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JEWISH CLAIMS: NO HOPE IN HUMAN MERIT
Ro 3:1-20
As the Apostle dictates, there rises before his mind a figure often
seen by his eyes, the Rabbinic disputant. Keen, subtle,
unscrupulous,
at once eagerly in earnest yet ready to use any argument for
victory,
how often that adversary had crossed his path, in Syria, in Asia
Minor, in Macedonia, in Achaia! He is present now to his
consciousness, within the quiet house of Gaius; and his questions
come thick and fast, following on this urgent appeal to his, alas!
almost impenetrable conscience. "What then is the advantage of the Jew? Or what is the
profit of circumcision? If some did not believe, what of that?
Will their faithlessness cancel God’s good faith?" "But if our
unrighteousness sets off God’s righteousness, would God be
unjust, bringing His wrath to bear?" We group the questions together thus, to make it the clearer
that
we do enter here, at this opening of the third chapter, upon a brief
controversial dialogue; perhaps the almost verbatim record of many a
dialogue actually spoken. The Jew, pressed hard with moral proofs of
his responsibility, must often have turned thus upon his pursuer, or
rather have tried thus to escape from him in the subtleties of a
false appeal to the faithfulness of God. And first he meets the Apostle’s stern assertion that circumcision
without spiritual reality will not save. He asks, where then is the
advantage of Jewish descent? What is the profit, the good, of
circumcision? It is a mode of reply not unknown in discussions on
Christian ordinances; "What then is the good of belonging to a
historic Church at all? What do you give the divine Sacraments to
do?" The Apostle answers his questioner at once; Much, in every way;
first, because they were entrusted with the Oracles of God.
"First," as if there were more to say in detail. Something, at
least, of what is here left unsaid is said later, Ro 9:4,5,
where he recounts the long roll of Israel’s spiritual and historical
splendours; "the adoption, and the glory, and the covenants, and the
law giving, and the worship, and the promises, and the Fathers, and
the Christ." Was it nothing to be bound up with things like these,
in a bond made at once of blood relationship, holy memories, and
magnificent hopes? Was it nothing to be exhorted to righteousness,
fidelity, and love by finding the individual life thus surrounded?
But here he places "first" of even these wonderful treasures this,
that Israel was "entrusted with the Oracles of God," the Utterances
of God, His unique Message to man "through His prophets, in the Holy
Scriptures." Yes, here was something which gave to the Jew an
"advantage" without which the others would either have had no
existence, or no significance. He was the trustee of Revelation. In
his care was lodged the Book by which man was to live and die;
through which he was to know immeasurably more about God and about
himself than he could learn from all other informants put together.
He, his people, his Church, were the "witness and keeper of Holy
Writ." And, therefore, to be born of Israel and ritually entered
into the covenant of Israel, was to be born into the light of
revelation, and committed to the care of the witnesses and keepers
of
the light. To insist upon this immense privilege is altogether to St. Paul’s
purpose here. For it is a privilege which evidently carries an awful
responsibility with it. What would be the guilt of the soul, and of
the Community, to whom those Oracles were—not given as property, but
entrusted—and who did not do the things they said? Again the message passes on to the Israel of the Christian Church.
"What advantage hath the Christian? What profit is there of
Baptism?" "Much, in every way; first, because to the Church is
entrusted the light of revelation." To be born in it, to be baptised
in it, is to be born into the sunshine of revelation, and laid on
the
heart and care of the Community which witnesses to the genuineness
of
its Oracles and sees to their preservation and their spread. Great
is
the talent. Great is the accountability. But the Rabbinist goes on. For if some did not believe, what of
that?
Will their faithlessness cancel God’s good faith? These Oracles of
God promise interminable glories to Israel, to Israel as a
community,
a body. Shall not that promise hold good for the whole mass, though
some (bold euphemism for the faithless multitudes!) have rejected
the
Promiser? Will not the unbelieving Jew, after all, find his way to
life eternal for his company’s sake, for his part and lot in the
covenant community? "Will God’s faith," His good faith, His
plighted word, be reduced to empty sounds by the bad Israelite’s
sin?
