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PEACE, LOVE, AND JOY FOR THE JUSTIFIED
Ro 5:1-11
WE reached a pause in the Apostle’s thought with the close of the
last paragraph. We may reverently imagine, as in spirit we listen to
his dictation, that a pause comes also in his work; that he is
silent, and Tertius puts down the pen, and they spend their hearts
awhile on worshipping recollection and realisation. The Lord
delivered up; His people justified; the Lord risen again, alive for
evermore—here was matter for love, joy, and wonder. But the Letter must proceed, and the argument has its fullest and
most wonderful developments yet to come. It has now already
expounded
the tremendous need of justifying mercy, for every soul of man.
It has shown how faith, always and only, is the way to
appropriate that mercy—the way of God’s will, and manifestly also in
its own nature the way of deepest fitness. We have been allowed to
see faith in illustrative action, in Abraham, who by faith,
absolutely, without the least advantage of traditional privilege,
received justification, with the vast concurrent blessings which it
carried. Lastly we have heard St. Paul dictate to Tertius, for the
Romans and for us, those sum-marising words {Ro 4:25} in which
we now have God’s own certificate of the triumphant efficacy of that
Atoning Work, which sustains the Promise in order that the Promise
may sustain us believing. We are now to approach the glorious theme of the Life of the
Justified. This is to be seen not only as a state whose basis is the
reconciliation of the Law, and whose gate and walls are the covenant
Promise. It is to appear as a state warmed with eternal Love;
irradiated with the prospect of glory. In it the man, knit up with
Christ his Head, his Bridegroom, his all, yields himself with joy to
the God who has received him. In the living power of the heavenly
Spirit, who perpetually delivers him from himself, he obeys, prays,
works, and suffers, in a liberty which is only not yet that of
heaven, and in which he is maintained to the end by Him who has
planned his full personal salvation from eternity to eternity. It has been the temptation of Christians sometimes to regard the
truth and exposition of Justification as if there were a certain
hardness and as it were dryness about it; as if it were a topic
rather for the schools than for life. If excuses have ever been
given
for such a view, they must come from other quarters than the Epistle
to the Romans. Christian teachers, of many periods, may have
discussed Justification as coldly as if they were writing a law
book.
Or again they may have examined it as if it were a truth terminating
in itself, the Omega as well as the Alpha of salvation; and then it
has been misrepresented, of course. For the Apostle certainly does
not discuss it drily; he lays deep indeed the foundations of Law and
Atonement, but he does it in the manner of a man who is not drawing
the plan of a refuge, but calling his reader from the tempest into
what is not only a refuge but a home. And again he does not discuss
it in isolation. He spends his fullest, largest, and most loving
expositions on its intense and vital connection with concurrent
truths. He is about now to take us, through a noble vestibule, into
the sanctuary of the life of the accepted, the life of union, of
surrender, of the Holy Ghost. Justified therefore on terms of faith, we have peace towards our
God,
we possess in regard of Him the "quietness and assurance" of
acceptance, through our Lord Jesus Christ, thus delivered up, and
raised up, for us; through whom we have actually found our
introduction, our free admission, by our faith, into this grace,
this
unearned acceptance for Another’s sake, in which we stand, instead
of
falling ruined, sentenced, at the tribunal. And we exult, not with
the sinful "boasting" of the legalist, but in hope (literally, "on
hope," as reposing on the promised prospect) of the glory of our
God, the light of the heavenly vision and fruition of our Justifier,
and the splendour of an eternal service of Him in that fruition. Nor
only so, but we exult too in our tribulations, with a better
fortitude than the Stoic’s artificial serenity, knowing that the
tribulation works out, develops, patient persistency, as it
occasions
proof after proof of the power of God in our weakness, and thus
generates the habit of reliance; and then the patient
persistency
develops proof, brings out in experience, as a proved fact, that
through Christ we are not what we were; and then the proof develops
hope, solid and definite expectation of continuing grace and final
glory, and, in particular, of the Lord’s Return; and the hope does
not shame, does not disappoint; it is a hope sure and steadfast, for
it is the hope of those who now know that they are objects of
eternal
Love; because the love of our God has been poured out in our hearts;
His love to us has been as it were diffused through our
consciousness, poured out in a glad experience as rain from the
cloud, as floods from the rising spring, through the Holy Spirit
that
was given to us. Here first is mentioned explicitly, in the Apostle’s argument (we do
not Ro 1:4 as in the argument), the blessed Spirit, the Lord the
Holy Ghost. Hitherto the occasion for the mention has hardly arisen.
