Of Justification By Faith
John Calvin explores this topic in
his Institutes.
Of Justification by
Faith
by Dr. John Calvin
(1509-1564)
1. I trust I have now sufficiently shown
how man's only resource for escaping from the curse of the law, and
recovering salvation, lies in faith; and also what the nature of faith
is, what the benefits which it confers, and the fruits which it
produces. The whole may be thus summed up: Christ given to us by the
kindness of God is apprehended and possessed by faith, by means of which
we obtain in particular a twofold benefit; first, being reconciled by
the righteousness of Christ, God becomes, instead of a judge, an
indulgent Father; and, secondly, being sanctified by his Spirit, we
aspire to integrity and purity of life. This second benefit, viz.,
regeneration, appears to have been already sufficiently discussed. On
the other hand, the subject of justification was discussed more
cursorily, because it seemed of more consequence first to explain that
the faith by which alone, through the mercy of God, we obtain free
justification, is not destitute of good works; and also to show the true
nature of these good works on which this question partly turns. The
doctrine of Justification is now to be fully discussed, and discussed
under the conviction, that as it is the principal ground on which
religion must be supported, so it requires greater care and attention.
For unless you understand first of all what your position is before God,
and what the judgment which he passes upon you, you have no foundation
on which your salvation can be laid, or on which piety towards God can
be reared. The necessity of thoroughly understanding this subject will
become more apparent as we proceed with it.
2. Lest we should stumble at the very
threshold, (this we should do were we to begin the discussion without
knowing what the subject is,) let us first explain the meaning of the
expressions, To be justified in the sight of God, to be Justified by
faith or by works. A man is said to be justified in the sight of God
when in the judgment of God he is deemed righteous, and is accepted on
account of his righteousness; for as iniquity is abominable to God, so
neither can the sinner find grace in his sight, so far as he is and so
long as he is regarded as a sinner. Hence, wherever sin is, there also
are the wrath and vengeance of God. He, on the other hand, is justified
who is regarded not as a sinner, but as righteous, and as such stands
acquitted at the judgment-seat of God, where all sinners are condemned.
As an innocent man, when charged before an impartial judge, who decides
according to his innocence, is said to be justified by the judge, as a
man is said to be justified by God when, removed from the catalogue of
sinners, he has God as the witness and assertor of his righteousness. In
the same manner, a man will be said to be justified by works, if in his
life there can be found a purity and holiness which merits an
attestation of righteousness at the throne of God, or if by the
perfection of his works he can answer and satisfy the divine justice. On
the contrary, a man will be justified by faith when, excluded from the
righteousness of works, he by faith lays hold of the righteousness of
Christ, and clothed in it appears in the sight of God not as a sinner,
but as righteous. Thus we simply interpret justification, as the
acceptance with which God receives us into his favor as if we were
righteous; and we say that this justification consists in the
forgiveness of sins and the imputation of the righteousness of Christ,
(see sec. 21 and 23.)
3. In confirmation of this there are many
clear passages of Scripture. First, it cannot be denied that this is the
proper and most usual signification of the term. But as it were too
tedious to collect all the passages, and compare them with each other,
let it suffice to have called the reader's attention to the fact: he
will easily convince himself of its truth. I will only mention a few
passages in which the justification of which we speak is expressly
handled. First, when Luke relates that all the people that heard Christ
"justified God," (Luke 7: 29,) and when Christ declares, that
"Wisdom is justified of all her children," (Luke 7: 35,) Luke
means not that they conferred righteousness which always dwells in
perfection with God, although the whole world should attempt to wrest it
from him, nor does Christ mean that the doctrine of salvation is made
just: this it is in its own nature; but both modes of expression are
equivalent to attributing due praise to God and his doctrine. On the
other hand, when Christ upbraids the Pharisees for justifying
themselves, (Luke 16: 15,) he means not that they acquired righteousness
by acting properly, but that they ambitiously courted a reputation for
righteousness of which they were destitute. Those acquainted with Hebrew
understand the meaning better: for in that language the name of wicked
is given not only to those who are conscious of wickedness, but to those
who receive sentence of condemnation. Thus, when Bathsheba says, "I
and my son Solomon shall be counted offenders," she does not
acknowledge a crime, but complains that she and her son will be exposed
to the disgrace of being numbered among reprobates and criminals, (1
Kings 1: 21.) It is, indeed, plain from the context, that the term even
in Latin must be thus understood, viz., relatively, and does not denote
any quality. In regard to the use of the term with reference to the
present subject, when Paul speaks of the Scripture, "foreseeing
that God would justify the heathen through faith," (Gal. 3: 8,)
what other meaning can you give it than that God imputes righteousness
by faith? Again, when he says, "that he (God) might be just, and
the justifier of him who believeth in Jesus," (Rom. 3: 26,) what
can the meaning be, if not that God, in consideration of their faith,
frees them from the condemnation which their wickedness deserves? This
appears still more plainly at the conclusion, when he exclaims,
"Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect? It is God
that justifieth. Who is he that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea
rather, that is risen again, who is even at the right hand of God, who
also maketh intercession for us, (Rom. 8: 33, 34.) For it is just as if
he had said, Who shall accuse those whom God has acquitted? Who shall
condemn those for whom Christ pleads? To justify therefore, is nothing
else than to acquit from the charge of guilt, as if innocence were
proved. Hence, when God justifies us through the intercession of Christ,
he does not acquit us on a proof of our own innocence, but by an
imputation of righteousness, so that though not righteous in ourselves,
we are deemed righteous in Christ. Thus it is said, in Paul's discourse
in the Acts, "Through this man is preached unto you the forgiveness
of sins; and by him all that believe are justified from all things from
which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses," (Acts 13: 38,
39.) You see that after remission of sins justification is set down by
way of explanation; you see plainly that it is used for acquittal; you
see how it cannot be obtained by the works of the law; you see that it
is entirely through the interposition of Christ; you see that it is
obtained by faith; you see, in fine, that satisfaction intervenes, since
it is said that we are justified from our sins by Christ. Thus when the
publican is said to have gone down to his house "justified,"
(Luke 18: 14,) it cannot be held that he obtained this justification by
any merit of works. All that is said is, that after obtaining the pardon
of sins he was regarded in the sight of God as righteous. He was
justified, therefore, not by any approval of works, but by gratuitous
acquittal on the part of God. Hence Ambrose elegantly terms confession
of sins "legal justification," (Ambrose on Psalm 118 Serm.
10).
4. Without saying more about the term, we
shall have no doubt as to the thing meant if we attend to the
description which is given of it. For Paul certainly designates
justification by the term acceptance, when he says to the Ephesians,
"Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus
Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will, to the
praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he has made us accepted in the
Beloved," (Eph. 1: 5, 6.) His meaning is the very same as where he
elsewhere says, "being justified freely by his grace," (Rom.
