Justification By Faith
“To him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the
ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.”
Romans 4:5.
1. How a sinner may be justified before God, the Lord and Judge of
all, is a question of no common importance to every child of man. It contains
the foundation of all our hope, inasmuch as while we are at enmity with God,
there can be no true peace, no solid joy, either in time or in eternity. What
peace can there be, while our own heart condemns us; and much more, He that is
“greater than our heart, and knoweth all things?” What solid joy, either in this
world or that to come, while “the wrath of God abideth on us?”
2. And yet how little hath this important question been understood!
What confused notions have many had concerning it! Indeed, not only confused,
but often utterly false; contrary to the truth, as light to darkness; notions
absolutely inconsistent with the oracles of God, and with the whole analogy of
faith. And hence, erring concerning the very foundation, they could not possibly
build thereon; at least, not “gold, silver, or precious stones,” which would
endure when tried as by fire; but only “hay and stubble,” neither acceptable to
God, nor profitable to man.
3. In order to justice, in far as in me lies, to the vast
importance of the subject, to save those that seek the truth in sincerity from
“vain jangling and strife of words,” to clear the confusedness of thought into
which so many have already been led thereby, and to give them true and just
conceptions of this great mystery of godliness, I shall endeavour to show,
First. What is the general ground of this whole doctrine of
justification.
Secondly. What justification is.
Thirdly. Who they are that are justified. And,
Fourthly. On what terms they are justified. I. I am, First, to
show, what is the general ground of this whole doctrine of justification.
1. In the image of God was man made, holy as he that created him is
holy; merciful as the Author of all is merciful; perfect as his Father in heaven
is perfect. As God is love, so man, dwelling in love, dwelt in God, and God in
him. God made him to be an “image of his own eternity,” an incorruptible picture
of the God of glory. He was accordingly pure, as God is pure, from every spot of
sin. He knew not evil in any kind or degree, but was inwardly and outwardly
sinless and undefiled. He “loved the Lord his God with all his heart, and with
all his mind, and soul, and strength.”
2. To man thus upright and perfect, God gave a perfect law, to
which he required full and perfect obedience. He required full obedience in
every point, and this to be performed without any intermission, from the moment
man became a living soul, till the time of his trial should be ended. No
allowance was made for any falling short: As, indeed, there was no need of any;
man being altogether equal to the task assigned, and thoroughly furnished for
every good word and work.
3. To the entire law of love which was written in his heart,
(against which, perhaps, he could not sin directly,) it seemed good to the
sovereign wisdom of God to superadd one positive law: “Thou shalt not eat of the
fruit of the tree that groweth in the midst of the garden;” annexing that
penalty thereto, “In the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely
die.”
4. Such, then, was the state of man in Paradise. By the free,
unmerited love of God, he was holy and happy: He knew, loved, enjoyed God, which
is, in substance, life everlasting. And in this life of love, he was to continue
for ever, if he continued to obey God in all things; but, if he disobeyed him in
any, he was to forfeit all. “In that day,” said God, “thou shalt surely
die.”
5. Man did disobey God. He “ate of the tree, of which God
commanded him, saying, Thou shalt not eat of it.” And in that day he was
condemned by the righteous judgment of God. Then also the sentence whereof he
was warned before, began to take place upon him. For the moment he tasted that
fruit, he died. His soul died, was separated from God; separate from whom the
soul has no more life than the body has when separate from the soul. His body,
likewise, became corruptible and mortal; so that death then took hold on this
also. And being already dead in spirit, dead to God, dead in sin, he hastened on
to death everlasting; to the destruction both of body and soul, in the fire
never to be quenched
6. Thus “by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin.
And so death passed upon all men,” as being contained in him who was the common
father and representative of us all. Thus, “through the offence of one,” all are
dead, dead to God, dead in sin, dwelling in a corruptible, mortal body, shortly
to be dissolved, and under the sentence of death eternal. For as, “by one man’s
disobedience,” all “were made sinners;” so, by that offence of one, “judgment
came upon all men to condemnation.” (Romans v.