The considerations have been mainly upon the personal guilt of the
sinner, and the objective fact of the Atonement, and the exercise of
faith, of trust in God, as a genuine personal act of man. With a
definite purpose, we may reverently think, the discussion of faith
has been kept thus far clear of the thought of anything lying behind
faith, of any "grace" giving faith. For whether or no faith is
the gift of God, it is most certainly the act of man; none should
assert this more decidedly than those who hold (as we do) that Eph
2:8 does teach that where saving faith is, it is there
because God has "given" it. But how does He "give" it? Not,
surely, by implanting a new faculty, but by so opening the soul to
God in Christ that the divine magnet effectually draws the man to a
willing repose upon such a God. But the man does this, as an act,
himself. He trusts God as genuinely, as personally, as much with his
own faculty of trust, as he trusts a man whom he sees to be quite
trustworthy and precisely fit to meet an imperative need. Thus it is
often the work of the evangelist and the teacher to insist upon the
duty rather than the grace of faith; to bid men rather thank
God for faith when they have believed than wait for the sense of
an afflatus before believing. And is this not what St. Paul does
here? At this point of his argument, and not before, he reminds
the believer that his possession of peace, of happiness, of hope,
has
been attained and realised not, ultimately, of himself, but through
the working of the Eternal Spirit. The insight into mercy, into a
propitiation provided by divine love, and so into the holy secret of
the divine love itself, has been given him by the Holy Ghost, who
has
taken of the things of Christ, and shown them to him, and secretly
handled his "heart" so that the fact of the love of God is a part
of experience at last. The man has been told of his great need, and
of the sure and open refuge, and has stepped through its peaceful
gate in the act of trusting the message and the will of God. Now he
is asked to look round, to look back, and bless the hand which, when
he was outside in the naked field of death, opened his eyes to see,
and guided his will to choose. What a retrospect it is! Let us trace it from the first words of
this
paragraph again. First, here is the sure fact of our acceptance,
and the reason of it, and the method. "Therefore"; let not that
word be forgotten. Our Justification is no arbitrary matter, whose
causelessness suggests an illusion, or a precarious peace.
"Therefore"; it rests upon an antecedent, in the logical chain of
divine facts. We have read that antecedent, Ro 4:25; "Jesus our
Lord was given up because of our transgressions, and was raised up
because of our justification." We assented to that fact; we have
accepted Him, only and altogether, in this work of His.