3: 24.) In the fourth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, he first
terms it the imputation of righteousness, and hesitates not to place it
in forgiveness of sins: "Even as David also describeth the
blessedness of the man unto whom God imputeth righteousness without
works, saying, Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven,"
&c., (Rom. 4: 6-8.) There, indeed, he is not speaking of a part of
justification, but of the whole. He declares, moreover, that a
definition of it was given by David, when he pronounced him blessed who
has obtained the free pardon of his sins. Whence it appears that this
righteousness of which he speaks is simply opposed to judicial guilt.
But the most satisfactory passage on this subject is that in which he
declares the sum of the Gospel message to be reconciliation to God, who
is pleased, through Christ, to receive us into favor by not imputing our
sins, (2 Cor. 5: 18-21.) Let my readers carefully weigh the whole
context. For Paul shortly after adding, by way of explanation, in order
to designate the mode of reconciliation, that Christ who knew no sin was
made sin for us, undoubtedly understands by reconciliation nothing else
than justification. Nor, indeed, could it be said, as he elsewhere does,
that we are made righteous "by the obedience" of Christ, (Rom.
5: 19,) were it not that we are deemed righteous in the sight of God in
him and not in ourselves.
5. But as Osiander has introduced a kind
of monstrosity termed essential righteousness, by which, although he
designed not to abolish free righteousness, he involves it in darkness,
and by that darkness deprives pious minds of a serious sense of divine
grace; before I pass to other matters, it may be proper to refute this
delirious dream. And, first, the whole speculation is mere empty
curiosity. He indeed, heaps together many passages of scripture showing
that Christ is one with us, and we likewise one with him, a point which
needs no proof; but he entangles himself by not attending to the bond of
this unity. The explanation of all difficulties is easy to us, who hold
that we are united to Christ by the secret agency of his Spirit, but he
had formed some idea akin to that of the Manichees, desiring to
transfuse the divine essence into men. Hence his other notion, that Adam
was formed in the image of God, because even before the fall Christ was
destined to be the model of human nature. But as I study brevity, I will
confine myself to the matter in hand. He says, that we are one with
Christ. This we admit, but still we deny that the essence of Christ is
confounded with ours. Then we say that he absurdly endeavors to support
his delusions by means of this principle: that Christ is our
righteousness, because he is the eternal God, the fountain of
righteousness, the very righteousness of God. My readers will pardon me
for now only touching on matters which method requires me to defer to
another place. But although he pretends that, by the term essential
righteousness, he merely means to oppose the sentiment that we are
reputed righteous on account of Christ, he however clearly shows, that
not contented with that righteousness, which was procured for us by the
obedience and sacrificial death of Christ, he maintains that we are
substantially righteous in God by an infused essence as well as quality.
For this is the reason why he so vehemently contends that not only
Christ but the Father and the Spirit dwell in us. The fact I admit to be
true, but still I maintain it is wrested by him. He ought to have
attended to the mode of dwelling, viz., that the Father and the Spirit
are in Christ; and as in him the fulness of the Godhead dwells, so in
him we possess God entire. Hence, whatever he says separately concerning
the Father and the Spirit, has no other tendency than to lead away the
simple from Christ. Then he introduces a substantial mixture, by which
God, transfusing himself into us, makes us as it were a part of himself.
Our being made one with Christ by the agency of the Spirit, he being the
head and we the members, he regards as almost nothing unless his essence
is mingled with us. But, as I have said, in the case of the Father and
the Spirit, he more clearly betrays his views, namely, that we are not
justified by the mere grace of the Mediator, and that righteousness is
not simply or entirely offered to us in his person, but that we are made
partakers of divine righteousness when God is essentially united to us.
6. Had he only said, that Christ by
justifying us becomes ours by an essential union, and that he is our
head not only in so far as he is man, but that as the essence of the
divine nature is diffused into us, he might indulge his dreams with less
harm, and, perhaps, it were less necessary to contest the matter with
him; but since this principle is like a cuttle-fish, which, by the
ejection of dark and inky blood, conceals its many tails, if we would
not knowingly and willingly allow ourselves to be robbed of that
righteousness which alone gives us full assurance of our salvation, we
must strenuously resist. For, in the whole of this discussion, the noun
righteousness and the verb to justify, are extended by Osiander to two
parts; to be justified being not only to be reconciled to God by a free
pardon, but also to be made just; and righteousness being not a free
imputation, but the holiness and integrity which the divine essence
dwelling in us inspires. And he vehemently asserts (see sec. 8) that
Christ is himself our righteousness, not in so far as he, by expiating
sins, appeased the Father, but because he is the eternal God and life.
To prove the first point, viz., that God justifies not only by pardoning
but by regenerating, he asks, whether he leaves those whom he justifies
as they were by nature, making no change upon their vices? The answer is
very easy: as Christ cannot be divided into parts, so the two things,
justification and sanctification, which we perceive to be united
together in him, are inseparable. Whomsoever, therefore, God receives
into his favor, he presents with the Spirit of adoption, whose agency
forms them anew into his image. But if the brightness of the sun cannot
be separated from its heat, are we therefore to say, that the earth is
warmed by light and illumined by heat? Nothing can be more apposite to
the matter in hand than this simile. The sun by its heat quickens and
fertilizes the earth; by its rays enlightens and illumines it. Here is a
mutual and undivided connection, and yet reason itself prohibits us from
transferring the peculiar properties of the one to the other. In the
confusion of a twofold grace, which Osiander obtrudes upon us, there is
a similar absurdity. Because those whom God freely regards as righteous,
he in fact renews to the cultivation of righteousness, Osiander
confounds that free acceptance with this gift of regeneration, and
contends that they are one and the same. But Scriptures while combining
both, classes them separately, that it may the better display the
manifold grace of God. Nor is Paul's statement superfluous, that Christ
is made unto us "righteousness and sanctification," (1 Cor. 1:
30.) And whenever he argues from the salvation procured for us, from the
paternal love of God and the grace of Christ, that we are called to
purity and holiness, he plainly intimates, that to be justified is
something else than to be made new creatures. Osiander on coming to
Scripture corrupts every passage which he quotes. Thus when Paul says,
"to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the
ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness," he expounds
justifying as making just. With the same rashness he perverts the whole
of the fourth chapter to the Romans. He hesitates not to give a similar
gloss to the passage which I lately quoted, "Who shall lay any
thing to the charge of God's elect? It is God that justifieth."
