver, an unfaithful and angry Judge. They despise
God, make a liar out of Him, snub Christ and all His
benefits; in short they pull God from His throne and perch
themselves on it.
Faith
truly honors God. And because faith honors God, God counts
faith for righteousness.
Christian
righteousness is the confidence of the heart in God
through Christ Jesus. Such confidence is accounted
righteousness for Christ's sake. Two things make for
Christian righteousness: Faith in Christ, which is a gift
of God; and God's acceptance of this imperfect faith of
ours for perfect righteousness. Because of my faith in
Christ, God overlooks my distrust, the unwillingness of my
spirit, my many other sins. Because the shadow of Christ's
wing covers me I have no fear that God will cover all my
sins and take my imperfections for perfect righteousness.
God
"winks" at my sins and covers them up. God says:
"Because you believe in My Son I will forgive your
sins until death shall deliver you from the body of
sin."
Learn
to understand the constitution of your Christian
righteousness. Faith is weak, but it means enough to God
that He will not lay sin to our charge. He will not punish
nor condemn us for it. He will forgive our sins as though
they amount to nothing at all. He will do it not because
we are worthy of such mercy. He will do it for Jesus' sake
in whom we believe.
Paradoxically,
a Christian is both right and wrong, holy and profane, an
enemy of God and a child of God. These contradictions no
person can harmonize who does not understand the true way
of salvation. Under the papacy we were told to toil until
the feeling of guilt had left us. But the authors of this
deranged idea were frequently driven to despair in the
hour of death. It would have happened to me, if Christ had
not mercifully delivered me from this error.
We
comfort the afflicted sinner in this manner: Brother, you
can never be perfect in this life, but you can be holy. He
will say: "How can I be holy when I feel my
sins?"
I answer: You feel sin? That is a good sign. To realize
that one is ill is a step, and a very necessary step,
toward recovery. "But how will I get rid of my
sin?" he will ask. I answer: See the heavenly
Physician, Christ, who heals the broken-hearted. Do not
consult that Quackdoctor, Reason. Believe in Christ and
your sins will be pardoned. His righteousness will become
your righteousness, and your sins will become His sins.
On
one occasion Jesus said to His disciples: "The Father
loveth you." Why? Not because the disciples were
Pharisees, or circumcised, or particularly attentive to
the Law. Jesus said: "The Father loveth you, because
ye have loved me, and have believed that I came out from
God. It pleased you to know that the Father sent me into
the world. And because you believed it the Father loves
you." On another occasion Jesus called His disciples
evil and commanded them to ask for forgiveness.
A
Christian is beloved of God and a sinner. How can these
two contradictions be harmonized: I am a sinner and
deserve God's wrath and punishment, and yet the Father
loves me? Christ alone can harmonize these contradictions.
He is the Mediator.
Do
you now see how faith justifies without works? Sin lingers
in us, and God hates sin. A transfusion of righteousness
therefore becomes vitally necessary. This transfusion of
righteousness we obtain from Christ because we believe in
Him.
VERSE
7. Know ye therefore that they which
are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham.
This
is the main point of Paul's argument against the Jews: The
children of Abraham are those who believe and not those
who are born of Abraham's flesh and blood. This point Paul
drives home with all his might because the Jews attached
saving value to the genealogical fact: "We are the
seed and children of Abraham."
Let us begin with Abraham and learn how this friend of God
was justified and saved. Not because he left his country,
his relatives, his father's house; not because he was
circumcised; not because he stood ready to sacrifice his
own son Isaac in whom he had the promise of posterity.
Abraham was justified because he believed. Paul's
argumentation runs like this: "Since this is the
unmistakable testimony of Holy Writ, why do you take your
stand upon circumcision and the Law? Was not Abraham, your
father, of whom you make so much, justified and saved
without circumcision and the Law by faith alone?"
Paul therefore concludes: "They which are of faith,
the same are the children of Abraham."
Abraham
was the father of the faithful. In order to be a child of
the believing Abraham you must believe as he did.
Otherwise you are merely the physical offspring of the
procreating Abraham, i.e., you were conceived and born in
sin unto wrath and condemnation.
Ishmael
and Isaac were both the natural children of Abraham. By
rights Ishmael should have enjoyed the prerogatives of the
firstborn, if physical generation had any special value.
Nevertheless he was left out in the cold while Isaac was
called. This goes to prove that the children of faith are
the real children of Abraham.
