Book III Chapter 14.
14. THE BEGINNING OF JUSTIFICATION. IN WHAT SENSE PROGRESSIVE.
To illustrate what has been already said, and show what
kind of righteousness man can have during the whole course of his
life, mankind are divided into four classes.
I. First class considered, sec. 1-6.
II. Second and third classes considered together, sec.
7,8.
| III. Fourth class considered, sec. 9 to end.
|
| | |
Sections.
- Men
either idolatrous, profane, hypocritical, or regenerate.
1. Idolaters void of righteousness, full of unrighteousness, and hence in
the sight of God altogether wretched and undone.
- Still
a great difference in the characters of men. This difference manifested.
1. In the gifts of God.
2. In the distinction between honorable and base.
3. In the blessings of the present life.
- All
human virtue, how praiseworthy soever it may appear, is corrupted.
1. By impurity of heart.
2. By the absence of a proper nature.
- By
the want of Christ, without whom there is no life.
- Natural
condition of man as described by Scripture. All men dead in sins before
regeneration.
- Passages
of Scripture to this effect. Vulgar error confounding the righteousness of
works with the redemption purchased by Christ.
- The
second and third classes of men, comprehending hypocrites and Christians
in name only. Every action of theirs deserves condemnation. Passage from
Haggai. Objection. Answer.
- Other
passages. Quotations from Augustine and Gregory.
- The
fourth class, viz., the regenerate. Though guided by the Spirit,
corruption adheres to all they do, especially when brought to the bar of
God.
- One
fault sufficient to efface all former righteousness. Hence they cannot
possibly be justified by works.
- In
addition to the two former arguments, a third adduced against the
Sophists, to show that whatever be the works of the regenerate, they are
justified solely by faith and the free imputation of Christ's
righteousness.
- Sophism
of the Schoolmen in opposition to the above doctrine. Answer.
- Answer
explained. Refutation of the fiction of partial righteousness, and
compensation by works of supererogation. This fiction necessarily falls
with that of satisfaction.
- Statement
of our Savior, viz., that after we have done all, we are still
unprofitable servants.
- Objection
founded on Paul's boasting. Answer, showing the Apostle's meaning. Other
answers, stating the general doctrine out of Chrysostom. Third answer,
showing that supererogation is the merest vanity.
- Fourth
answer, showing how Scripture dissuades us from all confidence in works.
Fifth answer, showing that we have no ground of boasting.
- Sixth
answer, showing, in regard to four different classes, that works have no
part in procuring our salvation.
1. The efficient cause is the free love of the Father.
2. The material cause is Christ acquiring righteousness for us.
3. The instrumental cause is faith.
4. The final cause the display of the divine justice and praise of the
divine goodness.
- A
second objection, founded on the glorying of saints. An answer, explaining
these modes of expression. How the saints feel in regard to the certainty
of salvation. The opinion they have of their own works as in the sight of
God.
- Another
answer, viz., that the elect, by this kind of glorying, refer only to
their adoption by the Father as proved by the fruits of their calling. The
order of this glorying. Its foundation, structure, and parts.
- Conclusion.
The saints neither attribute anything to the merits of works, nor derogate
in any degree from the righteousness which they obtain in Christ.
Confirmation from a passage of Augustine, in which he gives two reasons
why no believer will presume to boast before God of his works.
- A
third objection, viz., that the good works of believers are the causes of
divine blessings. Answer. There are inferior causes, but these depend on
free justification, which is the only true cause why God blesses us. These
modes of expression designate the order of sequence rather than the cause.
(Man in his natural state dead in sins and in need of
redemption, 1-6)
1. Four classes of men with regard to justification
In farther illustration of the subject, let us consider what kind of
righteousness man can have, during the whole course of his life, and for this
purpose let us make a fourfold division. Mankind, either endued with no
knowledge of God, are sunk in idolatry; or, initiated in the sacraments, but
by the impurity of their lives denying him whom they confess with their
mouths, are Christians in name only; or they are hypocrites, who with empty
glosses hide the iniquity of the heart; or they are regenerated by the Spirit
of God, and aspire to true holiness.
In the first place, when men are judged by their natural endowments, not a
iota of good will be found from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot,
unless we are to charge Scripture with falsehood, when it describes all the
sons of Adam by such terms as these: "The heart is deceitful above all
things, and desperately wicked." "The imagination of man's heart is
evil from his youth." "The Lord knoweth the thoughts of man that
they are vanity." "They are all gone aside: they are altogether
become filthy; there is none that does good, no, not one." In short, that
they are flesh, under which name are comprehended all those works which are
enumerated by Paul; adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness
idolatry witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulation, wrath, strife, seditions,
heresies, envyings, murders, drunkenness, revellings, and all kinds of
pollution and abomination which it is possible to imagine. Such, then, is the
worth on which men are to plume themselves.
But if any among them possess an integrity of manners which presents some
semblance of sanctity among men, yet because we know that God regards not the
outward appearance, we must penetrate to the very source of action, if we
would see how far works avail for righteousness. We must, I say, look within,
and see from what affection of the heart these works proceed. This is a very
wide field of discussion, but as the matter may be explained in few words, I
will use as much brevity as I can.