Here it is plain that guilt and acquittal simply are considered, and
that the Apostle's meaning depends on the antithesis. Therefore his
futility is detected both in his argument and his quotations for support
from Scripture. He is not a whit sounder in discussing the term
righteousness, when it is said, that faith was imputed to Abraham for
righteousness after he had embraced Christ, (who is the righteousness of
Gad and God himself) and was distinguished by excellent virtues. Hence
it appears that two things which are perfect are viciously converted by
him into one which is corrupt. For the righteousness which is there
mentioned pertains not to the whole course of life; or rather, the
Spirit testifies, that though Abraham greatly excelled in virtue, and by
long perseverance in it had made so much progress, the only way in which
he pleased God was by receiving the grace which was offered by the
promise, in faith. From this it follows, that, as Paul justly maintains,
there is no room for works in justification.
7. When he objects that the power of
justifying exists not in faith, considered in itself, but only as
receiving Christ, I willingly admit it. For did faith justify of itself,
or (as it is expressed) by its own intrinsic virtue, as it is always
weak and imperfect, its efficacy would be partial, and thus our
righteousness being maimed would give us only a portion of salvation. We
indeed imagine nothing of the kind, but say, that, properly speaking,
God alone justifies. The same thing we likewise transfer to Christ,
because he was given to us for righteousness; while we compare faith to
a kind of vessel, because we are incapable of receiving Christ, unless
we are emptied and come with open mouth to receive his grace. Hence it
follows, that we do not withdraw the power of justifying from Christ,
when we hold that, previous to his righteousness, he himself is received
by faith. Still, however, I admit not the tortuous figure of the
sophist, that faith is Christ; as if a vessel of clay were a treasure,
because gold is deposited in it. And yet this is no reason why faith,
though in itself of no dignity or value, should not justify us by giving
Christ; Just as such a vessel filled with coin may give wealth. I say,
therefore, that faith, which is only the instrument for receiving
justification, is ignorantly confounded with Christ, who is the material
cause, as well as the author and minister of this great blessing. This
disposes of the difficulty, viz., how the term faith is to be understood
when treating of justification.
8. Osiander goes still farther in regard
to the mode of receiving Christ, holding, that by the ministry of the
external word the internal word is received; that he may thus lead us
away from the priesthood of Christ, and his office of Mediator, to his
eternal divinity. We, indeed, do not divide Christ, but hold that he
who, reconciling us to God in his flesh, bestowed righteousness upon us,
is the eternal Word of God; and that he could not perform the office of
Mediator, nor acquire righteousness for us, if he were not the eternal
God. Osiander will have it, that as Christ is God and man, he was made
our righteousness in respect not of his human but of his divine nature.
But if this is a peculiar property of the Godhead, it will not be
peculiar to Christ, but common to him with the Father and the Spirit,
since their righteousness is one and the same. Thus it would be
incongruous to say, that that which existed naturally from eternity was
made ours. But granting that God was made unto us righteousness, what
are we to make of Paul's interposed statement, that he was so made by
God? This certainly is peculiar to the office of mediator, for although
he contains in himself the divine nature, yet he receives his own proper
title, that he may be distinguished from the Father and the Spirit. But
he makes a ridiculous boast of a single passage of Jeremiah, in which it
is said, that Jehovah will be our righteousness, (Jer. 23: 6; 33: 16.)
But all he can extract from this is, that Christ, who is our
righteousness, was God manifest in the flesh. We have elsewhere quoted
from Paul's discourse, that God purchased the Church with his own blood,
(Acts 20: 28.) Were any one to infer from this that the blood by which
sins were expiated was divine, and of a divine nature, who could endure
so foul a heresy? But Osiander, thinking that he has gained the whole
cause by this childish cavil, swells, exults, and stuffs whole pages
with his bombast, whereas the solution is simple and obvious, viz., that
Jehovah, when made of the seed of David, was indeed to be the
righteousness of believers, but in what sense Isaiah declares, "By
his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many," (Isa. 53:
11.) Let us observe that it is the Father who speaks. He attributes the
office of justifying to the Son, and adds the reason, - because he is
"righteous." He places the method, or medium, (as it is
called,) in the doctrine by which Christ is known. For the word "da'at"
is more properly to be understood in a passive sense. Hence I infer,
first, that Christ was made righteousness when he assumed the form of a
servant; secondly, that he justified us by his obedience to the Father;
and, accordingly that he does not perform this for us in respect of his
divine nature, but according to the nature of the dispensation laid upon
him. For though God alone is the fountain of righteousness, and the only
way in which we are righteous is by participation with him, yet, as by
our unhappy revolt we are alienated from his righteousness, it is
necessary to descend to this lower remedy, that Christ may justify us by
the power of his death and resurrection.
9. If he objects that this work by its
excellence transcends human, and therefore can only be ascribed to the
divine nature; I concede the former point, but maintain, that on the
latter he is ignorantly deluded. For although Christ could neither
purify our souls by his own blood, nor appease the Father by his
sacrifice, nor acquit us from the charge of guilt, nor, in short,
perform the office of priest, unless he had been very God, because no
human ability was equal to such a burden, it is however certain, that he
performed all these things in his human nature. If it is asked, in what
way we are justified? Paul answers, by the obedience of Christ. Did he
obey in any other way than by assuming the form of a servant? We infer,
therefore, that righteousness was manifested to us in his flesh. In like
manner, in another passage, (which I greatly wonder that Osiander does
not blush repeatedly to quote,) he places the fountain of righteousness
entirely in the incarnation of Christ, "He has made him to be sin
for us who knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God
in him," (2 Cor. 5: 21.) Osiander in turgid sentences lays hold of
the expression, righteousness of God, and shouts victory! as if he had
proved it to be his own phantom of essential righteousness, though the
words have a very different meaning, viz., that we are justified through
the expiation made by Christ. That the righteousness of God is used for
the righteousness which is approved by God, should be known to mere
tyros, as in John, the praise of God is contrasted with the praise of
men, (John 12: 43.) I know that by the righteousness of God is sometimes
meant that of which God is the author, and which he bestows upon us; but
that here the only thing meant is, that being supported by the expiation
of Christ, we are able to stand at the tribunal of God, sound readers
perceive without any observation of mine. The word is not of so much
importance, provided Osiander agrees with us in this, that we are
justified by Christ in respect he was made an expiatory victim for us.
This he could not be in his divine nature. For which reason also, when
Christ would seal the righteousness and salvation which he brought to
us, he holds forth the sure pledge of it in his flesh. He indeed calls
himself "living bread," but, in explanation of the mode, adds,
"my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed," (John
6: 55.) The same doctrine is clearly seen in the sacraments; which,
though they direct our faith to the whole, not to a part of Christ, yet,
at the same time, declare that the materials of righteousness and
salvation reside in his flesh; not that the mere man of himself
justifies or quickens, but that God was pleased, by means of a Mediator,
to manifest his own hidden and incomprehensible nature. Hence I often
repeat, that Christ has been in a manner set before us as a fountain,
whence we may draw what would otherwise lie without use in that deep and
hidden abyss which streams forth to us in the person of the Mediator. In
this way, and in this meaning, I deny not that Christ, as he is God and
man, justifies us; that this work is common also to the Father and the
Holy Spirit; in fine, that the righteousness of which God makes us
partakers is the eternal righteousness of the eternal God, provided
effect is given to the clear and valid reasons to which I have adverted.