Therefore
we are justified, δικαιωθεντες, placed by an act of divine
Love, working in the line of divine Law, among those whom the Judge
accepts, that He may embrace them as Father. Then, in this
possession
of the "peace" of our acceptance, thus led in (προσαγωγη),
through the gate of the promise, with the footstep of faith, we find
inside our Refuge far more than merely safety. We look up from
within
the blessed walls, sprinkled with atoning blood, and we see above
them the hope of glory, invisible outside. And we turn to our
present
life within them (for all our life is to be lived within that broad
sanctuary now), and we find resources provided there for a present
as
well as a prospective joy. We address ourselves to the discipline of
the place; for it has its discipline; the refuge is home, but it
is also school; and we find, when we begin to try it, that the
discipline is full of joy. It brings out into a joyful consciousness
the power we now have, in Him who has accepted us, in Him who is our
Acceptance, to suffer and to serve in love. Our life has become a
life not of peace only, but of the hope which animates peace, and
makes it flow "as a river." From hour to hour we enjoy the
never-disappointing hope of "grace for grace," new grace for the
next new need; and beyond it, and above it, the certainties of the
hope of glory. To drop our metaphor of the sanctuary for that of the
pilgrimage, we find ourselves upon a pathway, steep and rocky, but
always mounting into purer air, and so as to show us nobler
prospects; and at the summit—the pathway will be continued, and
transfigured, into the golden street of the City; the same track,
but
within the gate of heaven. Into all this the Holy Ghost has led us. He has been at the heart of
the whole internal process. He made the thunder of the Law
articulate
to our conscience. He gave us faith by manifesting Christ. And, in
Christ, He has "poured out in our hearts the love of God." For now the Apostle takes up that word, "the Love of God," and
holds it to our sight, and we see in its pure glory no vague
abstraction, but the face, and the work, of Jesus Christ. Such is
the
context into which we now advance. He is reasoning on; "For
Christ, when we still were weak." He has set justification before us
in its majestic lawfulness. But he has now to expand its mighty
love,
of which the Holy Ghost has made us conscious in our hearts. We are
to see in the Atonement not only a guarantee that we have a valid
title to a just acceptance. We are to see in it the love of the
Father and the Son, so that not our security only, but our bliss,
may
be full. For Christ, we still being weak (gentle euphemism for our utter
impotence, our guilty inability to meet the sinless claim of the Law
of God), in season, in the fulness of time, when the ages of precept
and of failure had done their work, and man had learnt something to
purpose of the lesson of self-despair, for the ungodly—died. "For
the ungodly," "concerning them," "with reference to them," that
is to say, in this context of saving mercy, "in their interests, for
their rescue, as their propitiation." "The ungodly," or, more
literally still, without the article, "ungodly ones"; a designation
general and inclusive for those for whom He died. Above {Ro 4:5}
we saw the word used with a certain limitation, as of the worst
among
the sinful. But here, surely, with a solemn paradox, it covers the
whole field of the Fall. The ungodly here are not the flagrant and
disreputable only; they are all who are not in harmony with God; the
potential as well as the actual doers of grievous sin. For them
"Christ died"; not "lived," let us remember, but "died." It was
a question not of example, nor of suasion, nor even of utterances of
divine compassion. It was a question of law and guilt; and it was to
be met only by the deathsentence and the death fact; such death as
He
died of whom, a little while before, this same Correspondent had
written to the converts of Galatia; {Ga 3:13} "Christ bought us
out from the curse of the Law, when He became a curse for us." All
the untold emphasis of the sentence, and of the thought, lies here
upon those last words, upon each and all of them, "for ungodly
ones—He died." The sequel shows this to us; he proceeds: For
scarcely, with difficulty, and in rare instances, for a just man
will
one die; "scarcely," he will not say "never," for, for the good
man, the man answering in some measure the ideal of gracious and not
only of legal goodness, perhaps someone actually ventures to die.
But
God commends, as by a glorious contrast, His love, "His" as above
all current human love, "His own love," towards us, because while
we were still sinners, and as such repulsive to the Holy, One,
Christ
for us did die. We are not to read this passage as if it were a statistical
assertion
as to the facts of human love and its possible sacrifices. The moral
argument will not be affected if we are able, as we shall be, to
adduce cases where unregenerate man has given even his life to save
the life of one, or of many, to whom he is not emotionally or
naturally attracted. All that is necessary to St. Paul’s tender plea
for the love of God is the certain fact that the cases of death even
on behalf of one who morally deserves a great sacrifice are
relatively very, very few. The thought of merit is the ruling
thought
in the connection. He labours to bring out the sovereign
Lovingkindness, which went even to the length and depth of death, by
reminding us, that, whatever moved it, it was not moved, even in the
lowest imaginable degree, by any merit, no, nor by any "congruity,"
in us. And yet we were sought, and saved. He who planned the
salvation, and provided it, was the eternal Lawgiver and Judge. He
who loved us is Himself eternal Right, to whom all our wrong is
unutterably repellent. What then is He as Love, who, being also
Right, stays not till He has given His Son to the death of the
Atonement? So we have indeed a warrant to "believe the love of God". {1Jo
4:16} Yes, to believe it. We look within us, and it is incredible.