2. The virtues of unbelievers are God-given
First, then, I deny not, that whatever excellent endowments appear in
unbelievers are divine gifts. Nor do I set myself so much in opposition to
common sense, as to contend that there was no difference between the justice,
moderation, and equity of Titus and Trojan, and the rage, intemperance, and
cruelty of Caligula, Nero, and Domitian; between the continence of Vespasian,
and the obscene lusts of Tiberius; and (not to dwell on single virtues and
vices) between the observance of law and justice, and the contempt of them. So
great is the difference between justice and injustice, that it may be seen
even where the former is only a lifeless image. For what order would remain in
the world if we were to confound them? Hence this distinction between
honorable and base actions God has not only engraven on the minds of each, but
also often confirms in the administration of his providence. For we see how he
visits those who cultivate virtue with many temporal blessings. Not that that
external image of virtue in the least degree merits his favor, but he is
pleased thus to show how much he delights in true righteousness, since he does
not leave even the outward semblance of it to go unrewarded. Hence it follows,
as we lately observed, that those virtues, or rather images of virtues, of
whatever kind, are divine gifts, since there is nothing in any degree
praiseworthy which proceeds not from him.
3. No true virtue without true faith
Still the observation of Augustine is true, that all who are strangers to
the true God, however excellent they may be deemed on account of their virtues
are more deserving of punishment than of reward, because, by the pollution of
their heart, they contaminate the pure gifts of God, (August. contra Julia.
Lib. 4.) For though they are instruments of God to preserve human society by
justice, continence, friendship, temperance, fortitude, and prudence, yet they
execute these good works of God in the worst manner, because they are kept
from acting ill, not by a sincere love of goodness, but merely by ambition or
self-love, or some other sinister affection. Seeing then that these actions
are polluted as in their very source, by impurity of heart, they have no
better title to be classed among virtues than vices, which impose upon us by
their affinity or resemblance to virtue. In short, when we remember that the
object at which righteousness always aims is the service of God, whatever is
of a different tendency deservedly forfeits the name. Hence, as they have no
regard to the end which the divine wisdom prescribes, although from the
performance the act seems good, yet from the perverse motive it is sin.
Augustine, therefore, concludes that all the Fabriciuses, the Scipios, and
Catos, in their illustrious deeds, sinned in this, that, wanting the light of
faith, they did not refer them to the proper end, and that, therefore, there
was no true righteousness in them, because duties are estimated not by acts
but by motives.
4. Without Christ there is no true holiness
Besides, if it is true, as John says, that there is no life without the Son
of God, (1 John 5: 12,) those who have no part in Christ, whoever they be,
whatever they do or devise, are hastening on, during their whole career, to
destruction and the judgment of eternal death. For this reason, Augustine
says, "Our religion distinguishes the righteous from the wicked, by the
law, not of works but of faith, without which works which seem good are
converted into sins," (August. ad Bonif. Lib. 3, c. 5.) He finely
expresses the same idea in another passage, when he compares the zeal of such
men to those who in a race mistake the course, (August. Praef in Ps. 31.) He
who is off the course, the more swiftly he runs is the more distant from the
goal and, therefore, the more unhappy. It is better to limp in the way than
run out of the way. Lastly, as there is no sanctification without union with
Christ, it is evident that they are bad trees which are beautiful and fair to
look upon, and may even produce fruit, sweet to the taste, but are still very
far from good. Hence we easily perceive that every thing which man thinks,
designs, and performs, before he is reconciled to God by faith, is cursed, and
not only of no avail for justification, but merits certain damnation. And why
do we talk of this as if it were doubtful, when it has already been proved by
the testimony of an apostle, that "without faith it is impossible to
please God?" (Heb. 11: 6.)
5. Righteousness before God comes not from works,
though ever so good, but from grace
But the proof will be still clearer if divine grace is set in opposition to
the natural condition of man. For Scripture everywhere proclaims that God
finds nothing in man to induce him to show kindness, but that he prevents him
by free liberality. What can a dead man do to obtain life? But when he
enlightens us with the knowledge of himself, he is said to raise us from the
dead, and make us new creatures, (John 5: 25.) On this ground we see that the
kindness of God toward us is often commended, especially by the apostle:
"God," says he, "who is rich in mercy, for his great love
wherewith he loved us, even when we were dead in sins, has quickened us
together with Christ," (Eph. 2: 4.) In another passage, when treating of
the general call of believers under the type of Abraham, he says, "God
quickeneth the dead, and calleth those things which be not as though they
were," (Rom. 4: 17.) If we are nothing, what, pray, can we do? Wherefore,
in the Book of Job the Lord sternly represses all arrogance in these words,
"Who has prevented me, that I should repay him? whatsoever is under the
whole heaven is mine," (Job 41: 11.) Paul explaining this sentence
applies it in this way, - Let us not imagine that we bring to the Lord any
thing but the mere disgrace of want and destitution, (Rom. 11: 35.)