10. Moreover, lest by his cavils he
deceive the unwary, I acknowledge that we are devoid of this
incomparable gift until Christ become ours. Therefore, to that union of
the head and members, the residence of Christ in our hearts, in fine,
the mystical union, we assign the highest rank, Christ when he becomes
ours making us partners with him in the gifts with which he was endued.
Hence we do not view him as at a distance and without us, but as we have
put him on, and been ingrafted into his body, he deigns to make us one
with himself, and, therefore, we glory in having a fellowship of
righteousness with him. This disposes of Osiander's calumny, that we
regard faith as righteousness; as if we were robbing Christ of his
rights when we say, that, destitute in ourselves, we draw near to him by
faith, to make way for his grace, that he alone may fill us. But
Osiander, spurning this spiritual union, insists on a gross mixture of
Christ with believers; and, accordingly, to excite prejudice, gives the
name of Zwinglians to all who subscribe not to his fanatical heresy of
essential righteousness, because they do not hold that, in the supper,
Christ is eaten substantially. For my part, I count it the highest honor
to be thus assailed by a haughty man, devoted to his own impostures;
though he assails not me only, but writers of known reputation
throughout the world, and whom it became him modestly to venerate. This,
however, does not concern me, as I plead not my own cause, and plead the
more sincerely that I am free from every sinister feeling. In insisting
so vehemently on essential righteousness, and an essential inhabitation
of Christ within us, his meaning is, first, that God by a gross mixture
transfuses himself into us, as he pretends that there is a carnal eating
in the supper; And, secondly that by instilling his own righteousness
into us, he makes us really righteous with himself since, according to
him, this righteousness is as well God himself as the probity, or
holiness, or integrity of God. I will not spend much time in disposing
of the passages of Scripture which he adduces, and which, though used in
reference to the heavenly life, he wrests to our present state. Peter
says, that through the knowledge of Christ "are given unto us
exceeding great and precious promises, that by them ye might be
partakers of the divine nature," (2 Pet. 1: 4;) as if we now were
what the gospel promises we shall be at the final advent of Christ; nay,
John reminds us, that "when he shall appear we shall be like him,
for we shall see him as he is", (1 John 3: 2.) I only wished to
give my readers a slender specimen of Osiander, it being my intention to
decline the discussion of his frivolities, not because there is any
difficulty in disposing of them, but because I am unwilling to annoy the
reader with superfluous labour.
11. But more poison lurks in the second
branch, when he says that we are righteous together with God. I think I
have already sufficiently proved, that although the dogma were not so
pestiferous, yet because it is frigid and jejune, and falls by its own
vanity, it must justly be disrelished by all sound and pious readers.
But it is impossible to tolerate the impiety which, under the pretence
of a twofold righteousness, undermines our assurance of salvation, and
hurrying us into the clouds, tries to prevent us from embracing the gift
of expiation in faith, and invoking God with quiet minds. Osiander
derides us for teaching, that to be justified is a forensic term,
because it behaves us to be in reality just: there is nothing also to
which he is more opposed than the idea of our being justified by a free
imputation. Say, then, if God does not justify us by acquitting and
pardoning, what does Paul mean when he says "God was in Christ
reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto
them"? "He made him to be sin for us who knew no sin; that we
might be made the righteousness of God in him," (2 Cor. 5: 19, 21.)
Here I learn, first, that those who are reconciled to God are regarded
as righteous: then the method is stated, God justifies by pardoning; and
hence, in another place, justification is opposed to accusation, (Rom.
8: 33;) this antithesis clearly demonstrating that the mode of
expression is derived from forensic use. And, indeed, no man, moderately
verdant in the Hebrew tongue, (provided he is also of sedate brain,) is
ignorant that this phrase thus took its rise, and thereafter derived its
tendency and force. Now, then, when Paul says that David
"describeth the blessedness of the man unto whom God imputeth
righteousness without works, saying, Blessed are they whose iniquities
are forgiven," (Rom. 4: 6, 7; Ps. 32: 1,) let Osiander say whether
this is a complete or only a partial definition. He certainly does not
adduce the Psalmist as a witness that pardon of sins is a part of
righteousness, or concurs with something else in justifying, but he
includes the whole of righteousness in gratuitous forgiveness, declaring
those to be blessed "whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins
are covered," and "to whom the Lord will not impute sin."
He estimates and judges of his happiness from this that in this way he
is righteous not in reality, but by imputation.
Osiander objects that it would be
insulting to God, and contrary to his nature, to justify those who still
remain wicked. But it ought to be remembered, as I already observed,
that the gift of justification is not separated from regeneration,
though the two things are distinct. But as it is too well known by
experience, that the remains of sin always exist in the righteous, it is
necessary that justification should be something very different from
reformation to newness of life. This latter God begins in his elect, and
carries on during the whole course of life, gradually and sometimes
slowly, so that if placed at his judgment-seat they would always deserve
sentence of death. He justifies not partially, but freely, so that they
can appear in the heavens as if clothed with the purity of Christ. No
portion of righteousness could pacify the conscience. It must be decided
that we are pleasing to God, as being without exception righteous in his
sight. Hence it follows that the doctrine of justification is perverted
and completely overthrown whenever doubt is instilled into the mind,
confidence in salvation is shaken, and free and intrepid prayer is
retarded; yea, whenever rest and tranquility with spiritual joy are not
established. Hence Paul argues against objectors, that "if the
inheritance be of the law, it is no more of promise," (Gal. 3: 18.)
that in this way faith would be made vain; for if respect be had to
works it fails, the holiest of men in that case finding nothing in which
they can confide. This distinction between justification and
regeneration (Osiander confounding the two, calls them a twofold
righteousness) is admirably expressed by Paul. Speaking of his real
righteousness, or the integrity bestowed upon him, (which Osiander terms
his essential righteousness,) he mournfully exclaims, "O wretched
man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?"
(Rom. 7: 24;) but retaking himself to the righteousness which is founded
solely on the mercy of God, he breaks forth thus magnificently into the
language of triumph: "Who shall lay any thing to the charge of
God's elect? It is God that justifieth." "Who shall separate
us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or distress, or
persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?" (Rom. 8:
33, 35.) He clearly declares that the only righteousness for him is that
which alone suffices for complete salvation in the presence of God, so
that that miserable bondage, the consciousness of which made him a
little before lament his lot, derogates not from his confidence, and is
no obstacle in his way. This diversity is well known, and indeed is
familiar to all the saints who groan under the burden of sin, and yet
with victorious assurance rise above all fears. Osiander's objection as
to its being inconsistent with the nature of God, falls back upon
himself; for though he clothes the saints with a twofold righteousness
as with a coat of skins, he is, however, forced to admit, that without
forgiveness no man is pleasing to God. If this be so, let him at least
admit, that with reference to what is called the proportion of
imputation, those are regarded as righteous who are not so in reality.