12)
7. In this state we were, even all mankind, when “God so loved the
world, that he gave his only-begotten Son, to the end we might not perish, but
have everlasting life.” In the fullness of time he was made Man, another common
Head of mankind, a second general Parent and Representative of the whole human
race. And as such it was that “he bore our griefs,” “the Lord laying upon him
the iniquities of us all.” Then was he “wounded for our transgressions, and
bruised for our iniquities.” “He made his soul an offering for sin:” He poured
out his blood for the transgressors: He “bare our sins in his own body on the
tree,” that by his stripes we might be healed: And by that one oblation of
himself, once offered, he hath redeemed me and all mankind; having thereby “made
a full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice and satisfaction for the sins of the
whole world.”
8. In consideration of this, that the Son of God hath “tasted
death for every man,” God hath now “reconciled the world to himself, not
imputing to them their” former “trespasses.” And thus, “as by the offence of one
judgment came upon all men to condemnation, even so by the righteousness of one
the free gift came upon all men unto justification.” So that, for the sake of
his well-beloved Son, of what he hath done and suffered for us, God now
vouchsafes, on one only condition, (which himself also enables us to perform,)
both to remit the punishment due to our sins, to reinstate us in his favour, and
to restore our dead souls to spiritual life, as the earnest of life eternal.
9. This, therefore, is the general ground of the whole doctrine of
justification. By the sin of the first Adam, who was not only the father, but
likewise the representative, of us all, we all fell short of the favour of God;
we all became children of wrath; or, as the Apostle expresses it, “judgment came
upon all men to condemnation.” Even so, by the sacrifice for sin made by the
Second Adam, as the Representative of us all, God is so far reconciled to all
the world, that he hath given them a new covenant; the plain condition whereof
being once fulfilled, “there is no more condemnation” for us, but “we are
justified freely by his grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus
Christ.”
II. 1. But what is it to be “justified?” What is “justification?”
This was the Second thing which I proposed to show. And it is evident, from what
has been already observed, that it is not the being made actually just and
righteous. This is “sanctification;” which is, indeed, in some degree, the
immediate fruit of justification, but, nevertheless, is a distinct gift of God,
and of a totally different nature. The one implies what God does for us through
his Son; the other, what he works in us by his Spirit. So that, although some
rare instances may be found, wherein the term “justified” or “justification” is
used in so wide a sense as to include “sanctification” also; yet, in general
use, they are sufficiently distinguished from each other, both by St. Paul and
the other inspired writers.
2. Neither is that far-fetched conceit, that justification is the
clearing us from accusation, particularly that of Satan, easily provable from
any clear text of holy writ. In the whole scriptural account of this matter, as
above laid down, neither that accuser nor his accusation appears to be at all
taken in. It can not indeed be denied, that he is the “accuser” of men,
emphatically so called. But it does in nowise appear, that the great Apostle
hath any reference to this, more or less, in all he hath written touching
justification, either to the Romans or the Galatians.
3. It is also far easier to take for granted, than to prove from
any clear scripture testimony, that justification is the clearing us from the
accusation brought against us by the law: At least if this forced, unnatural way
of speaking mean either more or less than this, that, whereas we have
transgressed the law of God, and thereby deserved the damnation of hell, God
does not inflict on those who are justified the punishment which they had
deserved.
4. Least of all does justification imply, that God is deceived in
those whom he justifies; that he thinks them to be what, in fact, they are not;
that he accounts them to be otherwise than they are. It does by no means imply,
that God judges concerning us contrary to the real nature of things; that he
esteems us better than we really are, or believes us righteous when we are
unrighteous. Surely no. The judgment of the all-wise God is always according to
truth. Neither can it ever consist with his unerring wisdom, to think that I am
innocent, to judge that I am righteous or holy, because another is so. He can no
more, in this manner, confound me with Christ, than with David or Abraham. Let
any man to whom God hath given understanding, weigh this without prejudice; and
he cannot but perceive, that such a notion of justification is neither
reconcilable to reason nor Scripture.