Wherefore, in the passage above quoted, to prove that we attain to the hope
of salvation, not by works but only by grace, he affirms that "we are his
workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God has before
ordained that we should walk in them," (Eph. 2: 10;) as if he had said,
"Who of us can boast of having challenged God by his righteousness,
seeing our first power to act aright is derived from regeneration? For, as we
are formed by nature, sooner shall oil be extracted from stone than good works
from us. It is truly strange how man, convicted of such ignominy, dares still
to claim any thing as his own. Let us acknowledge, therefore, with that chosen
vessel, that God "has called us with an holy calling, not according to
our works, but according to his own purpose and grace;" and "that
the kindness and love of God our Savior toward men appeared not by works of
righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved
us;" that being justified by his grace, we might become the heirs of
everlasting life, (2 Tim. 1: 9; Tit. 3: 4, 5.) By this confession we strip man
of every particle of righteousness, until by mere mercy he is regenerated unto
the hope of eternal life, since it is not true to say we are justified by
grace, if works contribute in any degree to our justification. The apostle
undoubtedly had not forgotten himself in declaring that justification is
gratuitous, seeing he argues in another place, that if works are of any avail,
"grace is no more grace," (Rom. 11: 6.) And what else does our Lord
mean, when he declares, "I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners
to repentance?" (Matth. 9: 13.) If sinners alone are admitted, why do we
seek admission by means of fictitious righteousness?
6. Man can contribute nothing to his own righteousness
The thought is ever and anon recurring to me, that I am in danger of
insulting the mercy of God by laboring with so much anxiety to maintain it, as
if it were doubtful or obscure. Such, however, is our malignity in refusing to
concede to God what belongs to him until most strongly urged that I am obliged
to insist at greater length. But as Scripture is clear enough on this subject,
I shall contend in its words rather than my own. Isaiah, after describing the
universal destruction of the human race, finely subjoins the method of
restitution. "The Lord saw it, and it displeased him that there was no
judgment. And he saw that there was no man, and wondered that there was no
intercessor: therefore his arm brought salvation unto him; and his
righteousness, it sustained him" (Isaiah 59: 15, 16.) Where is our
righteousness, if the prophet says truly, that no man in recovering salvation
gives any assistance to the Lord? Thus another prophet, introducing the Lord
as treating concerning the reconciliation of sinners, says, "I will
betroth thee unto me for ever; yea, I will betroth thee unto me in
righteousness, and in judgment, and in loving-kindness, and in mercies."
"I will have mercy upon her that had not obtained mercy," (Hosea 2:
19, 23.) If a covenant of this kind, evidently forming our first union with
God, depends on mercy, there is no foundation left for our righteousness.
And, indeed, I would fain know, from those who pretend that man meets God
with some righteousness of works, whether they imagine there is any kind of
righteousness save that which is acceptable to Him. If it were insane to think
so, can any thing agreeable to God proceed from his enemies, whom he
abominates with all their deeds? Truth declares that we are all the avowed and
inveterate enemies of God until we are justified and admitted to his
friendship, (Rom. 5: 6; Col. 1: 21.) If justification is the beginning of
love, how can the righteousness of works precede it? Hence John, to put down
the arrogant idea, carefully reminds us that God first loved us, (1 John 4:
10.) The Lord had formerly taught the same thing by his Prophet: "I will
love them freely: for mine anger is turned away from him," (Hosea 14: 4.)
Assuredly he is not influenced by works if his love turns to us spontaneously.
But the rude and vulgar idea entertained is, that we did not merit the
interposition of Christ for our redemption, but that we are aided by our works
in obtaining possession of it. On the contrary, though we may be redeemed by
Christ, still, until we are ingrafted into union with him by the calling of
the Father, we are darkness, the heirs of death, and the enemies of God. For
Paul declares that we are not purged and washed from our impurities by the
blood of Christ until the Spirit accomplishes that cleansing in us, (1 Cor. 6:
11.) Peter, intending to say the same thing, declares that the sanctification
of the Spirit avails "unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus
Christ," (1 Pet. 1: 2.) If the sprinkling of the blood of Christ by the
Spirit gives us purification, let us not think that, previous to this
sprinkling, we are anything but sinners without Christ. Let us, therefore,
hold it as certain, that the beginning of our salvation is as it were a
resurrection from death unto life, because, when it is given us on behalf of
Christ to believe on him, (Phil. 1: 29,) then only do we begin to pass from
death unto life.
(Hypocrites and nominal Christians, under
condemnation, 7-8)
7. Righteousness is a thing of the heart!
Under this head the second and third class of men noted in the above
division is comprehended. Impurity of conscience proves that as yet neither of
these classes is regenerated by the Spirit of God. And, again, their not being
regenerated proves their want of faith. Whence it is clear that they are not
yet reconciled, not yet justified, since it is only by faith that these
blessings are obtained. What can sinners, alienated from God, produce save
that which is abominable in his sight? Such, however, is the stupid confidence
entertained by all the wicked, and especially by hypocrites, that however
conscious that their whole heart teems with impurity, they yet deem any
spurious works which they may perform as worthy of the approbation of God.
Hence the pernicious consequence, that though convicted of a wicked and
impious minds they cannot be induced to confess that they are devoid of
righteousness. Even acknowledging themselves to be unrighteous, because they
cannot deny it, they yet arrogate to themselves some degree of righteousness.