But how far shall the sinner extend this gratuitous acceptance, which is
substituted in the room of righteousness? Will it amount to the whole
pound, or will it be only an ounce? He will remain in doubt, vibrating
to this side and to that, because he will be unable to assume to himself
as much righteousness as will be necessary to give confidence. It is
well that he who would prescribe a law to God is not the judge in this
cause. But this saying will ever stand true, "That thou mightest be
justified when thou speakest, and be clear when thou judges," (Ps.
51: 4.) What arrogance to condemn the Supreme Judge when he acquits
freely, and try to prevent the response from taking affect: "I will
have mercy on whom I will have mercy." And yet the intercession of
Moses, which God calmed by this answer, was not for pardon to some
individual, but to all alike, by wiping away the guilt to which all were
liable. And we, indeed, say, that the lost are justified before God by
the burial of their sins; for (as he hates sin) he can only love those
whom he justifies. But herein is the wondrous method of justification,
that, clothed with the righteousness of Christ, they dread not the
judgment of which they are worthy, and while they justly condemn
themselves, are yet deemed righteous out of themselves.
12. I must admonish the reader carefully
to attend to the mystery which he boasts he is unwilling to conceal from
them. For after contending with great prolixity that we do not obtain
favor with God through the mere imputation of the righteousness of
Christ, because (to use his own words) it were impossible for God to
hold those as righteous who are not so, he at length concludes that
Christ was given to us for righteousness, in respect not of his human,
but of his divine nature; and though this can only be found in the
person of the Mediator, it is, however, the righteousness not of man,
but of God. He does not now twist his rope of two righteousnesses, but
plainly deprives the human nature of Christ of the office of justifying.
It is worth while to understand what the nature of his argument is. It
is said in the same passage that Christ is made unto us wisdom, (1 Cor.
1: 30;) but this is true only of the eternal Word, and, therefore, it is
not the man Christ that is made righteousness. I answer, that the only
begotten Son of God was indeed his eternal wisdom, but that this title
is applied to him by Paul in a different way, viz., because "in him
are hid all the treasures of wisdom and righteousness," (Col. 2:
3.) That, therefore, which he had with the Father he manifested to us;
and thus Paul's expression refers not to the essence of the Son of God,
but to our use, and is fitly applied to the human nature of Christ; for
although the light shone in darkness before he was clothed with flesh,
yet he was a hidden light until he appeared in human nature as the Sun
of Righteousness, and hence he calls himself the light of the world. It
is also foolishly objected by Osiander, that justifying far transcends
the power both of men and angels, since it depends not on the dignity of
any creature, but on the ordination of God. Were angels to attempt to
give satisfaction to God, they could have no success, because they are
not appointed for this purpose, it being the peculiar office of Christ,
who "has redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse
for us," (Gal. 3: 13.) Those who deny that Christ is our
righteousness, in respect of his divine nature, are wickedly charged by
Osiander with leaving only a part of Christ, and (what is worse) with
making two Gods; because, while admitting that God dwells in us, they
still insist that we are not justified by the righteousness of God. For
though we call Christ the author of life, inasmuch as he endured death
that he might destroy him who had the power of death, (Heb. 2: 14,) we
do not thereby rob him of this honor, in his whole character as God
manifested in the flesh. We only make a distinction as to the manner in
which the righteousness of God comes to us, and is enjoyed by us, - a
matter as to which Osiander shamefully erred. We deny not that that
which was openly exhibited to us in Christ flowed from the secret grace
and power of God; nor do we dispute that the righteousness which Christ
confers upon us is the righteousness of God, and proceeds from him. What
we constantly maintain is, that our righteousness and life are in the
death and resurrection of Christ. I say nothing of that absurd
accumulation of passages with which without selection or common
understanding, he has loaded his readers, in endeavoring to show, that
whenever mention is made of righteousness, this essential righteousness
of his should be understood; as when David implores help from the
righteousness of God. This David does more than a hundred times, and as
often Osiander hesitates not to pervert his meaning. Not a whit more
solid is his objection, that the name of righteousness is rightly and
properly applied to that by which we are moved to act aright, but that
it is God only that worketh in us both to will and to do, (Phil. 2: 13.)
For we deny not that God by his Spirit forms us anew to holiness and
righteousness of life; but we must first see whether he does this of
himself, immediately, or by the hand of his Son, with whom he has
deposited all the fulness of the Holy Spirit, that out of his own
abundance he may supply the wants of his members. When, although
righteousness comes to us from the secret fountain of the Godhead, it
does not follow that Christ, who sanctified himself in the flesh on our
account, is our righteousness in respect of his divine nature, (John 17:
19.) Not less frivolous is his observation, that the righteousness with
which Christ himself was righteous was divine; for had not the will of
the Father impelled him, he could not have fulfilled the office assigned
him. For although it has been elsewhere said that all the merits of
Christ flow from the mere good pleasure of God, this gives no
countenance to the phantom by which Osiander fascinates both his own
eyes and those of the simple. For who will allow him to infer, that
because God is the source and commencement of our righteousness, we are
essentially righteous, and the essence of the divine righteousness
dwells in us? In redeeming us, says Isaiah, "he (God) put on
righteousness as a breastplate, and an helmet of salvation upon his
head," (Isaiah 59: 17,) was this to deprive Christ of the armour
which he had given him, and prevent him from being a perfect Redeemer?
All that the Prophet meant was, that God borrowed nothing from an
external quarter, that in redeeming us he received no external aid. The
same thing is briefly expressed by Paul in different terms, when he says
that God set him forth "to declare his righteousness for the
remission of sins." This is not the least repugnant to his
doctrine: in another place, that "by the obedience of one shall
many be made righteous," (Rom. 5: 19.) In short, every one who, by
the entanglement of a twofold righteousness, prevents miserable souls
from resting entirely on the mere mercy of God, mocks Christ by putting
on him a crown of plaited thorns.