Some
find fault with Paul for applying the term
"faith" in Genesis 15:6 to Christ. They think
Paul's use of the term too wide and general. They think
its meaning should be restricted to the context. They
claim Abraham's faith had no more in it than a belief in
the promise of God that he should have seed.
We
reply: Faith presupposes the assurance of God's mercy.
This assurance takes in the confidence that our sins are
forgiven for Christ's sake. Never will the conscience
trust in God unless it can be sure of God's mercy and
promises in Christ. Now all the promises of God lead back
to the first promise concerning Christ: "And I will
put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy
seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou
shalt bruise his heel." The faith of the fathers in
the Old Testament era, and our faith in the New Testament
are one and the same faith in Christ Jesus, although times
and conditions may differ. Peter acknowledged this in the
words: "
Which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear? But we
believe that through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we
shall be saved, even as they.
" (Acts 15: 10, 11.) And Paul writes: "
And did all drink the spiritual drink; for they drank of
that spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was
Christ.
" (I Cor. 10:4.) And Christ Himself declared: "
Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day: and he saw it
and was glad.
" (John 8:56.) The faith of the fathers was directed
at the Christ who was to come, while ours rests in the
Christ who has come. Time does not change the object of
true faith, or the Holy Spirit. There has always been and
always will be one mind, one impression, one faith
concerning Christ among true believers whether they live
in times past, now, or in times to come. We too believe in
the Christ to come as the fathers did in the Old
Testament, for we look for Christ to come again on the
last day to judge the quick and the dead.
VERSE
7. Know ye therefore that they which
are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham.
Paul
is saying: "You know from the example of Abraham and
from the plain testimony of the Scriptures that they are
the children of Abraham, who have faith in Christ,
regardless of their nationality, regardless of the Law,
regardless of works, regardless of their parentage. The
promise was made unto Abraham, 'Thou shalt be a father of
many nations'; again, 'And in thee shall all families of
the earth be blessed."' To prevent the Jews from
misinterpreting the word "nations," the
Scriptures are careful to say "many nations."
The true children of Abraham are the believers in Christ
from all nations.
VERSE 8. And the
Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the heathen
through faith.
"Your
boasting does not get you anywhere," says Paul to the
Galatians, "because the Sacred Scriptures foresaw and
foretold long before the Law was ever given, that the
heathen should be justified by the blessed 'seed' of
Abraham and not by the Law. This promise was made four
hundred and thirty years before the Law was given. Because
the Law was given so many years after Abraham, it could
not abolish the promised blessing." This argument is
strong because it is based on the exact factor of time.
"Why should you boast of the Law, my Galatians, when
the Law came four hundred and thirty years after the
promise ?"
The
false apostles glorified the Law and despised the promise
made unto Abraham, although it antedated the Law by many
years. It was after Abraham was accounted righteous
because of his faith that the Scriptures first make
mention of circumcision. "The Scriptures," says
Paul, "meant to forestall your infatuation for the
righteousness of the Law by installing the righteousness
of faith before circumcision and the Law ever were
ordained."
VERSE
8. Preached before the gospel unto
Abraham, saying, In thee shall all nations be blessed.
The
Jews misconstrue this passage. They want the term "to
bless" to mean "to praise." They want the
passage to read: In thee shall all the nations of the
earth be praised. But this is a perversion of the words of
Holy Writ. With the words "Abraham believed"
Paul describes a spiritual Abraham, renewed by faith and
regenerated by the Holy Ghost, that he should be the
spiritual father of many nations. In that way all the
Gentiles could be given to him for an inheritance.
The
Scriptures ascribe no righteousness to Abraham except
through faith. The Scriptures speak of Abraham as he
stands before God, a man justified by faith. Because
of his faith God extends to him the promise: "In thee
shall all nations be blessed."
VERSE
9. So then they which be of faith
are blessed with faithful Abraham.
The
emphasis lies on the words "with faithful
Abraham." Paul distinguishes between Abraham and
Abraham. There is a working and there is a believing
Abraham. With the working Abraham we have nothing to do.
Let the Jews glory in the generating Abraham; we glory in
the believing Abraham of whom the Scriptures say that he
received the blessing of righteousness by faith, not only
for himself but for all who believe as he did. The world
was promised to Abraham because he believed. The whole
world is blessed if it believes as Abraham believed.
The
blessing is the promise of the Gospel. That all nations
are to be blessed means that all nations are to hear the
Gospel. All nations are to be declared righteous before
God through faith in Christ Jesus. To bless simply means
to spread abroad the knowledge of Christ's salvation. This
is the office of the New Testament Church which
distributes the promised blessing by preaching the Gospel,
by administering the sacraments, by comforting the broken-
hearted, in short, by dispensing the benefits of Christ.