Away with the thought, the Apostle answers. Anything is more
possible
than that God should lie. Nay, let God prove true, and every man
prove liar; as it stands written, {Ps 51:4} "That Thou mightest
be justified in Thy words, and mightest overcome when Thou
impleadest." He quotes the Psalmist in that deep utterance of
self-accusation, where he takes part against himself, and finds
himself guilty "without one plea," and, in the loyalty of the
regenerate and now awakened soul, is jealous to vindicate the
justice
of his condemning God. The whole Scripture contains no more
impassioned, yet no more profound and deliberate, utterance of the
eternal truth that God is always in the right or He would be no God
at all; that it is better, and more reasonable, to doubt anything
than to doubt His righteousness, whatever cloud surrounds it, and
whatever lightning bursts the cloud. But again the caviller, intent not on God’s glory, but on his own
position, takes up the word. But if our unrighteousness exhibits,
sets off, God’s righteousness, if our sin gives occasion to grace to
abound, if our guilt lets the generosity of God’s Way of Acceptance
stand out the more wonderful by contrast—what shall we say? Would
God be unjust, bringing His (την) wrath to bear on us, when our
pardon would illustrate His free grace? Would He be unjust? Would He
not be unjust? We struggle, in our paraphrase, to bring out the bearing, as it
seems
to us, of a passage of almost equal grammatical difficulty and
argumentative subtlety. The Apostle seems to be "in a strait"
between the wish to represent the caviller’s thought, and the dread
of one really irreverent word. He throws the man’s last question
into a form which, grammatically, expects a "no" when the drift of
the thought would lead us up to a shocking "yes." And then at once
he passes to his answer. "I speak as man," man-wise; as if this
question of balanced rights and wrongs were one between man and man,
not between man and eternal God. Such talk, even for argument’s
sake,
is impossible for the regenerate soul except under urgent protest.
Away with the thought that He would not be righteous, in His
punishment of any given sin. "Since how shall God judge the world?"
How, on such conditions, shall we repose on the ultimate fact that
He
is the universal Judge? If He could not, righteously, punish a
deliberate sin because pardon, under certain conditions, illustrates
His glory, then He could not punish any sin at all. But He is
the
Judge; He does bring wrath to bear!’ Now he takes up the caviller on his own ground, and goes all lengths
upon it, and then flies with abhorrence from it. For if God’s truth,
in the matter of my lie, has abounded, has come more amply out, to
His glory, why am I too called to judgment as a sinner? And why not
say, as the slander against us goes, and as some assert that we do
say, "Let us do the ill that the good may come"? So they assert of
us. But their doom is just, -the doom of those who would utter such
a
maxim, finding shelter for a lie under the throne of God. No doubt he speaks from a bitter and frequent experience when he
takes this particular case, and with a solemn irony claims exemption
for himself from the liar’s, sentence of death. It is plain that the
charge of untruth was, for some reason or another, often thrown at
St. Paul; we see this in the marked urgency with which, from time to
time, he asserts his truthfulness; "The things which I say, behold,
before God I lie not"; {Ga 1:20} "I speak the truth in Christ
and lie not". {Ro 9:1} Perhaps the manifold sympathies of his
heart gave innocent occasion sometimes for the charge. The man who
could be "all things to all men," {1Co 9:22} taking with a
genuine insight their point of view, and saying things which showed
that he took it, would be very likely to be set down by narrower
minds as untruthful. And the very boldness of his teaching might
give
further occasion, equally innocent; as he asserted at different
times, with equal emphasis, opposite sides of truth. But these
somewhat subtle excuses for false witness against this great master
of holy sincerity would not be necessary where genuine malice was at
work. No man is so truthful that he cannot be charged with
falsehood;
and no charge is so likely to injure even where it only feigns to
strike. And of course the mighty paradox of Justification lent
itself
easily to the distortions, as well as to the contradictions, of
sinners. "Let us do evil that good may come" no doubt represented
the report which prejudice and bigotry would regularly carry away
and
spread after every discourse, and every argument, about free
Forgiveness. It is so still: "If this is true, we may live as we
like; if this is true, then the worst sinner makes the best saint."