5. The plain scriptural notion of justification is pardon, the
forgiveness of sins. It is that act of God the Father, hereby, for the sake of
the propitiation made by the blood of his Son, he “showeth forth his
righteousness (or mercy) by the remission of the sins that are past.” This is
the easy, natural account of it given by St. Paul, throughout this whole
epistle. So he explains it himself, more particularly in this and in the
following chapter. Thus, in the next verses but one to the text, “Blessed are
they,” saith he, “whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered:
Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin.” To him that is
justified or forgiven, God “will not impute sin” to his condemnation. He will
not condemn him on that account, either in this world or in that which is to
come. His sins, all his past sins, in thought, word, and deed, are covered, are
blotted out, shall not be remembered or mentioned against him, any more than if
they had not been. God will not inflict on that sinner what he deserved to
suffer, because the Son of his love hath suffered for him. And from the time we
are “accepted through the Beloved,” “reconciled to God through his blood,” he
loves, and blesses, and watches over us for good, even as if we had never
sinned.
Indeed the Apostle in one place seems to extend the meaning of the
word much farther, where he says, “Not the hearers of the law, but the doers of
the law, shall be justified.” Here he appears to refer our justification to the
sentence of the great day. And so our Lord himself unquestionably doth, when he
says, “By thy words thou shalt be justified;” proving hereby, that “for every
idle word men shall speak, they shall give an account in the day of judgment.”
But perhaps we can hardly produce another instance of St. Paul’s using the word
in that distant sense. In the general tenor of his writings, it is evident he
doth not; and least of all in the text before us, which undeniably speaks, not
of those who have already “finished their course,” but of those who are now just
“setting out,” just beginning to “run the race which is set before them.”
III. 1. But this is the third thing which was to be considered,
namely, Who are they that are justified? And the Apostle tells us expressly, the
ungodly: “He (that is, God) justifieth the ungodly;” the ungodly of every kind
and degree; and none but the ungodly. As “they that are righteous need no
repentance,” so they need no forgiveness. It is only sinners that have any
occasion for pardon: It is sin alone which admits of being forgiven.
Forgiveness, therefore, has an immediate reference to sin, and, in this respect,
to nothing else. It is our “unrighteousness” to which the pardoning God is
“merciful:” It is our “iniquity” which he “remembereth no more.”
2. This seems not to be at all considered by those who so
vehemently contend that a man must be sanctified, that is, holy, before he can
be justified; especially by such of them as affirm, that universal holiness or
obedience must precede justification. (Unless they mean that justification at
the last day, which is wholly out of the present question.) So far from it, that
the very supposition is not only flatly impossible, (for where there is no love
of God, there is no holiness, and there is no love of God but from a sense of
his loving us,) but also grossly, intrinsically absurd, contradictory to itself.
For it is not a saint but a sinner that is forgiven, and under the notion of a
sinner. God justifieth not the godly, but the ungodly; not those that are holy
already, but the unholy. Upon what condition he doeth this, will be considered
quickly: but whatever it is, it cannot be holiness. To assert this, is to say
the Lamb of God takes away only those sins which were taken away before.
3. Does then the good Shepherd seek and save only those that are
found already? No: He seeks and saves that which is lost. He pardons those who
need his pardoning mercy. He saves from the guilt of sin, (and, at the same
time, from the power,) sinners of every kind, of every degree: men who, till
then, were altogether ungodly; in whom the love of the Father was not; and,
consequently, in whom dwelt no good thing, no good or truly Christian temper,
—but all such as were evil and abominable, —pride, anger, love of the world,
—the genuine fruits of that “carnal mind” which is “enmity against God.”