The
Jews exhibited a working Abraham. The Pope exhibits a
working Christ, or an exemplary Christ. The Pope quotes
Christ's saying recorded in John 13:15, "
I have given you an example, that ye should do as I have
done to you.
" We do not deny that Christians ought to imitate the
example of Christ; but mere imitation will not satisfy
God. And bear in mind that Paul is not now discussing the
example of Christ, but the salvation of Christ.
That
Abraham submitted to circumcision at the command of God,
that he was endowed with excellent virtues, that he obeyed
God in all things, was certainly admirable of him. To
follow the example of Christ, to love one's
neighbor, to do good to them that persecute you, to pray
for one's enemies, patiently to bear the ingratitude of
those who return evil for good, is certainly praiseworthy.
But praiseworthy or not, such virtues do not acquit us
before God. It takes more than that to make us righteous
before God. We need Christ Himself, not His example, to
save us. We need a redeeming, not an exemplary Christ, to
save us. Paul is here speaking of the redeeming Christ and
the believing Abraham, not of the model Christ or the
sweating Abraham.
The
believing Abraham is not to lie buried in the grave. He is
to be dusted off and brought out before the world. He is
to be praised to the sky for his faith. Heaven and earth
ought to know about him and about his faith in Christ. The
working Abraham ought to look pretty small next to the
believing Abraham.
Paul's
words contain the implication of contrast. When he quotes
Scripture to the effect that all nations that share the
faith of faithful Abraham are to be blessed, Paul means to
imply the contrast that all nations are accursed without
faith in Christ.
VERSE
10. For as many as are of the works
of the law are under the curse.
The
curse of God is like a flood that swallows everything that
is not of faith. To avoid the curse we must hold on to the
promise of the blessing in Christ.
The
reader is reminded that all this has no bearing upon civil
laws, customs, or political matters. Civil laws and
ordinances have their place and purpose. Let every
government enact the best possible laws. But civil
righteousness will never deliver a person from the
condemnation of God's Law.
I
have good reason for calling your attention to this.
People easily mistake civil righteousness for spiritual
righteousness. In civil life we must, of course, pay
attention to laws and deeds, but in the spiritual life we
must not
think to be justified by laws and works, but always keep
in mind the promise and blessing of Christ, our only
Savior.
According
to Paul everything that is not of faith is sin. When our
opponents hear us repeat this statement of Paul, they make
it appear as if we taught that governments should not be
honored, as if we favored rebellion against the
constituted authorities, as if we condemned all laws. Our
opponents do us a great wrong, for we make a clear-cut
distinction between civil and spiritual affairs.
Governmental
laws and ordinances are blessings of God for this life
only. As for everlasting life, temporal blessings are not
good enough. Unbelievers enjoy more temporal blessings
than the Christians. Civil or legal righteousness may be
good enough for this life but not for the life hereafter.
Otherwise the infidels would be nearer heaven than the
Christians, for infidels often excel in civil
righteousness.
VERSE
10. For it is written, Cursed is
every one that continueth not in all things which are
written in the book of the law to do them.
Paul
goes on to prove from this quotation out of the Book of
Deuteronomy that all men who are under the Law are under
the sentence of sin, of the wrath of God, and of
everlasting death. Paul produces his proof in a roundabout
way. He turns the negative statement, "Cursed is
every one that continueth not in all things which are
written in the book of the law to do them," into a
positive statement, "As many as are of the works of
the law are under the curse." These two statements,
one by Paul and the other by Moses, appear to conflict.
Paul declares, "Whosoever shall do the works of the
Law, is accursed." Moses declares, "Whosoever
shall not do the works of the Law, is accursed." How
can these two contradictory statements be reconciled? How
can the one statement prove the other? No person can hope
to understand Paul unless he understands the article of
justification. These two statements are not at all
inconsistent.
We must bear in mind that to do the works of the Law does
not mean only to live up to the superficial requirements
of the Law, but to obey the spirit of the Law to
perfection. But where will you find the person who can do
that? Let him step forward and we will praise him.
Our
opponents have their answer ready-made. They quote Paul's
own statement in Romans 2:13, "
The doers of the law shall be justified.
" Very well. But let us first find out who the doers
of the law are. They call a "doer" of the Law
one who performs the Law in its literal sense. This is not
to "do" the Law. This is to sin. When our
opponents go about to perform the Law they sin against the
first, the second, and the third commandments, in fact
they sin against the whole Law. For God requires above all
that we worship Him in spirit and in faith. In observing
the Law for the purpose of obtaining righteousness without
faith in Christ these law-workers go smack against the Law
and against God. They deny the righteousness of God, His
mercy, and His promises. They deny Christ and all His
benefits.
