Dr. Jack L. Arnold Equipping Pastors International, Inc.
Lesson 9
INTRODUCTION
This
last Monday I was painting at the new church building. As I was about to paint
some outside doors, Hal Demarest said to me, ÒJack just loves to paint.Ó I
quickly answered, ÒI donÕt love to paint and there are lots of things I would
rather be doing than this job but someone has to do it. I donÕt enjoy painting
but I realize it has to be done if the building is going to get finished.Õ
This
is the way it is with a message on the history and theology of justification.
It may not be all that enjoyable but it has to be done if we are going to
understand our salvation in a world and life context. This message is not
designed to move your heart but your head, so you can appreciate your heritage
of faith.
When
most Christians think of justification they relate it only to their own
standing before God. They have little or no appreciation for the history and
theology behind the act of God declaring a sinner righteous.
Justification
by grace through faith goes back as far as Adam and was made into a formal or
definite covenant to man from God in Abraham. The whole Bible, from Genesis to
Revelation, tells the story of GodÕs sovereign purpose of grace, His masterplan
of salvation through Christ. As Christians, we need to stand back and get a
panoramic picture of GodÕs everlasting purpose to redeem a people for Himself
through Jesus Christ.
GodÕs
plan of salvation was set forth in a covenant He made with Abraham. In this
covenant, God gave some definite promises to Abraham. These promises are called
the Abrahamic Covenant, and in this covenant are the promises of salvation and
the promise of earthly blessing for all the seed of Abraham.
When
God called Abraham out of Ur of the Chaldees, He promised to bestow on him and
on his seed (children) a land. In
AbrahamÕs seed all the families of the earth would be blessed (Gen. 12:1-3: ÒThe Lord had said to Abram, ÒLeave your
country, your people and your fatherÕs household and go to the land I will show
you. I will make you into a great nation and I will bless you; I will make your
name great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and
whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed
through you.Ó).
Abraham
was promised a seed, a land and universal blessings for mankind. This universal
blessing was the promise of justification for the whole world through the
Messiah who would come from the physical seed of Abraham or the Jews.
In
Galatians, the Apostle Paul is refuting the false teaching of the Judaizers who
said that man had to be saved by keeping the Mosaic Law. They would not accept
the fact that salvation was by grace through faith in Jesus Christ alone, apart
from any human works or law-keeping. The Judaizers argued that the Mosaic Law,
because it was given hundreds of years after the Abrahamic Covenant, actually
substituted for, or at least took precedence over, the Abrahamic Covenant. They
were convinced that since the time God gave the law to Moses salvation was by law-works.
Paul proves in this section of scripture that the law of Moses does not
supplant the Abrahamic Covenant. He shows that the promise of grace in the
Abrahamic Covenant is still in force for the Christian, and the Mosaic Law as a
unit has been set aside as a way of life for Christians in the Church.
GODÕS
COVENANT WITH ABRAHAM CANNOT BE BROKEN 3:15-16
ÒBrothers, let me take an example from
everyday life. Just as no one can set aside or add to a human covenant that has
been duly established, so it is in this case.Ó
Paul
begins his argument with an illustration from everyday life among the Gentiles.
He is referring to the last will and testament of the ancient Greeks and
Romans. Once a will was made up, it could only be changed by the one who made
out the will. Once the person died, the will could not be revoked, modified or
challenged. A promise or will or covenant had been made and there was not any
way to change it.
The
point for this context is clear. If a man makes covenants and promises and
keeps them, how much more will God be faithful to His covenant with Abraham,
for GodÕs promises are immutable (unchanging). The promises were spoken to
Abraham and to his seed. The Scripture does not say Òand to seeds,Ó meaning
many people, but Òand to your seed,Ó meaning one person, who is Christ.
God promised an inheritance to Abraham and his posterity (Gen. 13:15 ÒAll the land that you see I will give to
you and your offspring forever.Ó Gen.