This vanity the Lord admirably refutes by the prophet: "Ask now the
priests concerning the law, saying, If one bear holy flesh in the skirt of his
garment, and with his skirt do touch bread, or pottage, or wine, or oil, or
any meat, shall it be holy? And the priests answered and said, No. Then said
Haggai, If one that is unclean by a dead body touch any of these, shall it be
unclean? And the priests answered and said, It shall be unclean. Then answered
Haggai, and said, So is this people, and so is this nation before me, saith
the Lord; and so is every work of their hands; and that which they offer there
is unclean," (Haggai 2: 11-14.) I wish these sentiments could obtain full
credit with us, and be deeply fixed on our memories. For there is no man,
however flagitous the whole tenor of his life may be, who will allow himself
to be convinced of what the Lord here so clearly declares. As soon as any
person, even the most wicked, has performed some one duty of the law, he
hesitates not to impute it to himself for righteousness; but the Lord declares
that no degree of holiness is thereby acquired, unless the heart has
previously been made pure. And not contented with this, he declares that all
the works performed by sinners are contaminated by impurity of heart. Let us
cease then to give the name of righteousness to works which the mouth of the
Lord condemns as polluted. How well is this shown by that elegant similitude?
It might be objected, that what the Lord has commanded is inviolably holy. But
he, on the contrary, replies, that it is not strange that those things which
are sanctified in the law are contaminated by the impurity of the wicked, the
unclean hand profaning that which is sacred by handling it.
8. Person and work
The same argument is admirably followed out by Isaiah: "Bring no more
vain oblations; incense is an abomination unto me; the new moons and sabbaths,
the calling of assemblies, I cannot away with; it is iniquity, even the solemn
meeting. Your new moons and your appointed feasts my foul hateth: they are a
trouble unto me; I am weary to bear them. And when ye spread forth your hands
I will hide mine eyes from you; yea, when ye make many prayers, I will not
hear: your hands are full of blood. Wash you, make you clean; put away the
evil of your doings from before mine eyes," (Isaiah 1: 13-16, compared
with ch. 58) What is meant by the Lord thus nauseating the observance of his
law? Nay, indeed, he does not repudiate any thing relating to the genuine
observance of the law, the beginning of which is as he uniformly declares the
sincere fear of his name. When this is wanting, all the services which are
offered to him are not only nugatory but vile and abominable.
Let hypocrites now go, and while keeping depravity wrapt up in their heart,
study to lay God under obligation by their works. In this way they will only
offend him more and more. "The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination
to the Lord; but the prayer of the upright is his delight," (Prov. 15: 8.
) We hold it, therefore, as indubitable, indeed it should be notorious to all
tolerably verdant with Scriptures that the most splendid works performed by
men, who are not yet truly sanctified, are so far from being righteousness in
the sight of the Lord, that he regards them as sins.
And, therefore it is taught with perfect truth, that no man procures favor
with God by means of works, but that, on the contrary, works are not pleasing
to God unless the person has previously found favor in his sight. Here we
should carefully observe the order which scripture sets before us. Moses says
that "the Lord had respect unto Abel and to his offering," (Gen. 4:
4.) Observe how he says that the Lord was propitious (had respect) to Abel,
before he had respect to his works. Wherefore, purification of heart ought to
precede, in order that the works performed by us may be graciously accepted by
God: for the saying of Jeremiah is always true, "O Lord, are not thine
eyes upon the truth?" (Jer. 5: 3.) Moreover the Holy Spirit declared by
the mouth of Peter, that it is by faith alone the heart is purified, (Acts 15:
9.) Hence it is evident, that the primary foundation is in true and living
faith.
(Those who are regenerated, justified by faith alone,
9-11)
9. Also, true believers do no good works of themselves
Let us now see what kind of righteousness belongs to those persons whom we
have placed in the fourth class. We admits that when God reconciles us to
himself by the intervention of the righteousness of Christ, and bestowing upon
us the free pardon of sins regards us as righteous, his goodness is at the
same time conjoined with mercy, so that he dwells in us by means of his Holy
Spirit, by whose agency the lusts of our flesh are every day more and more
mortified while that we ourselves are sanctified; that is consecrated to the
Lord for true purity of life, our hearts being trained to the obedience of the
law. It thus becomes our leading desire to obey his will, and in all things
advance his glory only.
Still, however while we walk in the ways of the Lord, under the guidance of
the Holy Spirit, lest we should become unduly elated, and forget ourselves, we
have still remains of imperfection which serve to keep us humble: "There
is no man that sinneth not," saith Scripture, (1 Kings 8: 46.) What
righteousness then can men obtain by their works? First, I say, that the best
thing which can be produced by them is always tainted and corrupted by the
impurity of the flesh, and has, as it were, some mixture of dross in it. Let
the holy servant of God, I say, select from the whole course of his life the
action which he deems most excellent, and let him ponder it in all its parts;
he will doubtless find in it something that savors of the rottenness of the
flesh, since our alacrity in well-doing is never what it ought to be, but our
course is always retarded by much weakness. Although we see theft the stains
by which the works of the righteous are blemished, are by no means unapparent,
still, granting that they are the minutest possible, will they give no offense
to the eye of God, before which even the stars are not clean? We thus see,
that even saints cannot perform one work which, if judged on its own merits,
is not deserving of condemnation.
10. He who thinks he has his own righteousness
misunderstands the severity of the law
Even were it possible for us to perform works absolutely pure, yet one sin
is sufficient to efface and extinguish all remembrance of former
righteousness, as the prophet says, (Ezek. 18: 24.) With this James agrees,
"Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, is
guilty of all," (James 2: 10.) And since this mortal life is never
entirely free from the taint of sin, whatever righteousness we could acquire
would ever and anon be corrupted, overwhelmed, and destroyed, by subsequent
sins, so that it could not stand the scrutiny of God, or be imputed to us for
righteousness.