In
their ignorance of the true purpose of the Law the
exponents of the Law abuse the Law, as Paul says, Romans
10:3, "
For they, being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going
about to establish their own righteousness, have not
submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God.
"
In
their folly our opponents rush into the Scriptures, pick
out a sentence here and a sentence there about the Law and
imagine they know all about it. Their work-righteousness
is plain idolatry and blasphemy against God. No wonder
they abide under the curse of God.
Because
God saw that we could not fulfill the Law, He provided a
way of salvation long before the Law was ever given, a
salvation that He promised to Abraham, saying, "In
thee shall all nations be blessed."
The
very first thing for us to do is to believe in Christ.
First, we must receive the Holy Spirit, who enlightens and
sanctifies us so that we can begin to do the Law, i.e., to
love God and our neighbor. Now, the Holy Ghost is not
obtained by the Law, but by faith in Christ. In the last
analysis, to do the Law means to believe in Jesus Christ.
The tree comes first, and then come the fruits.
The
scholastics admit that a mere external and superficial
performance of the Law without sincerity and good will is
plain hypocrisy. Judas acted like the other disciples.
What was wrong with Judas? Mark what Rome answers,
"Judas was a reprobate. His motives were perverse,
therefore his works were hypocritical and no good."
Well, well. Rome does admit, after all, that works in
themselves do not justify unless they issue from a sincere
heart. Why do our opponents not profess the same truth in
spiritual matters? There, above all, faith must precede
everything. The heart must be purified by faith before a
person can lift a finger to please God.
There
are two classes of doers of the Law, true doers and
hypocritical doers. The true doers of the Law are those
who are moved by faith in Christ to do the Law. The
hypocritical doers of the Law are those who seek to obtain
righteousness by a mechanical performance of good works
while their hearts are far removed from God. They act like
the foolish carpenter who starts with the roof when he
builds a house. Instead of doing the Law, these
law-conscious hypocrites break the Law. They break the
very first commandment of God by denying His promise in
Christ. They do not worship God in faith. They worship
themselves.
No
wonder Paul was able to foretell the abominations that
Antichrist would bring into the Church. That Antichrists
would come, Christ Himself prophesied, Matthew 24:5,
"
For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ; and
shall deceive many.
" Whoever seeks righteousness by works denies God and
makes himself God. He is an Antichrist because he ascribes
to his own works the omnipotent capability of conquering
sin, death, devil, hell, and the wrath of God. An
Antichrist lays claim to the honor of Christ. He is an
idolater of himself. The law- righteous person is the
worst kind of infidel.
Those who intend to obtain righteousness by their own
efforts do not say in so many words: "I am God; I am
Christ." But it amounts to that. They usurp the
divinity and office of Christ. The effect is the same as
if they said, "I am Christ; I am a Savior. I save
myself and others." This is the impression the monks
give out.
The
Pope is the Antichrist, because he is against Christ,
because he takes liberties with the things of God, because
he lords it over the temple of God.
I
cannot tell you in words how criminal it is to seek
righteousness before God without faith in Christ, by the
works of the Law. It is the abomination standing in the
holy place. It deposes the Creator and deifies the
creature.
The
real doers of the Law are the true believers. The Holy
Spirit enables them to love God and their neighbor. But
because we have only the first- fruits of the Spirit and
not the tenth-fruits, we do not observe the Law perfectly.
This imperfection of ours, however, is not imputed to us,
for Christ's sake.
Hence,
the statement of Moses, "Cursed is every one that
continueth not in all things which are written in the book
of the law to do them," is not contrary to Paul.
Moses requires perfect doers of the Law. But where will
you find them? Nowhere. Moses himself confessed that he
was not a perfect doer of the Law. He said to the Lord:
"Pardon our iniquity and our sin." Christ alone
can make us innocent of any transgression. How so? First,
by the forgiveness of our sins and the imputation of His
righteousness. Secondly, by the gift of the Holy Ghost,
who engenders new life and activity in us.
Objections
to the Doctrine of Faith Disproved
Here
we shall take the time to enter upon the objections which
our opponents raise against the doctrine of faith. There
are many passages in the Bible that deal with works and
the reward of works which our opponents cite against us in
the belief that these will disprove the doctrine of faith
which we teach.