If we have really seen ourselves, we have seen ground for a
sorrowful
conviction that He who is eternal Right must view us with aversion.
But if we have really seen Christ, we have seen ground for—not
feeling at all, it may be, at this moment, but—believing that God is
Love, and loves us. What is it to believe Him? It is to take Him at
His word; to act altogether not upon our internal consciousness but
upon His warrant. We look at the Cross, or rather, we look at the
crucified. Lord Jesus in His Resurrection; we read at His feet these
words of His Apostle; and we go away to take God at His assurance
that we, unlovely, are beloved. "My child," said a dying French saint, as she gave a last
embrace to her daughter, "I have loved you because of what you
are; my heavenly Father, to whom I go, has loved me malgre
moi." And how does the divine reasoning now advance? "From glory to
glory"; from acceptance by the Holy One, who is Love, to present and
endless preservation in His Beloved One. Therefore much more,
justified now in His blood, as it were "in" its laver of ablution,
or again "within" its circle of sprinkling as it marks the
precincts of our inviolable sanctuary, we. shall be kept safe
through
Him, who now lives to administer the blessings of His death, from
the
wrath, the wrath of God, in its present imminence over the head. of
the unreconciled, and in its final fall "in that day." For if,
being enemies, with no initial love to Him who is Love, nay, when we
were hostile to His claims, and as such subject to the hostility of
His Law, we were reconciled to our God through the death of His Son
(God coming to judicial peace with us, and we brought to submissive
peace with Him), much more, being reconciled, we shall be kept safe
in His life, in the life of the Risen One who now lives for us, and
in us, and we in Him. Nor, only so, but we shall be kept exulting
too
in our God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom now we have
received this reconciliation. Here, by anticipation, he indicates already the mighty issues of the
act of Justification, in our life of Union with the Lord who died
for
us, and lived again. In the sixth chapter this will be more fully
unfolded; but he cannot altogether reserve it so long. As he has
advanced from the law aspect of our acceptance to its love aspect,
so
now with this latter he gives us at once the life aspect, our vital
incorporation with our Redeemer, our part and lot in His
resurrection-life. Nowhere in this whole Epistle is that subject
expounded so fully as in the later Epistles, Colossians and
Ephesians; the Inspirer led His servant all over that region then,
in
his Roman prison, but not now. But He had brought him into the
region
from the first, and we see it here present to his thought, though
not
in the foreground of his discourse. "Kept safe in His life"; not
"by" His life, but "in" His life. We are livingly knit to Him the
Living One. From one point of view we are accused men, at the bar,
wonderfully transformed, by the Judge’s provision, into welcomed and
honoured friends of the Law and the Lawgiver. From another point of
view we are dead men, in the grave, wonderfully vivified, and put
into a spiritual connection with the mighty life of our Lifegiving
Redeemer. ‘The aspects are perfectly distinct. They belong to
different orders of thought. Yet they are in the closest and most
genuine relation. The Justifying Sacrifice procures the possibility
of our regeneration into the Life of Christ. Our union by faith with
the Lord who died and lives brings us into actual part and lot in
His
justifying merits. And our part and lot in those merits, our
"acceptance in the Beloved," assures us again of the permanence of
the mighty Love which will maintain us in our part and lot "in His
life." This is the view of the matter which is before us here. Thus the Apostle meets our need on every side. He shows us the holy
Law satisfied for us. He shows us the eternal love liberated upon
us.
He shows us the Lord’s own Life clasped around us, imparted to us;
"our life is hid in God with Christ, who is our Life". {Col
3:3,4} Shall we not "exult in God through Him"? And now we are to learn something of that great Covenant-Headship,
in
which we and He are one.
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