4. These who are sick, the burden of whose sins is intolerable,
are they that need a Physician; these who are guilty, who groan under the wrath
of God, are they that need a pardon. These who are “condemned already,” not only
by God, but also by their own conscience, as by a thousand witnesses, of all
their ungodliness, both in thought, and word, and work, cry aloud for Him that
“justifieth the ungodly,” through the redemption that is in Jesus; —the ungodly,
and “him that worketh not;” that worketh not, before he is justified, anything
that is good, that is truly virtuous or holy, but only evil continually. For his
heart is necessarily, essentially evil, till the love of God is shed abroad
therein. And while the tree is corrupt, so are the fruits; “for an evil tree
cannot bring forth good fruit.”
5. If it be objected, “Nay, but a man, before he is justified, may
feed the hungry, or clothe the naked; and these are good works;” the answer is
easy: He may do these, even before he is justified; and these are, in one sense,
“good works;” they are “good and profitable to men.” But it does not follow,
that they are, strictly speaking, good in themselves, or good in the sight of
God. All truly “good works” (to use the words of our Church) “follow after
justification;” and they are therefore good and “acceptable to God in Christ,”
because they “spring out of a true and living faith.” By a parity of reason, all
“works done before justification are not good,” in the Christian sense,
“forasmuch as they spring not of faith in Jesus Christ;” (though from some kind
of faith in God they may spring;) “yea, rather, for that they are not done as
God hath willed and commanded them to be done, we doubt not” (how strange soever
it may appear to some) “but they have the nature of sin.”
6. Perhaps those who doubt of this have not duly considered the
weighty reason which is here assigned, why no works done before justification
can be truly and properly good. The argument plainly runs thus: —
No works are good, which are not done as God hath willed and
commanded them to be done.
But no works done before justification are done as God hath willed
and commanded them to be done:
Therefore, no works done before justification are good.
The first proposition is self-evident; and the second, that no
works done before justification are done as God hath willed and commanded them
to be done, will appear equally plain and undeniable, if we only consider, God
hath willed and commanded that “all our works” should “be done in charity;”
(en agape) in love, in that love
to God which produces love to all mankind. But none of our works can be done in
this love, while the love of the Father (of God as our Father) is not in us; and
this love can not be in us till we receive the Spirit of Adoption, crying in ,
our hearts, Abba, Father. If, therefore, God doth not justify the ungodly, and
him that (in this sense) worketh not, then hath Christ died in vain; then,
notwithstanding his death, can no flesh living be justified.
IV. 1. But on what terms, then, is he justified who is altogether
“ungodly,” and till that time “worketh not?” on one alone; which is faith: he
“believeth is him that justifieth the ungodly.” And “he that believeth is not
condemned;” yea, he is “passed from death unto life.” “For the righteousness (or
mercy) of God is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that
believe: Whom God hath set forth for a propitiation, through faith in his blood;
that he might be just, and” (consistently with his justice) “the Justifier of
him which believeth in Jesus:” “Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by
faith without the deeds of the law;” without previous obedience to the moral
law, which, indeed, he could not, till now, perform. That it is the moral law,
and that alone, which is here intended, appears evidently from the words that
follow: “Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: Yea, we
establish the law. What law do we establish by faith? Not the ritual law: Not
the ceremonial law of Moses. In nowise; but the great, unchangeable law of love,
the holy love of God and of our neighbour.”
2. Faith in general is a divine, supernatural “elegchos,” “evidence” or “conviction,” “of things
not seen,” not discoverable by our bodily senses, as being either past, future,
or spiritual. Justifying faith implies, not only a divine evidence or conviction
that “God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself;” but a sure trust
and confidence that Christ died for “my” sins, that he loved “me,” and gave
himself for “me.” And at what time soever a sinner thus believes, be it in early
childhood, in the strength of his years, or when he is old and hoary-haired, God
justifieth that ungodly one: God, for the sake of his Son, pardoneth and
absolveth him, who had in him, till then, no good thing. Repentance, indeed, God
had given him before; but that repentance was neither more nor less than a deep
sense of the want of all good, and the presence of all evil. And whatever good
he hath, or doeth, from that hour when he first believes in God through Christ,
faith does not “find,” but “bring.” This is the fruit of faith. First the tree
is good, and then the fruit is good also.