The scholastics grant that according to the reasonable
order of nature being precedes doing. They grant that any
act is faulty unless it proceeds from a right motive. They
grant that a person must be right before he can do right.
Why don't they grant that the right inclination of the
heart toward God through faith in Christ must precede
works?
In
the eleventh chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrews we find
a catalogue of various works and deeds of the saints of
the Bible. David, who killed a lion and a bear, and
defeated Goliath, is mentioned. In the heroic deeds of
David the scholastic can discover nothing more than
outward achievement. But the deeds of David must be
evaluated according to the personality of David. When we
understand that David was a man of faith, whose heart
trusted in the Lord, we shall understand why he could do
such heroic deeds. David said: "
The Lord that delivered me out of the paw of the lion, and
out of the paw of the bear, he will deliver me out of the
hand of this Philistine.
" Again: "
Thou comest to me with a sword, and with a spear, and with
a shield: but I come to thee in the name of the Lord of
hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom thou hast
defied. This day will the Lord deliver thee into mine
hand; and I will smite thee, and take shine head from
thee.
" (I Samuel 17:37, 45, 46.) Before David could
achieve a single heroic deed he was already a man beloved
of God, strong and constant in faith.
Of
Abel it is said in the same Epistle: "By faith Abel
offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than
Cain." When the scholastics come upon the parallel
passage in Genesis 4:4 they get no further than the words:
"And the Lord had respect unto Abel and to his
offering." "Aha!" they cry. "See, God
has respect to offerings. Works do justify." With mud
in their eyes they cannot see that the text says in
Genesis that the Lord had respect to the person of Abel
first. Abel pleased the Lord because of his faith. Because
the person of Abel pleased the Lord, the
offering of Abel pleased the Lord also. The Epistle to the
Hebrews expressly states: "By faith Abel offered unto
God a more excellent sacrifice."
In
our dealings with God the work is worth nothing without
faith, for
"without faith it is impossible to please him.
" (Hebrews 11:6.) The sacrifice of Abel was better
than the sacrifice of Cain, because Abel had faith. As to
Cain he had no faith or trust in God's grace, but strutted
about in his own fancied worth. When God refused to
recognize Cain's worth, Cain got angry at God and at Abel.
The
Holy Spirit speaks of faith in different ways in the
Sacred Scriptures. Sometimes He speaks of faith
independently of other matters. When the Scriptures speak
of faith in the absolute or abstract, faith refers to
justification directly. But when the Scripture speaks of
rewards and works it speaks of compound or relative faith.
We will furnish some examples. Galatians 5:6, "
Faith which worketh by love.
" Leviticus 18:5, "
Which if a man do, he shall live in them.
" Matthew 19:17, "
If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments.
" Psalm 37:27, "Depart from evil, and do
good." In these and other passages where mention is
made of doing, the Scriptures always speak of a faithful
doing, a doing inspired by faith. "Do this and thou
shalt live," means: First have faith in Christ, and
Christ will enable you to do and to live.
In
the Word of God all things that are attributed to works
are attributable to faith. Faith is the divinity of works.
Faith permeates all the deeds of the believer, as Christ's
divinity permeated His humanity. Abraham was accounted
righteous because faith pervaded his whole personality and
his every action.
When
you read how the fathers, prophets, and kings accomplished
great deeds, remember to explain them as the Epistle to
the Hebrews accounts for them: "
Who through faith subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness,
obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions.
" (Hebrews 11:33.) In this way will we correctly
interpret all those
passages that seem to support the righteousness of works.
The Law is truly observed only through faith. Hence, every
"holy," "moral" law-worker is
accursed.
Supposing
that this explanation will not satisfy the scholastics,
supposing that they should completely wrap me up in their
arguments (they cannot do it), I would rather be wrong and
give all credit to Christ alone. Here is Christ. Paul,
Christ's apostle, declares that "
Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being
made a curse for us.
" (Gal. 3:13.) I hear with my own ears that I cannot
be saved except by the blood and death of Christ. I
conclude, therefore, that it is up to Christ to overcome
my sins, and not up to the Law, or my own efforts. If He
is the price of my redemption, if He was made sin for my
justification, I don't give a care if you quote me a
thousand Scripture passages for the righteousness of works
against the righteousness of faith. I have the Author and
Lord of the Scriptures on my side. I would rather believe
Him than all that riffraff of "pious" law-
workers.
VERSE
11. But that no man is justified by
the law in the sight of God, it is evident: for, The just
shall live by faith.