Things like this have been current sayings since Luther, since
Whitefield, and till now. Later in the Epistle we shall see the
unwilling evidence which such distortions bear to the nature of the
maligned doctrine; but here the allusion is too passing to bring
this
out. "Whose doom is just." What a witness is this to the
inalienable truthfulness of the Gospel! This brief stern
utterance absolutely repudiates all apology for means by end;
all seeking of even the good of men by the way of saying the
thing that is not. Deep and strong, almost from the first, has
been the temptation to the Christian man to think otherwise,
until we find whole systems of casuistry developed whose aim
seems to be to go as near the edge of untruthfulness as
possible, if not beyond it, in religion. But the New Testament
sweeps the entire idea of the pious fraud away, with this short
thunder peal, "Their doom is just." It will hear of no
unholiness that leaves out truthfulness; no word, no deed, no
habit, that even with the purest purpose belies the God of
reality and veracity. If we read aright Ac 24:20,21, with Ac 23:6, we see St.
Paul himself once, under urgent pressure of circumstances, betrayed
into an equivocation, and then, publicly and soon, expressing his
regret of conscience. "I am a Pharisee, and a Pharisee’s son; about
the hope and resurrection of the dead I am called in question."
True, true in fact, but not the whole truth, not the unreserved
account of his attitude towards the Pharisee. Therefore, a week
later, he confesses, does he not? that in this one thing there
was "evil in him, while he stood before the council." Happy the
Christian, happy indeed the Christian public man, immersed in
management and discussion, whose memory is as clear about truth
telling, and whose conscience is as sensitive! What then? are we superior? Say not so at all. Thus now he proceeds,
taking the word finally from his supposed antagonist. Who are the
"we," and with whom are "we" compared? The drift of the argument
admits of two replies to this question. "We" may be "we Jews"; as
if Paul placed himself in instinctive sympathy, by the side of the
compatriot whose cavils he has just combated, and gathered up here
into a final assertion all he has said before of the (at least)
equal
guilt of the Jew beside the Greek. Or "we" may be "we
Christians," taken for the moment as men apart from Christ; it may
be a repudiation of the thought that he has been speaking from a
pedestal, or from a tribunal. As if he said, "Do not think that I,
or my friends in Christ, would say to the world, Jewish or Gentile,
that we are holier than you. No; we speak not from the bench, but
from the bar. Apart from Him who is our peace and life, we are ‘in
the same condemnation.’ It is exactly because we are in it that we
turn and say to you, ‘Do not ye fear God?"’ On the whole, this
latter reference seems the truer to the thought and spirit of the
whole context. For we have already charged Jews and Greeks, all of them, with being
under sin; with being brought under sin, as the Greek bids us more
exactly render, giving us the thought that the race has fallen
from a good estate into an evil; self-involved in an awful
super-incumbent ruin. As it stands written, that there is not even
one man righteous; there is not a man who understands, not a man who
seeks his (~&964;&959;&957;~) God. All have left the road; they have turned
worthless together. There is not a man who does what is good, there
is not. even so many as one. A grave set open is their throat,
exhaling the stench of polluted words; with their tongues they have
deceived; asp’s venom is under their lips; (men) whose mouth is
brimming with curse and bitterness. Swift are their feet to shed
blood; ruin and misery for their victims are in their ways; and the
way of peace they never knew. There is no such thing as fear of God
before their eyes. Here is a tesselation of Old Testament oracles. The fragments, hard
and dark, come from divers quarries; from the Psalms, {Ps
5:9,10:7,14:1-3,36:1,140:3} from the Proverbs, {Pr 1:16} from
Isaiah. {Isa 59:7} All in the first instance depict and denounce
classes ofsins and sinners in Israelite society; and we may wonder
at
first sight how their evidence convicts all men everywhere, and in
all time, of condemnable and fatal sin. But we need not only, in
submission, own that somehow it must be so, for "it stands written"
here; we may see, in part, now it is so. These special charges
against certain sorts of human lives stand in the same Book which
levels the general charge against "the human heart," {Jer 17:9}
that it is "deceitful above all things, hopelessly diseased," and
incapable of knowing all its own corruption. The crudest surface
phenomena of sin are thus never isolated from the dire underlying
epidemic of the race of man. The actual evil of men shows the
potential evil of man. The tiger strokes of open wickedness show the
tiger nature, which is always present, even when its possessor least
suspects it. Circumstances infinitely vary, and among them those
internal circumstances which we call special tastes and
dispositions.