3. I cannot describe the nature of this faith better than in the
words of our own Church: “The only instrument of salvation” (whereof
justification is one branch) “is faith; that is, a sure trust and confidence
that God both hath and will forgive our sins, that he hath accepted us again
into His favour, for the merits of Christ’s death and passion. —But here we must
take heed that we do not halt with God, through an inconstant, wavering faith:
Peter, coming to Christ upon the water, because he fainted in faith, was in
danger of drowning; so we, if we begin to waver or doubt, it is to be feared
that we shall sink as Peter did, not into the water, but into the bottomless pit
of hell fire.” (“Second Sermon on the Passion”)
“Therefore, have a sure and constant faith, not only that the
death of Christ is available for all the world, but that he hath made a full and
sufficient sacrifice for “thee,” a perfect cleansing of “thy” sins, so that thou
mayest say, with the Apostle, he loved “thee,” and gave himself for “thee.” For
this is to make Christ “thine own,” and to apply his merits unto “thyself.”
(“Sermon on the Sacrament, First Part”)
4. By affirming that this faith is the term or “condition of
justification,” I mean, First, that there is no justification without it. “He
that believeth not is condemned already;” and so long as he believeth not, that
condemnation cannot be removed, but “the wrath of God abideth on him.” As “there
is no other name given under heaven,” than that of Jesus of Nazareth, no other
merit whereby a condemned sinner can ever be saved from the guilt of sin; so
there is no other way of obtaining a share in his merit, than “by faith in his
name.” So that as long as we are without this faith, we are “strangers to the
covenant of promise,” we are “aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and
without God in the world.” Whatsoever virtues (so called) a man may have, —I
speak of those unto whom the gospel is preached; for “what have I to do to judge
them that are without?” —whatsoever good works (so accounted) he may do, it
profiteth not; he is still a “child of wrath,” still under the curse, till he
believes in Jesus.
5. Faith, therefore, is the “necessary” condition of
justification; yea, and the “only necessary” condition thereof. This is the
Second point carefully to be observed; that, the very moment God giveth faith
(for “it is the gift of God”) to the “ungodly” that “worketh not,” that “faith
is counted to him for righteousness.” He hath no righteousness at all,
antecedent to this, not so much as negative righteousness, or innocence. But
“faith is imputed to him for righteousness,” the very moment that he believeth.
Not that God (as was observed before) thinketh him to be what he is not. But as
“he made Christ to be sin for us,” that is, treated him as a sinner, punishing
him for our sins; so he counteth us righteous, from the time we believe in him:
That is, he doth not punish us for our sins; yea, treats us as though we are
guiltless and righteous.
6. Surely the difficulty of assenting to this proposition, that
“faith is the “only condition” of justification,” must arise from not
understanding it. We mean thereby thus much, that it is the only thing without
which none is justified; the only thing that is immediately, indispensably,
absolutely requisite in order to pardon. As, on the one hand, though a man
should have every thing else without faith, yet he cannot be justified; so, on
the other, though he be supposed to want everything else, yet if he hath faith,
he cannot but be justified. For suppose a sinner of any kind or degree, in a
full sense of his total ungodliness, of his utter inability to think, speak, or
do good, and his absolute meetness for hell-fire; suppose, I say, this sinner,
helpless and hopeless, casts himself wholly on the mercy of God in Christ,
(which indeed he cannot do but by the grace of God,) who can doubt but he is
forgiven in that moment? Who will affirm that any more is “indispensably
required” before that sinner can be justified?
Now, if there ever was one such instance from the beginning of the
world, (and have there not been, and are there not, ten thousand times ten
thousand?) it plainly follows, that faith is, in the above sense, the sole
condition of justification.
