Dr. Jack L. Arnold Equipping Pastors International, Inc.
Lesson 6
INTRODUCTION
The
most pressing and urgent question facing mankind is, ÒHow can a person be right
before God?Ó or ÒHow can a condemned sinner be righteous in the sight of a holy
God?Ó This question and the objections to this question will be answered for us
by the Apostle Paul in Galatians 2:15-21.
The
Apostle Paul was writing the Book of Galatians to refute the false teaching of
the Judaizers who taught that a person could not be saved without keeping the
Mosaic Law. They were convinced that a person could only be right before God by
toil and hard work at keeping the law. In their legalistic approach to
salvation, they felt a person must do everything the law commands and refrain
from everything the law forbids. They sincerely felt that if a person did all
the works of the law to the best of his ability, he would be accepted by God.
They taught that justification was by the works of the law. In essence, they
were saying that men get right before God by their own righteousness. If a
person has enough good works, God will surely save him; therefore all men ought
to seek to do good works to be accepted by God.
The
basic religion of all men everywhere outside of Christ is salvation by works.
This is the fundamental principle of every religious and moral system in the
world except Biblical Christianity. Men in all sincerity are seeking to work
their way to heaven, but the Apostle Paul tells us that they are sincerely
wrong because salvation is by grace through faith in Christ alone not by law or
works.
JUSTIFICATION
IS BY FAITH AND NOT BY WORKS
2:15-16
ÒWe who are Jews by birth and not Gentile
sinnersÓ
Jews,
who had all the privileges and promises of a covenant people, still had to be
justified by grace through faith. The Jews had wrongly thought themselves
spiritually and morally superior to Gentiles because of their privileges, so
much so that Gentiles were called Ògodless,Ó ÒdogsÓ and Òsinners.Ó They had
arrogant pretensions to superior holiness, and they were sure they were saved
because they kept the law and Gentiles did not.
What
most Jews did not understand is that salvation had always been by grace through
faith in Jehovah God with the promise of the coming Messiah. They honestly felt
they were saved because they kept the law the best they could. The Judaizers
failed to grasp that when Christ came, grace was fully revealed and now more
clearly than ever both Jews and Gentiles had to be justified by grace through
faith in Christ alone.
There
are multitudes of people who say, ÒIÕm a good person. I try the best I can to
do right. I treat people fairly and honestly. I work hard and am a good
citizen. Surely God will accept me if IÕm trying hard to please Him?Ó People
who say these things, do not understand what salvation is all about.
ÒKnow that a man is not justified by
observing the lawÓ
A
person cannot get right with God by doing good works, for good works cannot
save a man (Rom. 3:10-12: ÒAs it is
written: ÔThere is no one righteous, not even one; there is no one who
understands, no one who seeks God. All have turned away, they have together
become worthless; there is no one who does good, not even one.Ó) Our best
human works are a garbage heap to a holy God. Our most brilliant endeavors are
odious to the nostrils of righteous Jehovah.
The
big lie in the world is that a man may be justified by the works of the law.
The Òbig lieÓ is propagated by the Òbiggest liarÓ in this world, the devil
himself. No one has ever been justified by the works of the law perfectly. No
human being will ever keep the law of God perfectly or live perfectly in this
life. Perfection is required by the law if one is to be accepted before God.
As
we look into our hearts, we know we have broken GodÕs laws thousands of times,
and we should realize that the law condemns us and does not save us.
ÒBut by faith in Jesus Christ. So we,
too, have put our faith in (into) Christ Jesus that we may be justified by
faith in Christ.Ó
Here
is a clear statement that a person is justified by faith in Christ alone. Each
individual must exercise faith in Christ if he is to be Justified.
Justification means Òto declare righteous.Ó It is a legal term and means just
the opposite of Òto condemn.Ó To condemn is to declare someone guilty; to
justify is to declare a person not guilty or innocent or righteous.Ó
Justification
is a key word. In the Bible it refers to GodÕs act of unmerited favor by which
He puts a sinner right with Himself, not only pardoning and acquitting him, but
accepting him as perfectly righteous.