The
Apostle draws into his argument the testimony of the
Prophet Habakkuk: "The just shall live by his
faith." This passage carries much weight because it
eliminates the Law and the deeds of the Law as factors in
the process of our justification.
The
scholastics misconstrue this passage by saying: "The
just shall live by faith, if it is a working faith, or a
faith formed and performed by charitable works."
Their annotation is a forgery. To speak of formed or
unformed faith, a sort of double faith, is contrary to the
Scriptures. If charitable works can form and perfect faith
I am forced to say eventually that charitable deeds
constitute the essential factor in the Christian religion.
Christ and His benefits would be lost to us.
VERSE 12. And the
law is not of faith.
In
direct opposition to the scholastics Paul declares:
"The law is not of faith." What is this charity
the scholastics talk so much about? Does not the Law
command charity? The fact is the Law commands nothing but
charity, as we may gather from the following Scripture
passages: "
Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and
with all thy soul, and with all thy might
" (Deut. 6:5.) "
Strewing mercy unto thousands of them that love me, and
keep my commandments.
" (Exodus 20:6.) "
On these two commandments hang all the law and the
prophets.
" (Matt. 22:40.) If the law requires charity, charity
is part of the Law and not of faith. Since Christ has
displaced the Law which commands charity, it follows that
charity has been abrogated with the Law as a factor in our
justification, and only faith is left.
VERSE
12. But, The man that doeth them
shall live in them.
Paul
undertakes to explain the difference between the
righteousness of the Law and the righteousness of faith.
The righteousness of the Law is the fulfillment of the Law
according to the passage: "The man that doeth them
shall live in them." The righteousness of faith is to
believe the Gospel according to the passage: "The
just shall live by faith." The Law is a statement of
debit, the Gospel a statement of credit. By this
distinction Paul explains why charity which is the
commandment of the Law cannot justify, because the Law
contributes nothing to our justification.
Indeed,
works do follow after faith, but faith is not therefore a
meritorious work. Faith is a gift. The character and
limitations of the Law must be rigidly maintained.
When
we believe in Christ we live by faith. When we believe in
the Law we may be active enough but we have no life. The
function of the Law is not to give life; the function of
the Law is to kill. True, the Law says: "The man that
doeth them shall live in them." But where is
the person who can do "them," i.e., love God
with all his heart, soul, and mind, and his neighbor as
himself?
Paul
has nothing against those who are justified by faith and
therefore are true doers of the Law. He opposes those who
think they can fulfill the Law when in reality they can
only sin against the Law by trying to obtain righteousness
by the Law. The Law demands that we fear, love, and
worship God with a true faith. The law-workers fail to do
this. Instead, they invent new modes of worship and new
kinds of works which God never commanded. They provoke His
anger according to the passage: "
But in vain they do worship me, teaching for doctrines the
commandments of men.
" (Matthew 15:9.) Hence, the law-righteous workers
are downright rebels against God, and idolaters who
constantly sin against the first commandment. In short,
they are no good at-all though outwardly they seem to be
extremely solicitous of the honor of God.
We
who are justified by faith as the saints of old, may be
under the Law, but we are not under the curse of the Law
because sin is not imputed to us for Christ's sake. If the
Law cannot be fulfilled by the believers, if sin continues
to cling to them despite their love for God, what can you
expect of people who are not yet justified by faith, who
are still enemies of God and His Word, like the
unbelieving law-workers? It goes to show how impossible it
is for those who have not been justified by faith to
fulfill the Law.
VERSE
13. Christ hath redeemed us from the
curse of the law, being made a curse for us: for it is
written, Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree.
Jerome
and his present-day followers rack their miserable brains
over this comforting passage in an effort to save Christ
from the fancied insult of being called a curse. They say:
"This quotation from Moses does not apply to Christ.
Paul is taking liberties with Moses by
generalizing the statements in @Deuteronomy
21:23. Moses has 'he that is hanged.' Paul puts it
'every one that hangeth.' On the other hand, Paul omits
the words 'of God' in his quotation from Moses: 'For he
that is hanged is accursed of God.' Moses speaks of a
criminal who is worthy of death." "How,"
our opponents ask, "can this passage be applied to
the holy Christ as if He were accursed of God and worthy
to be hanged?" This piece of exegesis may impress the
naive as a zealous attempt to defend the honor and glory
of Christ. Let us see what Paul has in mind.
Paul
does not say that Christ was made a curse for Himself. The
accent is on the two words "for us." Christ is
personally innocent. Personally, He did not deserve to be
hanged for any crime of His own doing. But because Christ
took the place of others who were sinners, He was hanged
like any other transgressor. The Law of Moses leaves no
loopholes. It says that a transgressor should be hanged.