In short, whenever we treat of the righteousness of works, we must look not
to the legal work but to the command. Therefore, when righteousness is sought
by the Law, it is in vain to produce one or two single works; we must show an
uninterrupted obedience. God does not (as many foolishly imagine) impute that
forgiveness of sins once for all, as righteousness; so that having obtained
the pardon of our past life we may afterwards seek righteousness in the Law.
This were only to mock and delude us by the entertainment of false hopes. For
since perfection is altogether unattainable by us, so long as we are clothed
with flesh, and the Law denounces death and judgment against all who have not
yielded a perfect righteousness, there will always be ground to accuse and
convict us unless the mercy of God interpose, and ever and anon absolve us by
the constant remission of sins. Wherefore the statement which we set out is
always true, If we are estimated by our own worthiness, in every thing that we
think or devise, with all our studies and endeavors we deserve death and
destruction.
11. Believers' righteousness is always faith
righteousness
We must strongly insist on these two things: That no believer ever
performed one work which, if tested by the strict judgment of God, could
escape condemnation; and, moreover, that were this granted to be possible,
(though it is not,) yet the act being vitiated and polluted by the sins of
which it is certain that the author of it is guilty, it is deprived of its
merit.
This is the cardinal point of the present discussion. There is no
controversy between us and the sounder Schoolmen as to the beginning of
justification. They admit that the sinner, freely delivered from condemnation,
obtains justification, and that by forgiveness of sins; but under the term
justification they comprehend the renovation by which the Spirit forms us anew
to the obedience of the Law; and in describing the righteousness of the
regenerate man, maintain that being once reconciled to God by means of Christ,
he is afterwards deemed righteous by his good works, and is accepted in
consideration of them. The Lord, on the contrary, declares, that he imputed
Abraham's faith for righteousness, (Rom. 4: 3,) not at the time when he was
still a worshipper of idols, but after he had been many years distinguished
for holiness. Abraham had long served God with a pure heart, and performed
that obedience of the Law which a mortal man is able to perform: yet his
righteousness still consisted in faith. Hence we infer, according to the
reasoning of Paul, that it was not of works. In like manners when the prophet
says, "The just shall live by his faith," (Hab. 2: 4,) he is not
speaking of the wicked and profane, whom the Lord justifies by converting them
to the faith: his discourse is directed to believers, and life is promised to
them by faith. Paul also removes every doubt, when in confirmation of this
sentiment he quotes the words of David, "Blessed is he whose
transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered," (Ps. 32: 1.) It is
certain that David is not speaking of the ungodly but of believers such as he
himself was, because he was giving utterance to the feelings of his own mind.
Therefore we must have this blessedness not once only, but must hold it fast
during our whole lives. Moreover, the message of free reconciliation with God
is not promulgated for one or two days, but is declared to be perpetual in the
Church, (2 Cor. 5: 18, 19.) Hence believers have not even to the end of life
any other righteousness than that which is there described. Christ ever
remains a Mediator to reconcile the Father to us, and there is a perpetual
efficacy in his death, viz., ablution, satisfaction, expiation; in short,
perfect obedience, by which all our iniquities are covered. In the Epistle to
the Ephesians, Paul says not that the beginning of salvation is of grace, but
"by grace are ye saved," "not of works, lest any man should
boast," (Eph. 2: 8, 9.)
(Scholastic objections to justification by faith,
and doctrine of the supererogatory merits of the saints examined and refuted,
12-21)
12. Evasions of opponents
The subterfuges by which the Schoolmen here endeavor to escape will not
disentangle them. They say that good works are not of such intrinsic worth as
to be sufficient to procure justification, but it is owing to accepting grace
that they have this effect. Then because they are forced to confess that here
the righteousness of works is always imperfect, they grant that so long as we
are in this life we stand in need of the forgiveness of sin in order to supply
the deficiency of works, but that the faults which are committed are
compensated by works of supererogation.
I answer, that the grace which they call "accepting", is nothing
else than the free goodness with which the Father embraces us in Christ when
he clothes us with the innocence of Christ, and accepts it as ours, so that in
consideration of it he regards us as holy, pure, and innocent. For the
righteousness of Christ (as it alone is perfect, so it alone can stand the
scrutiny of God) must be sisted for us, and as a surety represent us
judicially. Provided with this righteousness, we constantly obtain the
remission of sins through faith. Our imperfection and impurity, covered with
this purity, are not imputed but are as it were buried, so as not to come
under judgment until the hour arrive when the old man being destroyed, and
plainly extinguished in us, the divine goodness shall receive us into beatific
peace with the new Adam, there to await the day of the Lord, on which, being
clothed with incorruptible bodies, we shall be translated to the glory of the
heavenly kingdom.
13. One who speaks of "supererogatory"
works misunderstands the sharpness of God's demand and the gravity of sin
If these things are so, it is certain that our works cannot in themselves
make us agreeable and acceptable to God, and even cannot please God, except in
so far as being covered with the righteousness of Christ we thereby please him
and obtain forgiveness of sins. God has not promised life as the reward of
certain works, but only declares, "which if a man do, he shall live in
them," (Lev. 18: 5,) denouncing the well-known curse against all who do
not continue in all things that are written in the book of the Law to do them.