When
and where does a sinful person get a righteousness to be declared righteous
before God? The moment a person trusts Christ, he is spiritually put into union
with Christ and he receives positionally the righteousness of Christ. Christ
kept the law perfectly and He lived the perfect life. Only Christ has a
righteousness that is acceptable to God the Father. Those who have Christ are
spiritually in union with Christ and share His righteousness which gives them a
right standing before God (2 Cor.5: 21 ÒGod
made him (Christ) who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might
become the righteousness of God.Ó)
GodÕs
holiness and justice must judge sin with wrath. And to live in the presence of
God, one must have a righteousness that God will accept, and the only
righteousness He will accept is perfect righteousness. When God looks down on
the Christian, He does not see the ChristianÕs sin but He sees the
righteousness of His Son in the believer. He will not judge the Christian
because he has judged Christ for the Christian. He accepts the Christian
because of ChristÕs righteousness, and He declares every true believer in
Christ righteous in His sight.
PaulÕs
gospel of grace stated that a man could only be saved or made right before God
by faith in Christ alone apart from any human works. Christ died to deliver
lawbreakers; He bled to save sinners; He suffered undefinable agony to rescue
hell-bound people. Therefore, all that is required to be justified before God
is to acknowledge our sin and helplessness, to repent (change our attitude)
about our self-asserting and self-righteousness and to put our whole trust and
confidence in Jesus Christ to save us.
It
says men are to believe Òinto Christ.Ó This tells a little about what faith
really is. It is not intellectual assent or an emotional religious experience,
but it is a personal commitment to or julo Christ. Faith is casting away all
confidence in self-effort to save ourselves and casting ourselves wholly on
Christ to save us. Faith is turning loose of self and abandoning ourselves to
Christ as our only hope of salvation.
Notice
carefully there must be a right object of faith before one can be justified
before God. The object of oneÕs faith must be Jesus Christ. A general belief in
God will not justify anyone. Ninety-five percent of all Americans believe in
God but they are not justified. Neither holding on to some religious experience
will make one right before God. Even a confidence in your own faith in Christ
will not justify you. You can only be justified by Christ and that through
faith in Him.
A
once famous Bible scholar named Lenski said, ÒAll the believing in the world
secures nothing but damnation from the Judge, but the tiniest believing in
Christ secures salvation.Ó
ÒAnd not by observing the law, because by
observing the law no one will be justified.Ó
Three
times for emphasis Paul repeats that salvation is not by works of any law. A
trust in good works will not save a man in eternity but works will be the basis
of his condemnation. Whatever a personÕs religious upbringing, education,
social status or racial origin, the way of salvation is the same. None can be
justified by works. All men must be justified through faith in Christ.
Concerning
justification through faith, Martin Luther said these words:
ÒThis
is the truth of the gospel. It is also the principle article of all Christian
doctrine, wherein the knowledge of all godliness consists. Most necessary it
is, therefore, that we should know this article well, teach it to others, and beat
it into their heads continually.Ó
THE MAJOR
OBJECTION TO JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH 2:17
ÒIf, while we seek to be justified in
Christ, it becomes evident that we ourselves are sinners, does that mean that
Christ promotes sin?Ó
As
soon as a person teaches that justification is by grace through faith in Christ
apart from any human works, the objections begin to fly. Anyone knows that
after a person is justified, he still sins at times, so does this make Christ
the minister of sin? If a person can be saved apart from the law, is he being
discouraged from doing good works? If a man is saved by faith in Christ alone,
is Christ then discouraging the keeping of the moral law which God commanded to
be kept? Even more severe, if men are justified by grace through faith alone
apart from works, they are eternally secure in Christ, so now may they live as
they please? Does justification make a person antinomian (against law) and a
libertine (one without restraints)?
ÒAbsolutely not!Ó
Paul
emotionally replies by saying, ÒMai
genoitoÓ—God forbid—Absolutely not! The thought of a Christian
habitually sinning after salvation was repugnant to the Apostle Paul.
Justification by faith in Christ never causes a person to become a libertine in
his living. Nor does it make him one who is against moral law.