13. But since a great part of mankind
imagine a righteousness compounded of faith and works let us here show
that there is so wide a difference between justification by faith and by
works, that the establishment of the one necessarily overthrows the
other. The Apostle says, "Yea doubtless, and I count all things but
loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for
whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung,
that I may win Christ, and be found in him, not having mine own
righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith
of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith," (Phil. 3:
8, 9.) You here see a comparison of contraries, and an intimation that
every one who would obtain the righteousness of Christ must renounce his
own. Hence he elsewhere declares the cause of the rejection of the Jews
to have been, that "they being ignorant of God's righteousness, and
going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted
themselves unto the righteousness of God," (Rom. 10: 3.) If we
destroy the righteousness of God by establishing our own righteousness,
then, in order to obtain his righteousness, our own must be entirely
abandoned. This also he shows, when he declares that boasting is not
excluded by the Law, but by faith, (Rom. 3: 27.) Hence it follows, that
so long as the minutes portion of our own righteousness remains, we have
still some ground for boasting. Now if faith utterly excludes boasting,
the righteousness of works cannot in any way be associated with the
righteousness of faith. This meaning is so clearly expressed in the
fourth chapter to the Romans as to leave no room for cavil or evasion.
"If Abraham were justified by works he has whereof to glory;"
and then it is added, "but not before God," (Rom. 4: 2.) The
conclusion, therefore, is, that he was not justified by works. He then
employs another argument from contraries, viz., when reward is paid to
works, it is done of debt, not of grace; but the righteousness of faith
is of grace: therefore it is not of the merit of works. Away, then, with
the dream of those who invent a righteousness compounded of faith and
works, (see Calvin. ad Concilium Tridentinum.)
14. The Sophists, who delight in sporting
with Scripture and in empty cavils, think they have a subtle evasion
when they expound works to mean, such as unregenerated men do literally,
and by the effect of free will, without the grace of Christ, and deny
that these have any reference to spiritual works. Thus according to
them, man is justified by faith as well as by works, provided these are
not his own works, but gifts of Christ and fruits of regeneration;
Paul's only object in so expressing himself being to convince the Jews,
that in trusting to their ohm strength they foolishly arrogated
righteousness to themselves, whereas it is bestowed upon us by the
Spirit of Christ alone, and not by studied efforts of our own nature.
But they observe not that in the antithesis between Legal and Gospel
righteousness, which Paul elsewhere introduces, all kinds of works, with
whatever name adorned, are excluded, (Gal. 3: 11, 12.) For he says that
the righteousness of the Law consists in obtaining salvation by doing
what the Law requires, but that the righteousness of faith consists in
believing that Christ died and rose again, (Rom. 10: 5-9.) Moreover, we
shall afterwards see, at the proper place, that the blessings of
sanctification and justification, which we derive from Christ, are
different. Hence it follows, that not even spiritual works are taken
into account when the power of justifying is ascribed to faith. And,
indeed, the passage above quoted, in which Paul declares that Abraham
had no ground of glorying before God, because he was not justified by
works, ought not to be confined to a literal and external form of
virtue, or to the effort of free will. The meaning is, that though the
life of the Patriarch had been spiritual and almost angelic, yet he
could not by the merit of works have procured justification before God.
15. The Schoolmen treat the matter
somewhat more grossly by mingling their preparations with it; and yet
the others instill into the simple and unwary a no less pernicious
dogma, when, under cover of the Spirit and grace, they hide the divine
mercy, which alone can give peace to the trembling soul. We, indeed,
hold with Paul, that those who fulfill the Law are justified by God, but
because we are all far from observing the Law, we infer that the works
which should be most effectual to justification are of no avail to us,
because we are destitute of them. In regard to vulgar Papists or
Schoolmen, they are here doubly wrong, both in calling faith assurance
of conscience while waiting to receive from God the reward of merits,
and in interpreting divine grace to mean not the imputation of
gratuitous righteousness, but the assistance of the Spirit in the study
of holiness. They quote from an Apostle: "He that comes to God must
believe that he is, and that he is the rewarder of them that diligently
seek him," (Heb. 11: 6.) But they observe not what the method of
seeking is. Then in regard to the term grace, it is plain from their
writings that they labour under a delusion. For Lombard holds that
justification is given to us by Christ in two ways. "First,"
says he, (Lombard, Sent. Lib. 3, Dist. 16, c. 11,) "the death of
Christ justifies us when by means of it the love by which we are made
righteous is excited in our hearts; and, secondly, when by means of it
sin is extinguished, sin by which the devil held us captive, but by
which he cannot now procure our condemnation." You see here that
the chief office of divine grace in our justification he considers to be
its directing us to good works by the agency of the Holy Spirit. He
intended, no doubt, to follow the opinion of Augustine, but he follows
it at a distance, and even wanders far from a true imitation of him both
obscuring what was clearly stated by Augustine, and making what in him
was less pure more corrupt. The Schools have always gone from worse to
worse, until at length, in their downward path, they have degenerated
into a kind of Pelagianism. Even the sentiment of Augustine, or at least
his mode of expressing it, cannot be entirely approved of. For although
he is admirable in stripping man of all merit of righteousness, and
transferring the whole praise of it to God, yet he classes the grace by
which we are regenerated to newness of life under the head of
sanctification.
16. Scripture, when it treats of
justification by faith, leads us in a very different direction. Turning
away our view from our own works, it bids us look only to the mercy of
God and the perfection of Christ. The order of justification which it
sets before us is this: first, God of his mere gratuitous goodness is
pleased to embrace the sinner, in whom he sees nothing that can move him
to mercy but wretchedness, because he sees him altogether naked and
destitute of good works. He, therefore, seeks the cause of kindness in
himself, that thus he may affect the sinner by a sense of his goodness,
and induce him, in distrust of his own works, to cast himself entirely
upon his mercy for salvation. This is the meaning of faith by which the
sinner comes into the possession of salvation, when, according to the
doctrine of the Gospel, he perceives that he is reconciled by God; when,
by the intercession of Christ, he obtains the pardon of his sins, and is
justified; and, though renewed by the Spirit of God, considers that,
instead of leaning on his own works, he must look solely to the
righteousness which is treasured up for him in Christ. When these things
are weighed separately, they will clearly explain our view, though they
may be arranged in a better order than that in which they are here
presented. But it is of little consequence, provided they are so
connected with each other as to give us a full exposition and solid
confirmation of the whole subject.
17. Here it is proper to remember the
relation which we previously established between faith and the Gospel;
faith being said to justify because it receives and embraces the
righteousness offered in the Gospel. By the very fact of its being said
to be offered by the Gospel, all consideration of works is excluded.
This Paul repeatedly declares, and in two passages, in particular, most
clearly demonstrates. In the Epistle to the Romans, comparing the Law
and the Gospel, he says, "Moses describeth the righteousness which
is of the law, That the man which does those things shall live by them.
But the righteousness which is of faith speaketh on this wise, - If thou
shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine
heart that God has raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved,"
(Rom. 10: 5, 6: 9.) Do you see how he makes the distinction between the
Law and the Gospel to be, that the former gives justification to works,
whereas the latter bestows it freely without any help from works? This
is a notable passage, and may free us from many difficulties if we
understand that the justification which is given us by the Gospel is
free from any terms of Law. It is for this reason he more than once
places the promise in diametrical opposition to the Law. "If the
inheritance be of the law, it is no more of promise," (Gal. 3: 18.)