In this way is completely refuted the fiction of a partial righteousness, the
only righteousness acknowledged in heaven being the perfect observance of the
Law.
There is nothing more solid in their dogma of compensation by means of
works of supererogation. For must they not always return to the proposition
which has already been disproved, viz., that he who observes the Law in part
is so far justified by works? This, which no man of sound judgment will
concede to them, they are not ashamed to take for granted. The Lord having so
often declared that he recognizes no justification by works unless they be
works by which the Law is perfectly fulfilled, - how perverse is it, while we
are devoid of such works, to endeavor to secure some ground of glorying to
ourselves; that is not to yield it entirely to God, by boasting of some kind
of fragments of works, and trying to supply the deficiency by other
satisfactions?
Satisfactions have already been so completely disposed of, that we ought
never again even to dream of them. Here all I say is, that those who thus
trifle with sin do not at all consider how execrable it is in the sight of
God; if they did, they would assuredly understand, that all the righteousness
of men collected into one heap would be inadequate to compensate for a single
sin. For we see that by one sin man was so cast off and forsaken by God, that
he at the same time lost all power of recovering salvation. He was, therefore,
deprived of the power of giving satisfaction. Those who flatter themselves
with this idea will never satisfy God, who cannot possibly accept or be
pleased with anything that proceeds from his enemies. But all to whom he
imputes sin are enemies, and, therefore, our sins must be covered and forgiven
before the Lord has respect to any of our works. From this it follows, that
the forgiveness of sins is gratuitous, and this forgiveness is wickedly
insulted by those who introduce the idea of satisfaction. Let us, therefore,
after the example of the Apostle, "forgetting those things which are
behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before,"
"press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Jesus
Christ," (Philip. 3:13,14.)
14. Even the perfect fulfillment of our
obligation would bring us no glory; but this also is not at all possible!
How can boasting in works of supererogation agree with the command given to
us: "When ye shall have done all those things which are commanded you,
say, We are unprofitable servants: we have done that which was our duty to
do?" (Luke 17: 10.) To say or speak in the presence of God is not to
feign or lie, but to declare what we hold as certain. Our Lord, therefore,
enjoins us sincerely to feel and consider with ourselves that we do not
perform gratuitous duties, but pay him service which is due. And truly. For
the obligations of service under which we lie are so numerous that we cannot
discharge them though all our thoughts and members were devoted to the
observance of the Law; and, therefore, when he says "When ye shall have
done all those things which are commanded you," it is just as if he had
said that all the righteousness of men would not amount to one of these
things. Seeing, then, that every one is very far distant from that goal, how
can we presume to boast of having accumulated more than is due?
It cannot be objected that a person, though failing in some measure in what
is necessary, may yet in intention go beyond what is necessary. For it must
ever be held that in whatever pertains to the worship of God, or to charity,
nothing can ever be thought of that is not comprehended under the Law. But if
it is part of the Law, let us not boast of voluntary liberality in matters of
necessary obligation.
15. God is entitled to all that we are and have;
hence there can be no supererogatory works
On this subject, they ceaselessly allege the boast of Paul, that among the
Corinthians he spontaneously renounced a right which, if he had otherwise
chosen, he might have exercised, (1 Cor. 9: 15;) thus not only paying what he
owed them in duty, but gratuitously bestowing upon them more than duty
required. They ought to have attended to the reason there expressed, that his
object was to avoid giving offense to the weak. For wicked and deceitful
workmen employed this pretence of kindness that they might procure favor to
their pernicious dogmas, and excite hatred against the Gospel, so that it was
necessary for Paul either to peril the doctrine of Christ, or to thwart their
schemes. Now, if it is a matter of indifference to a Christian man whether or
not he cause a scandal when it is in his power to avoid it, then I admit that
the Apostle performed a work of supererogation to his Master; but if the thing
which he did was justly required in a prudent minister of the Gospel, then I
say he did what he was bound to do. In short, even when no such reason
appears, yet the saying of Chrysostom is always true, that everything which we
have is held on the same condition as the private property of slaves; it is
always due to our Master. Christ does not disguise this in the parable, for he
asks in regard to the master who, on return from his labour, requires his
servant to gird himself and serve him, "Does he thank that servant
because he did the things that were commanded him? I trow not," (Luke 17:
9.) But possibly the servant was more industrious than the master would have
ventured to exact. Be it so: still he did nothing to which his condition as a
servant did not bind him, because his utmost ability is his master's.
I say nothing as to the kind of supererogations on which these men would
plume themselves before God. They are frivolities which he never commanded,
which he approves not, and will not accept when they come to give in their
account. The only sense in which we admit works of supererogation is that
expressed by the prophet, when he says, "Who has required this at your
hand?" (Isaiah 1: 12.) But let them remember what is elsewhere said of
them: "Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread? and your
labour for that which satisfieth not?" (Isaiah 55: 2.) It is, indeed, an
easy matter for these indolent Rabbis to carry on such discussions sitting in
their soft chairs under the shade, but when the Supreme Judge shall sit on his
tribunal, all these blustering dogmas will behave to disappear. This, this I
say, was the true question: not what we can fable and talk in schools and
corners, but what ground of defense we can produce at his judgment-seat.
16. No trust in works and no glory in works!
In this matter the minds of men must be specially guarded against two
pestiferous dogmas, viz., against putting any confidence in the righteousness
of works, or ascribing any glory to them.