THE FIRST
REFUTATION AGAINST THE CHARGE OF ANTINOMIANISM 2:18
ÒIf I rebuild what I destroyed, I prove
that I am a lawbreakerÓ
While
this verse is very hard to interpret, I think it is speaking about manÕs
responsibility for sin. Paul seems to be saying if after justification a man
still sins, it is the ChristianÕs fault not ChristÕs fault. A Christian can
only blame himself for his sin, for a justified sinner is always responsible
for his own sin after conversion.
So
many Christians try to blame something or someone else for their sin: ÒThe sin
in me did it,Ó or ÒThe flesh made me do it,Ó or ÒThe devil made me do it,Ó or
ÒThe demons made me do it.Ó No, my friends, we do our own sin by our own choice
and we are always responsible for it.
THE SECOND
REFUTATION AGAINST THE CHARGE OF ANTINOMIANISM 2:19
ÒFor through the law I died to the lawÓ
The
second argument against antinomianisin is that Paul died to the legalistic
aspects of the law and was now really free to live for God. It was through the
law that Paul finally saw himself a sinner before a holy God and his own
inability to reach God through good works. The law forced him to seek salvation
in Christ.
When
Paul received Christ, he was put into spiritual union with Christ and shared
the very death of Christ for sin. The Lord Jesus lived under the law, fully
obeyed the law, assumed the guilt and penalty of the law and by dying under the
law satisfied its requirements. By union with Christ, Paul was delivered from
all legalistic claims or control over him. The Christian through spiritual
union with Christ has passed out of divine law so far as the legalistic aspect
is concerned.
The
only way to get out from under the laws of the land is to die to the law. A
bank robber may be hunted by the law for some crime he has committed. As long
as he is alive the law has control over him. If, however, while robbing a bank,
he is shot and killed, the law is still in force but he is dead. Therefore, the
law has no control over him. He is free from the law in the sense that he died
to the law.
By
spiritual union with Christ, the Christian died to the law. Notice the law did
not die. The law still exists. It is still in effect to point out damning
guilt, judge sinful hearts and condemn all breakers of the law. The law is
still in fun force for the non-Christian. However, the Christian in Christ has
died to the law. The law is still there but the Christian sustains a different
relationship to the law as a saved man. The legalistic aspects are gone. law
cannot judge or condemn the Christian because the Christian is in Christ. The
law can point out sin and be a moral guide to the Christian but it cannot
condemn.
The
law has no right to tell me that I must be justified by it. The law has the
right to tell me that I should love God and my neighbor, that I should live in
chastity, temperance, patience, etc. The law has no right to tell me how I may
be delivered from sin, death and hell. It is the GospelÕs business to tell me
that. I must listen to the Gospel. It tells me, not what I must do, but what
Jesus Christ, the Son of God has done for me. (Martin Luther, Commentary
on Galatians).
ÒSo that I might live for God.Ó
Deliverance
from the legalistic aspects of the law through sharing ChristÕs death, gave
Paul the ability to really live for God. Legalism in every form kills the
spirit of Christ because it comes between a manÕs soul and God. Freedom from
legalism is the beginning of true freedom in Christ. When a man is free from
legalism, he is not free to live for himself but he is free only to live for Christ.
Freedom from law gives the Christian liberty to live for Christ.
THE THIRD
REFUTATION AGAINST ANTINOMIANISM
2:20
ÒI have been crucified with Christ.Ó
Paul
actually died with Christ because of spiritual union with Christ. When Christ
died on the cross, every person who would ever believe in Christ was in His
body that horrible day. Because of this, the Christian shares the death of
Christ and also resurrection life because of spiritual union with Christ. The
charge that justification by faith encourages a person to sin was ridiculous.
Those who thought that the gospel of grace invited men to sin did not
understand justification at all. Justification is the result of union with
Christ and union with Christ not only gives us a position before God but also
affects our character. We are justified in Christ. Our justification takes
place when we are united to Christ by faith. One who is united to Christ is
never the same person again. He is changed by a supernatural work of God. Not
only is a personÕs standing changed but also his character is changed. To talk
of going back to the old life on a permanent basis and sinning habitually as
one pleases is impossible if one has truly been justified through union with
Christ.