Expressions of similar import occur in the same chapter. Undoubtedly the
Law also has its promises; and, therefore, between them and the Gospel
promises there must be some distinction and difference, unless we are to
hold that the comparison is inept. And in what can the difference
consist unless in this that the promises of the Gospel are gratuitous,
and founded on the mere mercy of God, whereas the promises of the Law
depend on the condition of works? But let no pester here allege that
only the righteousness which men would obtrude upon God of their own
strength and free will is repudiated; since Paul declares, without
exceptions that the Law gained nothing by its commands, being such as
none, not only of mankind in general, but none even of the most perfect,
are able to fulfill. Love assuredly is the chief commandment in the Law,
and since the Spirit of God trains us to love, it cannot but be a cause
of righteousness in us, though that righteousness even in the saints is
defective, and therefore of no value as a ground of merit.
18. The second passage is, "That no
man is justified by the law in the sight of God, it is evident: for, The
just shall live by faith. And the law is not of faith: but, The man that
does them shall live in them," (Gal. 3: 11, 12; Hab. 2: 4.) How
could the argument hold unless it be true that works are not to be taken
into account, but are to be altogether separated? The Law, he says, is
different from faith. Why? Because to obtain justification by it, works
are required; and hence it follows, that to obtain justification by the
Gospel they are not required. From this statement, it appears that those
who are justified by faith are justified independent of, nay, in the
absence of, the merit of works, because faith receives that
righteousness which the Gospel bestows. But the Gospel differs from the
Law in this, that it does not confine justification to works, but places
it entirely in the mercy of God. In like manner, Paul contends, in the
Epistle to the Romans, that Abraham had no ground of glorying, because
faith was imputed to him for righteousness, (Rom. 4: 2;) and he adds in
confirmation, that the proper place for justification by faith is where
there are no works to which reward is due. "To him that worketh is
the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt." What is given to
faith is gratuitous, this being the force of the meaning of the words
which he there employs. Shortly after he adds, "Therefore it is of
faith, that it might be by grace," (Rom. 4: 16;) and hence infers
that the inheritance is gratuitous because it is procured by faith. How
so but just because faiths without the aid of works leans entirely on
the mercy of God? And in the same sense, doubtless, he elsewhere
teaches, that the righteousness of God without the Law was manifested,
being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets, (Rom. 3: 21;) for excluding
the Law, he declares that it is not aided by worlds, that we do not
obtain it by working, but are destitute when we draw near to receive it.
19. The reader now perceives with what
fairness the Sophists of the present day cavil at our doctrine, when we
say that a man is justified by faith alone, (Rom. 4: 2.) They dare not
deny that he is justified by faith, seeing Scripture so often declares
it; but as the word alone is nowhere expressly used they will not
tolerate its being added. Is it so? What answer, then will they give to
the words of Paul, when he contends that righteousness is not of faith
unless it be gratuitous? How can it be gratuitous, and yet by works? By
what cavils, moreover, will they evade his declaration in another place,
that in the Gospel the righteousness of God is manifested? (Rom. 1: 17.)
If righteousness is manifested in the Gospel, it is certainly not a
partial or mutilated, but a full and perfect righteousness. The Law,
therefore, has no part in its and their objection to the exclusive word
alone is not only unfounded, but is obviously absurd. Does he not
plainly enough attribute everything to faith alone when he disconnects
it with works? What I would ask, is meant by the expressions, "The
righteousness of God without the law is manifested;" "Being
justified freely by his grace;" "Justified by faith without
the deeds of the law?" (Rom. 3: 21, 24, 28.) Here they have an
ingenious subterfuge, one which, though not of their own devising but
taken from Origin and some ancient writers, is most childish. They
pretend that the works excluded are ceremonial, not moral works. Such
profit do they make by their constant wrangling, that they possess not
even the first elements of logic. Do they think the Apostle was raving
when he produced, in proof of his doctrine, these passages? "The
man that does them shall live in them," (Gal. 3: 12.) "Cursed
is every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the
book of the law to do them," (Gal. 3: 10.) Unless they are
themselves raving, they will not say that life was promised to the
observers of ceremonies, and the curse denounced only against the
transgressors of them. If these passages are to be understood of the
Moral Law, there cannot be a doubt that moral works also are excluded
from the power of justifying. To the same effect are the arguments which
he employs. "By the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be
justified in his sight: for by the law is the knowledge of sin,"
(Rom. 3: 20.) "The law worketh wrath," (Rom. 4: 15,) and
therefore not righteousness. "The law cannot pacify the
conscience," and therefore cannot confer righteousness. "Faith
is imputed for righteousness," and therefore righteousness is not
the reward of works, but is given without being due. Because "we
are justified by faith," boasting is excluded. "Had there been
a law given which could have given life, verily righteousness should
have been by the law. But the Scripture has concluded all under sin,
that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that
believe," (Gal. 3: 21, 22.) Let them maintain, if they dare, that
these things apply to ceremonies, and not to morals, and the very
children will laugh at their effrontery. The true conclusion, therefore,
is, that the whole Law is spoken of when the power of justifying is
denied to it.
20. Should any one wonder why the
Apostle, not contented with having named works, employs this addition,
the explanation is easy. However highly works may be estimated, they
have their whole value more from the approbation of God than from their
own dignity. For who will presume to plume himself before God on the
righteousness of works, unless in so far as He approves of them? Who
will presume to demand of Him a reward except in so far as He has
promised it? It is owing entirely to the goodness of God that works are
deemed worthy of the honor and reward of righteousness; and, therefore,
their whole value consists in this, that by means of them we endeavor to
manifest obedience to God. Wherefore, in another passage, the Apostle,
to prove that Abraham could not be justified by works, declares,
"that the covenant, that was confirmed before of God in Christ, the
law, which was four hundred and thirty years after, cannot disannul,
that it should make the promise of none effect," (Gal. 3: 17.) The
unskillful would ridicule the argument that there could be righteous
works before the promulgation of the Law, but the Apostle, knowing that
works could derive this value solely from the testimony and honor
conferred on them by God, takes it for granted that, previous to the
Law, they had no power of justifying. We see why he expressly terms them
works of Law when he would deny the power of justifying to theme viz.,
because it was only with regard to such works that a question could be
raised; although he sometimes, without addition, excepts all kinds of
works whatever, as when on the testimony of David he speaks of the man
to whom the Lord imputeth righteousness without works, (Rom. 4: 5, 6.)