From all such confidence the Scriptures uniformly dissuade us when they
declare that our righteousness is offensive in the sight of God unless it
derives a sweet odour from the purity of Christ: that it can have no other
effect than to excite the divine vengeance unless sustained by his indulgent
mercy. Accordingly, the only thing they leave to us is to deprecate our Judge
with that confession of David: "Enter not into judgment with thy servant:
for in thy sight shall no living be justified," (Psalm 143: 2.) And when
Job says, "If I be wicked, woe unto me: and if I be righteous, yet will I
not lift up my head," (Job 10: 15.) Although he refers to that spotless
righteousness of God, before which even angels are not clean, he however
shows, that when brought to the bar of Gods all that mortals can do is to
stand dumb. He does not merely mean that he chooses rather to give way
spontaneously than to risk a contest with the divine severity, but that he was
not conscious of possessing any righteousness that would not fall the very
first moment it was brought into the presence of God.
Confidence being banished, all glorying must necessarily cease. For who can
attribute any merit of righteousness to works, which instead of giving
confidence, only make us tremble in the presence of God? We must, therefore,
come to what Isaiah invites us: "In the Lord shall all the seed of Israel
be justified, and shall glory," (Isaiah 45: 25;) for it is most true, as
he elsewhere says, that we are "the planting of the Lord, that he might
be glorified," (Isaiah 61: 3.) Our soul, therefore, will not be duly
purified until it ceases to have any confidence, or feel any exultation in
works. Foolish men are puffed up to this false and lying confidence by the
erroneous idea that the cause of their salvation is in works.
17. In no respect can works serve as the cause
of our holiness
But if we attend to the four kinds of causes which philosophers bring under
our view in regard to effects, we shall find that not one of them is
applicable to works as a cause of salvation. The efficient cause of our
eternal salvation the Scripture uniformly proclaims to be the mercy and free
love of the heavenly Father towards us; the material cause to be Christ, with
the obedience by which he purchased righteousness for us; and what can the
formal or instrumental cause be but faith? John includes the three in one
sentence when he says, "God so loved the world, that he gave his only
begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have
everlasting life," (John 3: 16.) The Apostle, moreover, declares that the
final cause is the demonstration of the divine righteousness and the praise of
his goodness. There also he distinctly mentions the other three causes; for he
thus speaks to the Romans: "All have sinned, and come short of the glory
of God, being justified freely by his grace," (Rom. 3: 23, 24.) You have
here the head and primary source - God has embraced us with free mercy. The
next words are, "through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus;"
this is as it were the material cause by which righteousness is procured for
us. "Whom God has set forth to be a propitiation through faith."
Faith is thus the instrumental cause by which righteousness is applied to us.
He lastly subjoins the final cause when he says, "To declare at this time
his righteousness; that he might be just, and the justifier of him that
believeth in Jesus." And to show by the way that this righteousness
consists in reconciliation, he says that Christ was "set forth to be a
propitiation." Thus also, in the Epistle to the Ephesians, he tells us
that we are received into the favor of God by mere mercy; that this is done by
the intervention of Christ; that it is apprehended by faith; the end of all
being that the glory of the divine goodness may be fully displayed. When we
see that all the parts of our salvation thus exist without us, what ground can
we have for glorying or confiding in our works? Neither as to the efficient
nor the final cause can the most sworn enemies of divine grace raise any
controversy with us unless they would abjure the whole of Scripture. In regard
to the material or formal cause they make a gloss, as if they held that our
works divide the merit with faith and the righteousness of Christ. But here
also Scripture reclaims, simply affirming that Christ is both righteousness
and life, and that the blessing of justification is possessed by faith alone.
18. The sight of good works, however, can
strengthen faith
When the saints repeatedly confirm and console themselves with the
remembrance of their innocence and integrity, and sometimes even abstain not
from proclaiming them, it is done in two ways: either because by comparing
their good cause with the bad cause of the ungodly, they thence feel secure of
victory, not so much from commendation of their own righteousness, as from the
just and merited condemnation of their adversaries; or because, reviewing
themselves before God, even without any comparison with others the purity of
their conscience gives them some comfort and security.
The former reason will afterwards be considered, (chap. 17, sec. 14, and
chap. 20, sec. 10;) let us now briefly show, in regard to the latter, how it
accords with what we have above said, that we can have no confidence in works
before the bar of God, that we cannot glory in any opinion of their worth. The
accordance lies here, that when the point considered is the constitution and
foundation of salvation, believers, without paying any respect to works,
direct their eyes to the goodness of God alone. Nor do they turn to it only in
the first instance, as to the commencement of blessedness, but rest in it as
the completion. Conscience being thus founded, built up, and established is
farther established by the consideration of works, inasmuch as they are proofs
of God dwelling and reigning in us. Since, then, this confidence in works has
no place unless you have previously fixed your whole confidence on the mercy
of God, it should not seem contrary to that on which it depends. Wherefore,
when we exclude confidence in works, we merely mean, that the Christian mind
must not turn back to the merit of works as an aid to salvation, but must
dwell entirely on the free promise of justification. But we forbid no believer
to confirm and support this faith by the signs of the divine favor towards
him. For if when we call to mind the gifts which God has bestowed upon us,
they are like rays of the divine countenance, by which we are enabled to
behold the highest light of his goodness; much more is this the case with the
gift of good works, which shows that we have received the Spirit of adoption
(Rom. 8:15).