Who are the other sinners? We are. The sentence of death
and everlasting damnation had long been pronounced over
us. But Christ took all our sins and died for them on the
Cross. "
He was numbered with the transgressors; and he bare the
sin of many, and made intercession for the transgressors.
" (Isaiah 53:12.)
All
the prophets of old said that Christ should be the
greatest transgressor, murderer, adulterer, thief,
blasphemer that ever was or ever could be on earth. When
He took the sins of the whole world upon Himself, Christ
was no longer an innocent person. He was a sinner burdened
with the sins of a Paul who was a blasphemer; burdened
with the sins of a Peter who denied Christ; burdened with
the sins of a David who committed adultery and murder, and
gave the heathen occasion to laugh at the Lord. In short,
Christ was charged with the sins of all men, that He
should pay for them with His own blood. The curse struck
Him. The Law found Him among sinners. He was not only in
the company of sinners. He had gone
so far as to invest Himself with the flesh and blood of
sinners. So the Law judged and hanged Him for a sinner.
In
separating Christ from us sinners and holding Him up as a
holy exemplar, errorists rob us of our best comfort. They
misrepresent Him as a threatening tyrant who is ready to
slaughter us at the slightest provocation.
I
am told that it is preposterous and wicked to call the Son
of God a cursed sinner. I answer: If you deny that He is a
condemned sinner, you are forced to deny that Christ died.
It is not less preposterous to say, the Son of God died,
than to say, the Son of God was a sinner.
John
the Baptist called Him "the lamb of God, which taketh
away the sin of the world." Being the unspotted Lamb
of God, Christ was personally innocent. But because He
took the sins of the world His sinlessness was defiled
with the sinfulness of the world. Whatever sins I, you,
all of us have committed or shall commit, they are
Christ's sins as if He had committed them Himself. Our
sins have to be Christ's sins or we shall perish forever.
Isaiah
declares of Christ: "The Lord hath laid on him the
iniquity of us all." We have no right to minimize the
force of this declaration. God does not amuse Himself with
words. What a relief for a Christian to know that Christ
is covered all over with my sins, your sins, and the sins
of the whole world.
The
papists invented their own doctrine of faith. They say
charity creates and adorns their faith. By stripping
Christ of our sins, by making Him sinless, they cast our
sins back at us, and make Christ absolutely worthless to
us. What sort of charity is this? If that is a sample of
their vaunted charity we want none of it.
Our
merciful Father in heaven saw how the Law oppressed us and
how impossible it was for us to get out from under the
curse of the Law. He therefore sent His only Son into the
world and said to Him: "You are now Peter, the liar;
Paul, the persecutor; David, the adulterer; Adam, the
disobedient; the thief on the cross. You, My
Son, must pay the world's iniquity." The Law growls:
"All right. If Your Son is taking the sin of the
world, I see no sins anywhere else but in Him. He shall
die on the Cross." And the Law kills Christ. But we
go free.
The
argument of the Apostle against the righteousness of the
Law is impregnable. If Christ bears our sins, we do not
bear them. But if Christ is innocent of our sins and does
not bear them, we must bear them, and we shall die in our
sins. "But thanks be to God, which giveth us the
victory through our Lord Jesus Christ."
Let
us see how Christ was able to gain the victory over our
enemies. The sins of the whole world, past, present, and
future, fastened themselves upon Christ and condemned Him.
But because Christ is God He had an everlasting and
unconquerable righteousness. These two, the sin of the
world and the righteousness of God, met in a death
struggle. Furiously the sin of the world assailed the
righteousness of God. Righteousness is immortal and
invincible. On the other hand, sin is a mighty tyrant who
subdues all men. This tyrant pounces on Christ. But
Christ's righteousness is unconquerable. The result is
inevitable. Sin is defeated and righteousness triumphs and
reigns forever.
In
the same manner was death defeated. Death is emperor of
the world. He strikes down kings, princes, all men. He has
an idea to destroy all life. But Christ has immortal life,
and life immortal gained the victory over death. Through
Christ death has lost her sting. Christ is the Death of
death.
The
curse of God waged a similar battle with the eternal mercy
of God in Christ. The curse meant to condemn God's mercy.
But it could not do it because the mercy of God is
everlasting. The curse had to give way. If the mercy of
God in Christ had lost out, God Himself would have lost
out, which, of course, is impossible.