No cavils, therefore, can enable them to prove that the exclusion of
works is not general. In vain do they lay hold of the frivolous subtilty,
that the faith alone, by which we are justified, "worketh by
love," and that love, therefore, is the foundation of
justification. We, indeed, acknowledge with Paul, that the only faith
which justifies is that which works by love, (Gal. 5: 6;) but love does
not give it its justifying power. Nay, its only means of justifying
consists in its bringing us into communication with the righteousness of
Christ. Otherwise the whole argument, on which the Apostle insists with
so much earnestness, would fall. to him that worketh is the reward not
reckoned of grace, but of debt. But to him that worketh not, but
believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for
righteousness." Could he express more clearly than in this word,
that there is justification in faith only where there are no works to
which reward is due, and that faith is imputed for righteousness only
when righteousness is conferred freely without merit?
21. Let us now consider the truth of what
was said in the definition, viz., that justification by faith is
reconciliation with God, and that this consists solely in the remission
of sins. We must always return to the axioms that the wrath of God lies
upon all men so long as they continue sinners. This is elegantly
expressed by Isaiah in these words: "Behold, the Lord's hand is not
shortened, that it cannot save; neither his ear heavy, that it cannot
hear: but your iniquities have separated between you and your God, and
your sins have hid his face from you, that he will not hear,"
(Isaiah 59: 1, 2.) We are here told that sin is a separation between God
and man; that His countenance is turned away from the sinner; and that
it cannot be otherwise, since, to have any intercourse with sin is
repugnant to his righteousness. Hence the Apostle shows that man is at
enmity with God until he is restored to favour by Christ, (Rom. 5:
8-l0.) When the Lord, therefore, admits him to union, he is said to
justify him, because he can neither receive him into favor, nor unite
him to himself, without changing his condition from that of a sinner
into that of a righteous man. We adds that this is done by remission of
sins. For if those whom the Lord has reconciled to himself are estimated
by works, they will still prove to be in reality sinners, while they
ought to be pure and free from sin. It is evident therefore, that the
only way in which those whom God embraces are made righteous, is by
having their pollutions wiped away by the remission of sins, so that
this justification may be termed in one word the remission of sins.
22. Both of these become perfectly clear
from the words of Paul: "God was in Christ reconciling the world
unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them; and has committed
unto us the word of reconciliation." He then subjoins the sum of
his embassy: "He has made him to be sin for us who knew no sin;
that we might be made the righteousness of God in him," (2 Cor. 5:
l9-21.) He here uses righteousness and reconciliation indiscriminately,
to make us understand that the one includes the other. The mode of
obtaining this righteousness he explains to be, that our sins are not
imputed to us. Wherefore, you cannot henceforth doubt how God justifies
us when you hear that he reconciles us to himself by not imputing our
faults. In the same manner, in the Epistle to the Romans, he proves, by
the testimony of David, that righteousness is imputed without works,
because he declares the man to be blessed "whose transgression is
forgiven, whose sin is covered," and "unto whom the Lord
imputeth not iniquity," (Rom. 4: 6; Ps. 32: 1, 2.) There he
undoubtedly uses blessedness for righteousness; and as he declares that
it consists in forgiveness of sins, there is no reason why we should
define it otherwise. Accordingly, Zacharias, the father of John the
Baptist, sings that the knowledge of salvation consists in the
forgiveness of sins, (Luke 1: 77.) The same course was followed by Paul
when, in addressing the people of Antioch, he gave them a summary of
salvation. Luke states that he concluded in this way: "Through this
man is preached unto you the forgiveness of sins, and by him all that
believe are justified from all things from which ye could not be
justified by the law of Moses," (Acts 12: 38, 39.) Thus the Apostle
connects forgiveness of sins with justification in such a way as to show
that they are altogether the same; and hence he properly argues that
justification, which we owe to the indulgence of God, is gratuitous. Nor
should it seem an unusual mode of expression to say that believers are
justified before God not by works, but by gratuitous acceptance, seeing
it is frequently used in Scripture, and sometimes also by ancient
writers. Thus Augustine says: "The righteousness of the saints in
this world consists more in the forgiveness of sins than the perfection
of virtue," (August. de Civitate Dei, lib. 19, cap. 27.) To this
corresponds the well-known sentiment of Bernard: "Not to sin is the
righteousness of God, but the righteousness of man is the indulgence of
God," (Bernard, Serm. 22, 23 in Cant.) He previously asserts that
Christ is our righteousness in absolution, and, therefore, that those
only are just who have obtained pardon through mercy.
23. Hence also it is proved, that it is
entirely by the intervention of Christ's righteousness that we obtain
justification before God. This is equivalent to saying that man is not
just in himself, but that the righteousness of Christ is communicated to
him by imputation, while he is strictly deserving of punishment. Thus
vanishes the absurd dogma, that man is justified by faith, inasmuch as
it brings him under the influence of the Spirit of God by whom he is
rendered righteous. This is so repugnant to the above doctrine that it
never can be reconciled with it. There can be no doubt that he who is
taught to seek righteousness out of himself does not previously possess
it in himself. This is most clearly declared by the Apostle, when he
says, that he who knew no sin was made an expiatory victim for sin, that
we might be made the righteousness of God in him (2 Cor. 5: 21.) You see
that our righteousness is not in ourselves, but in Christ; that the only
way in which we become possessed of it is by being made partakers with
Christ, since with him we possess all riches. There is nothing repugnant
to this in what he elsewhere says: "God sending his own Son in the
likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin condemned sin in the flesh: that
the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us," (Rom. 8: 3,
4.) Here the only fulfillment to which he refers is that which we obtain
by imputation. Our Lord Jesus Christ communicates his righteousness to
us, and so by some wondrous ways in so far as pertains to the justice of
Gods transfuses its power into us. That this was the Apostle's view is
abundantly clear from another sentiment which he had expressed a little
before: "As by one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by
the obedience of one shall many be made righteous," (Rom. 5: 19.)
To declare that we are deemed righteous, solely because the obedience of
Christ is imputed to us as if it where our own, is just to place our
righteousness in the obedience of Christ. Wherefore, Ambrose appears to
me to have most elegantly adverted to the blessing of Jacob as an
illustration of this righteousness, when he says that as he who did not
merit the birthright in himself personated his brother, put on his
garments which gave forth a most pleasant odour, and thus introduced
himself to his father that he might receive a blessing to his own
advantage, though under the person of another, so we conceal ourselves
under the precious purity of Christ, our first-born brother, that we may
obtain an attestation of righteousness from the presence of God. The
words of Ambrose are, - "Isaac's smelling the odour of his
garments, perhaps means that we are justified not by works, but by
faith, since carnal infirmity is an impediment to works, but errors of
conduct are covered by the brightness of faith, which merits the pardon
of faults," (Ambrose de Jacobo et Vita Beats, Lib. 2, c. 2.) And so
indeed it is; for in order to appear in the presence of God for
salvation, we must send forth that fragrant odour, having our vices
covered and buried by his perfection.
John Calvin, Book 3:11, The Institutes
of The Christian Religion, Beveridge edition, 1863. |
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