17:8 ÒThe whole land of Canaan, where
you are now an alien, I will give as an everlasting possession to you and your
descendants after you; and I will be their God.Ó)
In
Genesis, the promise is given to Abraham and his physical descendants. However,
we know from other scripture that these promises are not to all Jews
indiscriminately simply because they are physically related to Abraham. The
promises of the Abrahamic Covenant will be fulfilled to spiritual Jews,
those who have been Òborn of the SpiritÓ because they have believed the
promises.
The
Apostle Paul takes these two verses and gives them an even deeper meaning and
applies the singular ÒseedÓ to Christ Himself. The promises of the Abrahamic
Covenant were ultimately made to Christ, for He fulfills the spiritual meaning
of the covenant. Therefore, all who receive Christ, whether Jew or Gentile,
will be recipients of the promises of the Abrahamic Covenant. Men and women are
blessed or justified because they are related to Christ who fulfills the
covenant to Abraham. All Gentiles who are Christians are related to Abraham by
faith in Christ (Gal. 3:29 ÒIf you belong to Christ, then you are
AbrahamÕs seed, and heirs according to the promise.Ó).
Gentile
Christians are spiritual seed of Abraham, not physical seed, and they receive
the blessings of the Abrahamic Covenant. All Gentiles who receive Jesus Christ
are spiritual seed of Abraham and partake of the universal aspects of the
Abrahamic Covenant: ÒAnd all peoples on earth will be
blessed through you.Ó
While
all scholars do not agree with me, I personally believe that all the spiritual
seed of Abraham (Jews and Gentiles) will inherit the land promised in the
Abrahamic Covenant. When a Gentile receives Christ, he is justified and placed
into the Church. This act of faith in Christ gives him a place in the yet
future kingdom on earth as well as the eternal kingdom to come. Physical seed
of Abraham who believed in Christ in the Old Testament and spiritual seed of
Abraham who believe in Christ in the New Testament shall inherit the land which
will become a reality in the future earthly kingdom after the return of Christ
in His second coming.
Amazingly
enough, the New Testament expands the land promise to the whole world (Rom 4:13
ÒIt was not through law that Abraham and
his offspring received the promise that he would be heir of the world, but
through the righteousness that comes by faith.Ó). I do not completely understand
all this but I do believe it and some day will enjoy it immensely.
This
is a blessed truth. All saved Gentiles are sons and daughters of Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob and the promises of the covenant belong to them. The Church is
vitally connected with the Old Testament saints, for all of GodÕs family is
blessed in the Messiah who fulfills the Abrahamic Covenant.
GODÕS
COVENANT OF GRACE PRECEDED THE MOSAIC LAW 3; 17-18
ÒWhat I mean is this: The law, introduced
430 years later, does not set aside the covenant previously established by God
and thus do away with the promise.Ó
In order to refute the Judaizers who
said the Mosaic Law took the place of the Abrahamic Covenant as the way of
salvation, Paul shows that hundreds of years before the Mosaic Law was given by
Moses, God already had given the Abrahamic Covenant which contained the
promises of salvation. The Mosaic Law did not change or render void the promise
of grace in the Abrahamic Covenant.
God
gave the promise to Abraham in 2000 BC.
The law was given in 1500 BC. Men and women were being saved by grace through faith long
before there was a Mosaic Law. Even those who lived in the Age of Law were
saved by grace through faith because there is no salvation outside the covenant
of grace.
God
gave the Mosaic Law to the children of Israel but He never gave it to them to
be the means of obtaining salvation. God had a purpose for the law but it was
not to give men salvation. The purpose of the law was to curb sin and to point
people to the reality that they were sinners and in need of a Savior. The law
had a temporary function as a rule of life for the nation of Israel and ceased
to be a rule of life as a unit at the Cross. The law had a temporary function
whereas the promise of grace in the Abrahamic Covenant was permanent and
eternal.
ÒFor if the inheritance depends on the
law, then it no longer depends on a promise; but God in his grace gave it to
Abraham through a promise.Ó
Paul makes it clear that if salvation is
in any way of law-works then it nullifies the promise made to Abraham. Law, when added to promise, destroys
salvation by grace through faith in Christ. Salvation must rest either on
promise or on law, for it is impossible to mix the two.