"Christ," says Paul, "spoiled
principalities and powers, He made a show of them openly,
triumphing over them in
it.
" (Col. 2:15.) They cannot harm those who hide in
Christ. Sin, death, the wrath of God, hell, the devil are
mortified in Christ. Where Christ is near the powers of
evil must keep their distance. St. John says: "
And this is the victory that overcometh the world, even
our faith.
" (I John 5:4.)
You
may now perceive why it is imperative to believe and
confess the divinity of Christ. To overcome the sin of a
whole world, and death, and the wrath of God was no work
for any creature. The power of sin and death could be
broken only by a greater power. God alone could abolish
sin, destroy death, and take away the curse of the Law.
God alone could bring righteousness, life, and mercy to
light. In attributing these achievements to Christ the
Scriptures pronounce Christ to be God forever. The article
of justification is indeed fundamental. If we remain sound
in this one article, we remain sound in all the other
articles of the Christian faith. When we teach
justification by faith in Christ we confess at the same
time that Christ is God.
I
cannot get over the blindness of the Pope's theologians.
To imagine that the mighty forces of sin, death, and the
curse can be vanquished by the righteousness of man's
paltry works, by fasting, pilgrimages, masses, vows, and
such gewgaws. These blind leaders of the blind turn the
poor people over to the mercy of sin, death, and the
devil. What chance has a defenseless human creature
against these powers of darkness? They train sinners who
are ten times worse than any thief, whore, murderer. The
divine power of God alone can destroy sin and death, and
create righteousness and life.
When
we hear that Christ was made a curse for us, let us
believe it with joy and assurance. By faith Christ changes
places with us. He gets our sins, we get His holiness.
By
faith alone can we become righteous, for faith invests us
with the sinlessness of Christ. The more fully we believe
this, the fuller will be our joy. If you believe that sin,
death, and the curse are void, why, they are null, zero.
Whenever sin and death make you nervous write it down as
an illusion of the devil. There is no sin now, no curse,
no death, no devil because Christ has done away with them.
This fact is sure. There is nothing wrong with the fact.
The defect lies in our lack of faith.
In
the Apostolic Creed we confess: "I believe in the
holy Christian Church." That means, I believe that
there is no sin, no curse, no evil in the Church of God.
Faith says: "I believe that." But if you want to
believe your eyes you will find many shortcomings and
offenses in the members of the holy Church. You see them
succumb to temptation, you see them weak in faith, you see
them giving way to anger, envy, and other evil
dispositions. "How can the Church be holy?" you
ask. It is with the Christian Church as it is with the
individual Christian. If I examine myself I find enough
unholiness to shock me. But when I look at Christ in me I
find that I am altogether holy. And so it is with the
Church.
Holy
Writ does not say that Christ was under the curse. It says
directly that Christ was made a curse. In II Corinthians
5:21 Paul writes: "
For he (God) hath made him (Christ) to be sin for us, who
knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of
God in him.
" Although this and similar passages may be properly
explained by saying that Christ was made a sacrifice for
the curse and for sin, yet in my judgment it is better to
leave these passages stand as they read: Christ was made
sin itself; Christ was made the curse itself. When a
sinner gets wise to himself he does not only feel
miserable, he feels like misery personified; he does not
only feel like a sinner, he feels like sin itself.
To
finish with this verse: All evils would have overwhelmed
us, as they shall overwhelm the unbelievers forever, if
Christ had not become the great transgressor and guilty
bearer of all our sins. The sins of the world got Him down
for a moment. They came around Him like water. Of Christ,
the Old Testament Prophet complained: "
Thy fierce wrath goeth over me; thy terrors have cut me
off.
" (Psalm 88:16.) By Christ's salvation we have been
delivered from the terrors of God to a life of eternal
felicity.
VERSE
14. That the blessing of Abraham
might come, on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ.
Paul
always keeps this text before him: "In thy seed shall
all the nations of the earth be blessed." The
blessing promised unto Abraham could come upon the
Gentiles only by Christ, the seed of Abraham. To become a
blessing unto all nations Christ had to be made a curse to
take away the curse from the nations of the earth. The
merit that we plead, and the work that we proffer is
Christ who was made a curse for us.
Let
us become expert in the art of transferring our sins, our
death, and every evil from ourselves to Christ; and
Christ's righteousness and blessing from Christ to
ourselves.
VERSE
14. That we might receive the
promise of the Spirit through faith.
"The
promise of the Spirit" is Hebrew for "the
promised Spirit." The Spirit spells freedom from the
Law, sin, death, the curse, hell, and the judgment of God.
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