19. Works as fruits of the call
When believers therefore feel their faith strengthened by a consciousness
of integrity, and entertain sentiments of exultation, it is just because the
fruits of their calling convince them that the Lord has admitted them to a
place among his children. Accordingly, when Solomon says, "In the fear of
the Lord is strong confidence," (Prov. 14: 26,) and when the saints
sometimes beseech the Lord to hear them, because they walked before his face
in simplicity and integrity, (Gen. 24: 10; 2 Kings 20: 3,) these expressions
apply not to laying the foundation of a firm conscience, but are of force only
when taken a posteriori. For there is no where such a fear of God as can give
full security, and the saints are always conscious that any integrity which
they may possess is mingled with many remains of the flesh. But as the fruits
of regeneration furnish them with a proof of the Holy Spirit dwelling in them,
experiencing God to be a Father in a matter of so much moment, they are
strengthened in no slight degree to wait for his assistance in all their
necessities. Even this they could not do, had they not previously perceived
that the goodness of God is sealed to them by nothing but the certainty of the
promise. Should they begin to estimate it by their good works, nothing will be
weaker or more uncertain; works, when estimated by themselves, no less proving
the divine displeasure by their imperfection, than his good-will by their
incipient purity.
In short, while proclaiming the mercies of the Lord, they never lose sight
of his free favor, with all its "breadth and length, and depth and
height," testified by Paul, (Eph. 3: 18;) as if he had said,
Whithersoever the believer turns, however loftily he climbs, however far and
wide his thoughts extend, he must not go farther than the love of Christ, but
must be wholly occupied in meditating upon it, as including in itself all
dimensions. Accordingly, he declares that it "passeth knowledge,"
that "to know the love of Christ" is to "be filled with all the
fulness of God," (Eph. 3: 19.) In another passage, where he glories that
believers are victorious in every contest, he adds the reason, "through
him that loved us," (Rom. 8: 37.)
20. Works are God's gift and cannot become the
foundation of self-confidence for believers
We now see that believers have no such confidence in works as to attribute
any merit to them, (since they regard them only as divine gifts, in which they
recognize his goodness, and signs of calling, in which they discern their
election;) nor such confidence as to derogate in any respect from the free
righteousness of Christ; since on this it depends, and without this cannot
subsist. The same thing is briefly but elegantly expressed by Augustine when
he says, "I do not say to the Lord, Despise not the works of my hands; I
have sought the Lord with my hands, and have not been deceived. But I commend
not the works of my hands, for I fear that when thou examinest them thou wilt
find more faults than merits. This only I say, this asks this desire, Despise
not the works of thy hands. See in me thy work, not mine. If thou sees mine,
thou condemnest; if thou sees thine own, thou crownest. Whatever good works I
have are of thee," (August. in Ps. 137.) He gives two reasons for not
venturing to boast of his works before God: first, that if he has any good
works, he does not see in them any thing of his own; and, secondly, that these
works are overwhelmed by a multitude of sins. Whence it is, that the
conscience derives from them more fear and alarm than security. Therefore, the
only way in which he desires God to look at any work which he may have done
aright is, that he may therein see the grace of his calling, and perfect the
work which he has begun.
21. Sense in which good works are sometimes
spoken of as a reason for divine benefits
Moreover, when Scripture intimates that the good works of believers are
causes why the Lord does them good, we must still understand the meaning so as
to hold unshaken what has previously been said, viz., that the efficient cause
of our salvation is placed in the love of God the Father; the material cause
in the obedience of the Son; the instrumental cause in the illumination of the
Spirit, that is, in faith; and the final cause in the praise of the divine
goodness. In this, however, there is nothing to prevent the Lord from
embracing works as inferior causes. But how so? In this way: Those whom in
mercy he has destined for the inheritance of eternal life, he, in his ordinary
administration, introduces to the possession of it by means of good works.
What precedes in the order of administration is called the cause of what
follows. For this reason, he sometimes makes eternal life a consequent of
works; not because it is to be ascribed to them, but because those whom he has
elected he justifies, that he may at length glorify, (Rom. 8: 30;) he makes
the prior grace to be a kind of cause, because it is a kind of step to that
which follows. But whenever the true cause is to be assigned, he enjoins us
not to take refuge in works, but to keep our thoughts entirely fixed on the
mercy of God; "The wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal
life," (Rom. 6: 23.) Why, as he contrasts life with death, does he not
also contrast righteousness with sin? Why, when setting down sin as the cause
of death, does he not also set down righteousness as the cause of life? The
antithesis which would otherwise be complete is somewhat marred by this
variation; but the Apostle employed the comparison to express the fact, that
death is due to the deserts of men, but that life was treasured up solely in
the mercy of God.
In short, by these expressions, the order rather than the cause is noted.
The Lord adding grace to grace, takes occasion from a former to add a
subsequent, so that he may omit no means of enriching his servants. Still, in
following out his liberality, he would have us always look to free election as
its source and beginning. For although he loves the gifts which he daily
bestows upon us, inasmuch as they proceed from that fountain, still our duty
is to hold fast by that gratuitous acceptance, which alone can support our
souls; and so to connect the gifts of the Spirit, which he afterwards bestows,
with their primary cause, as in no degree to detract from it.