The
text says, ÒGod in his grace gave it,Ó
referring to the promise of salvation or justification as found in the
Abrahamic Covenant. The promise of salvation was given as a pure gift to
Abraham and his seed. The promise came from GodÕs heart with no strings
attached, for it was given in grace. GodÕs promise to Abraham and his spiritual
seed was unconditional, and He gave the promise because He wanted to, out of
His own free action.
All
who lay hold of the promise of grace by faith will be saved and those who do
not shall not be saved. God did not go back on His promise of grace when He
gave the Mosaic Law. GodÕs covenant is sure. Every sinner who trusts in Christ
crucified for salvation, apart from any merit, work or human good, receives the
blessing of eternal life and inherits the promises of God made to Abraham.
The
dealings with Abraham and Moses were based on two different principles. The Mosaic
Law is based on works and the Abrahamic Covenant is based on grace. Law and
grace are as far apart as heaven and hell.
In
GodÕs promise to Abraham, we hear over and over again, ÒI will do this; I will
do that; I will; I will,Ó indicating pure grace with no strings attached. But
in the law of Moses God said, "You shall do this; you shall not do that.Ó
GodÕs
promises of salvation were free and unconditional to Abraham. There were no
works to do, no law to obey, no merit to establish and no conditions to fulfill.
God simply said, ÒI will give you a
seed. To your seed I will give the land, and in your seed all the nations of
the earth will be blessed.Ó The
Mosaic Law said, ÒDo and live,Ó which was an impossible task to perform because
the law is constantly broken by men. But in the covenant of grace found in the
promise to Abraham, God said, ÒIn grace I have done something for you in
Christ, believe and live.Ó One is of works and the other is of grace.
The
promise of grace in the Abrahamic Covenant sets forth the true religion of God—GodÕs
plan, GodÕs grace, GodÕs initiative in salvation with man appropriating
salvation through faith. The Mosaic Law sets forth a false view of religion—manÕs
will, manÕs duty, manÕs initiative in salvation by working to get right before
God. Law-works and grace-promise
are two distinct religions and never will the two meet. Promise leads to
eternal life and law leads to eternal death.
Christian,
you are part of the greatest heritage known to man. You are GodÕs family and
related by faith to all the Old Testament and New Testament saints. You are
related by faith to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, having four thousand years of
history behind you. You even go back beyond Abraham to Adam, Eve and Noah for
thousands of years more of history. You belong to the family of faith. DonÕt
let anyone tell you that Christianity began 2000 years ago when Jesus Christ
appeared on the scene of history. Our Christian faith has its roots in the Old
Testament and in some form can be traced all the way back to Adam and Eve.
God
has been faithful to His people from the beginning of creation until now, and
He will be faithful to you also. Let us, therefore, push on in our faith,
knowing that God will be faithful to us because we are part of the family of
faith. (Heb. 12:1-2a ÒTherefore, since we are surrounded by such
a great cloud of witnesses, let us-throw off everything that hinders and the
sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked
out for us. Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith.Ó).
CONCLUSION
For
you today without Christ, if you are going to have your sins forgiven and be
granted eternal life, you are going to have to be saved by grace through faith
in Christ Jesus. You cannot get right with God by works, acts, law or merit.
You must trust Jesus Christ alone, GodÕs historical and theological answer to
the sin problem.
If
you are going to be a spiritual seed of Abraham and be on your way to earthly
and eternal blessing, then you must receive Christ, just as every other person in history has done. Adam, Abel,
Noah, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses and every Jew and every Gentile are spiritual
seed of Abraham if they have trusted in Christ. God will grant the promises of
the Abrahamic Covenant to all who are related to Christ by faith.
Without
Christ you have no hope. With Christ, you have the promise of God that will
grant you hope for time and eternity. Believe the promises of God in Christ and
be saved, for salvation is found only in Christ.