But everywhere amidst them all is the human heart, made upright in
its creation, self-wrecked into moral wrongness when it turned
itself
from God. That it is turned from Him, not to Him, appears when
its direction is tested by the collision between His claim and its
will And in this aversion from the Holy One, who claims the whole
heart, there lies at least the potency of "all unrighteousness." Long after this, as his glorious rest drew near, St. Paul wrote
again
of the human heart, to "his true son" Titus. {Tit 3:3} He
reminds him of the wonder of that saving grace which he so fully
unfolds in this Epistle; how, "not according to our works," the
"God who loveth man" had saved Titus, and saved Paul. And what had
he saved them from? From a state in which they were "disobedient,
deceived, the slaves of divers lusts and pleasures, living in malice
and envy, hateful, hating one another." What, the loyal and
laborious Titus, the chaste, the upright, the unutterably earnest
Paul? Is not the picture greatly, lamentably exaggerated, a burst of
religious rhetoric? Adolphe Monod tells us that he once thought
it must be so; he felt himself quite unable to submit to the awful
witness. But years moved, and he saw deeper into himself, seeing
deeper into the holiness of God; and the truthfulness of that
passage
grew upon him. Not that its difficulties all vanished, but its
truthfulness shone out, "and sure I am," he said from his death
bed, "that when this veil of flesh shall fall I shall recognise in
that passage the truest portrait ever painted of my own natural
heart." Robert Browning, in a poem of terrible moral interest and
power, confesses that, amidst a thousand doubts and
difficulties, his mind was anchored to faith in Christianity by the
fact of its doctrine of Sin: "I still, to suppose it true, for my part See
reasons and reasons; this, to begin; ‘Tis the faith that
launched point-blank her dart At the head of a lie;
taught Original Sin, The Corruption of Man’s
Heart." Now we know that whatever things the Law says, it speaks them to
those in the Law, those within its range, its dominion; that every
mouth may be stopped, and all the world may. prove guilty with
regard
to God. "The Law"; that is to say, here, the Old Testament
Revelation. This not only contains the Mosaic and Prophetic moral
code, but has it for one grand pervading object, in all its parts,
to
prepare man for Christ by exposing him to himself, in his shame and
need. It shows him in a thousand ways that "he cannot serve the
Lord," {Jos 24:19} on purpose that in that same Lord he may
take refuge from both his guilt and his impotency. And this it does
for "those in the Law"; that is to say here, primarily, for the
Race, the Church, whom it surrounded with its light of holy fire,
and
whom in this passage the Apostle has in his first thoughts. Yet
they,
surely, are not alone upon his mind. We have seen already how "the
Law" is, after all, only the more full and direct enunciation of
"law"; so that the Gentile as well as the Jew has to do with the
light, and with the responsibility, of a knowledge of the will of
God. While the chain of stern quotations we have just handled lies
heaviest on Israel, it yet binds the world. It "shuts every
mouth." It drags man in guilty before God. "That every mouth may be stopped." Oh, solemn silence, when
at last it comes! The harsh or muffled voices of self-defence,
of self-assertion are hushed at length. The man, like one of
old, when he saw his righteous self in the light of God,
"lays his hand on his mouth". {Job 11:4} He leaves speech
to God, and learns at last to listen. What shall he hear? An
external repudiation? An objurgation, and then a final and
exterminating anathema? No, something far other, and better, and
more wonderful. But there must first be silence on man’s part,
if it is to be heard. "Hear—and your souls shall live." So the great argument pauses, gathered up into an utterance which at
once concentrates what has gone before, and prepares us for a
glorious sequel. Shut thy mouth, O man, and listen now: Because by means of works of law there shall be justified no flesh
in
His presence; for by means of law comes—moral knowledge of sin.
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