ÒAnd I no longer live.Ó
The
ÒIÓ or ego of Paul had been put to death. The ÒIÓ of PaulÕs unsaved life had
been crucified with Christ. The self-life had the sword put to it.
ÒBut Christ lives in me.Ó
Because
of spiritual union with Christ, PaulÕs old, unsaved ÒIÓ was put to death through
co-crucifixion. Now Christ is living in Paul because Paul shares the
resurrected life of Jesus Christ through spiritual union. The secret to living
a holy life while having freedom from law is that the believer is joined with
Christ in resurrected life.
While
Christ was living in Paul, it did not destroy his personality. Paul and
ChristÕs personality remained ever distinct. Paul retained his
self-consciousness, his ability to think and act and his personal
responsibility was never eliminated. There are some Christians who are very
mystical and believe ChristÕs personality molds into the personalities of all
Christians. Therefore, it is Christ who thinks and acts for the Christian. They
say that Christ actually takes over the personalities of Christians and lives
life for them. Not so, Christ spiritually lives in the Christian and by faith
in Christ, ChristÕs life flows out through the Christian, but Christ never acts
or thinks for the Christian.
Once
we have been united to Christ in His death, our old life is finished. It is
foolishness to suggest that we could ever go back to it. Besides, we have risen
to a new life in Christ so that Christ lives in us. He gives us new desired for
holiness, God and heaven. It is not that the Christian cannot sin after trusting
in Christ because he does at times, but he does not long to sin and is
miserable when he does sin. Everything is different for the Christian because
he shares ChristÕs death and resurrection as a spiritual creation of God (2
Cor. 5:17. ÒTherefore, if anyone is in
Christ, He is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!Ó)
The
Christian is no longer bound by legalistic law but is bound to Jesus Christ who
gives him the desire to keep the law of Christ (1 Cor. 9:21 ÒTo
those not having the law I became like one not having the law (though I am not
free from GodÕs law, but am under ChristÕs law), so as to win those not having
the law.Ó)
ÒThe life I live in the body, I live by
faith in the Son of GodÓ
The
Christian life is lived by faith in the living and resurrected Christ. Faith is
the key that unlocks the great spiritual secrets for those who are obedient.
Those who exercise more faith are going to experience more spiritual realities
that flow from union with Christ.
ÒWho loved me and gave himself for me.Ó
Salvation
for Paul was individual, particular and personal. He realized that Christ loved
him and died for him, not because he deserved it but because Christ did it in
grace.
Paul
never got over the fact that Christ died for him in love when multiple millions
had no understanding of Christ at all.
THE FINAL
ARGUMENT AGAINST LEGALISM 2:21
ÒI do not set aside the grace of God.Ó
Paul
knew that justification was by grace through faith in Christ. Salvation is all
of grace and is appropriated through faith in Christ. Any system of works
simply sets aside the real gospel, making it no gospel at all.
ÒFor if righteousness could be gained
through the law, Christ died for nothing!Ó
Christianity
is based on GodÕs grace and ChristÕs death for sin and sinners. Christ has
already accomplished salvation is His death and all any man can do is lay hold
of this death for sinners through faith. If anyone insists that justification
is by works and that he can earn his salvation by his own efforts, he is
undermining true Christianity. He is setting aside the grace of God and making
ChristÕs death unnecessary.
CONCLUSION
The
Bible tells us that God is holy and righteous and man is sinful and rebellious.
Man is in a predicament, for how can a sinful man get right before a holy God?
Man knows that sin separates him from God, for his conscience and experience
tells him something is wrong spiritually. There is no peace and only friction.
Men are alienated from GodÕs fellowship. They are under His judgment and
banished from His presence.
How
can a sinful man be right with God?
He must trust Christ, for only Christ can give a man or woman a
righteousness that will be accepted by God. Only God can declare a sinner righteous and He will do just
that for all who have trusted in Jesus Christ as their Savior and Lord.