7. It does not become poor, guilty, sinful worms, who receive
whatsoever blessings they enjoy, (from the least drop of water that cools our
tongue, to the immense riches of glory in eternity,) of grace, of mere favour,
and not of debt, to ask of God the reasons of his conduct. It is not meet for us
to call Him in question “who giveth account to none of his ways;” to demand,
“Why didst thou make faith the condition, the only condition, of justification?
Wherefore didst thou decree, “He that believeth,” and he only, “shall be saved?”
This is the very point on which St. Paul so strongly insists in the ninth
chapter of this Epistle, viz., That the terms of pardon and acceptance must
depend, not on us, but “on him that calleth us;” that there is no
“unrighteousness with God,” in fixing his own terms, not according to ours, but
his own good pleasure; who may justly say, “I will have mercy on whom I will
have mercy;” namely, on him who believeth in Jesus. “So then it is not of him
that willeth, nor of him that runneth,” to choose the condition on which he
shall find acceptance; “but of God that showeth mercy;” that accepteth none at
all, but of his own free love, his unmerited goodness. “Therefore hath he mercy
on whom he will have mercy,” viz., on those who believe on the Son of his love;
“and whom he will,” that is, those who believe not, “he hardeneth,” leaves at
last to the hardness of their hearts.
8. One reason, however, we may humbly conceive, of God’s fixing
this condition of justification, “If thou believest in the Lord Jesus Christ,
thou shalt be saved,” was to “hide pride from man.” Pride had already destroyed
the very angels of God, had cast down “a third part of the stars of heaven.” It
was likewise in great measure owing to this, when the tempter said, “Ye shall be
as gods,” that Adam fell from his own steadfastness, and brought sin and death
into the world. It was therefore an instance of wisdom worthy of God, to appoint
such a condition of reconciliation for him and all his posterity as might
effectually humble, might abase them to the dust. And such is faith. It is
peculiarly fitted for this end: For he that cometh unto God by this faith, must
fix his eye singly on his own wickedness, on his guilt and helplessness, without
having the least regard to any supposed good in himself, to any virtue or
righteousness whatsoever. He must come as a “mere sinner,” inwardly and
outwardly, self-destroyed and self-condemned, bringing nothing to God but
ungodliness only, pleading nothing of his own but sin and misery. Thus it is,
and thus alone, when his “mouth is stopped,” and he stands utterly “guilty
before” God, that he can “look unto Jesus,” as the whole and sole “Propitiation
for his sins.” Thus only can he be “found in him,” and receive the
“righteousness which is of God by faith.”
9. Thou ungodly one, who hearest or readest these words! thou
vile, helpless, miserable sinner! I charge thee before God, the Judge of all, go
straight unto him, with all thy ungodliness. Take heed thou destroy not thy own
soul by pleading thy righteousness, more or less. Go as altogether ungodly,
guilty, lost, destroyed, deserving and dropping into hell; and thou shalt then
find favour in his sight, and know that he justifieth the ungodly. As such thou
shalt be brought unto the “blood of sprinkling,” as an undone, helpless, damned
sinner. Thus “look unto Jesus!” There is “the Lamb of God,” who “taketh away thy
sins!” Plead thou no works, no righteousness of thine own! no humility,
contrition, sincerity! In nowise. That were, in very deed, to deny the Lord that
bought thee. No: Plead thou, singly, the blood of the covenant, the ransom paid
for thy proud, stubborn, sinful soul. Who art thou, that now seest and feelest
both thine inward and outward ungodliness? Thou art the man! I want thee for my
Lord! I challenge “thee” for a child of God by faith! The Lord hath need of
thee. Thou who feelest thou art just fit for hell, art just fit to advance his
glory; the glory of his free grace, justifying the ungodly and him that worketh
not. O come quickly! Believe in the Lord Jesus; and thou, even thou, art
reconciled to God.