Tuesday, May 29, 2018

FAITH RECKONED FOR RIGHTEOUSNESS

Rom. 4:20-21 ... "With respect to the promise of God, he did not waver in unbelief, but grew strong in faith, giving glory to God, and being fully assured that what He had promised, He was able also to perform."



      For many years after Christianity was launched in the world at Jerusalem in 33 A.D. it had a very strong Jewish identity. Within the church the influence of Jewish thought and customs was indeed powerful and posed no little challenge to Gentiles who came into the church without this mental and cultural baggage. One of these challenges specifically centered on the doctrine of justification. Jews thought that because they were genetically descended from Abraham justification was their birthright. Abraham was their spiritual hero, being the "father of the faithful" and having the distinction of being called "the friend of God," (Jas. 2:23). His faith was the epitome of human response to divine promise, so much so that Gen. 15:6 reports that "he believed in the Lord; and He reckoned it to him as righteousness," (quoted by Paul in v.3). Since all of Israel were genetically in Abraham, (cf. Heb. 7:9-10), when righteousness was conferred upon him in reward for his faith, it was conferred upon every unborn Jew as well. To be born, therefore, in descent from Abraham was to be justified from the day of one's birth. The Jews also thought they accumulated righteousness through the scrupulous performance of the rituals and other religious acts taught in the Mosaic Law. The Pharisees carried this doctrine to the ultimate, hedging the Law about with endless deductions from Mosaic statutes to ensure that everything would be done that could be to increase one's righteousness by participation.

      In Romans 4 Paul refutes the entire Jewish doctrine of justification. He points out that Abraham was not saved by works, but rather through his faith which prevented him from "wavering" as he considered "the promise of God." Even the works that he did, in response to God's commandments, were not the works of the Mosaic Law, for that law was still some four hundred years in the future after Abraham. In the previous chapter (vs. 28-29) Paul had argued that being a Jew genetically was unimportant. What mattered was being a Jew spiritually, an identity available to anyone through faith in Christ and obedience to His gospel.  The same logic applies to being a "child" of Abraham. There is no distinction in being lineally descended from Abraham; his righteousness is not inherited by his offspring. It is only when, like that patriarch, we put our faith in God who "raised Jesus our Lord from the dead," that our own faith is reckoned to us for righteousness, (see vs. 23-24). Although this faith involves obedience (Rom. 1:5), it is not meritorious obedience that obligates God to save.

      The lesson we must learn from this is that we cannot construct a doctrine of justification to suit ourselves. We must study the Scriptures to see what is taught there about the problem of human sin and how it may be forgiven. As our text says, what God has promised, He is also able to perform. But the crucial point is "what God has promised." It is not for me or anyone else to speak for God and demand that others accept my word about justification. God has already spoken clearly and has given us the intelligence to understand what He has said. He will be pleased if, like Abraham, we respond in simple faith to the gospel. When we have done that, just as He has promised, He will reckon our faith unto us for righteousness, and we will be justified in the Lord Jesus Christ.

Friday, May 11, 2018

THE REALITY OF SIN

Rom. 3:23 ... "All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God."



      One of the arts cultivated by people of the twentieth century is that of denial. We have become masters of the ability to deny the existence or the active influence of certain things that people in former times readily, though often painfully, confessed. Our sophistication, our pride in humanity's advances in certain areas, and our feeling that we have been liberated from old superstitions have together blinded us to realities. And when some rather persistent entities refuse to disappear through our denial, we just hide them behind a cover of redefinition. One of these entities is sin.

      Although there is abundant evidence that people have always tended to deny the existence of sin in their own lives, generally they admitted that sin itself was a reality in human life. Sermons from the pulpit were often devoted in their entirety to the subject of sin. Specific attitudes and behaviors were identified as sin. People who held those attitudes, or who practiced those behaviors, were said plainly to be sinners. There was public consciousness of sin, even among those who did not profess religion or attend church. In recent decades, however,  this awareness and understanding has changed. An attitude has been established that sin, in the traditional sense, is a bogus concept. Few are willing to admit that sin is resident in their lives. It has become publicly offensive to apply the label of "sin" to any attitude or behavior, and to call someone a "sinner" is considered a terrible insult, almost, in fact, sufficient grounds for a lawsuit. Today we hide the reality of sin behind a cover of redefinition. Instead of being a sin, the action is an "error in judgment," a "social malfunction," a "disease," an "inherited trait," a "syndrome," or any other of multiple terms current in our lexicon.

      To deny a sin is also to deny the Bible, for it explicitly declares both that sin is a reality and that it is universal in human experience. So, it is not unexpected that the Bible is another thing which a great many people have also come to deny. And to deny the Bible as truth and authority in human life is to deny God who gave us the Bible. Ultimately, therefore, to deny the reality of sin is to deny the reality of God. Through His wisdom revealed in the Bible, God has repeatedly declared that certain attitudes and behaviors in people are sin. Furthermore, He has stated that every person holds some of these attitudes and frequently engages in various of these illicit behaviors. Such is the message of Rom. 3:23, "All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God."

      It does a person no good to deny that sin exists in his life and that he is a sinner. To admit guilt of sin does not harm the psyche; much the rather, it is the first step to the salvation, reclamation, and reconstruction of a healthy soul. God has a perfect cure for sin, but He will apply it only to the person who confesses his sin and seeks that cure. We are assured in I Jno. 1:9 that "if we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." Sin is truly an insult to a person, and to be declared a sinner is disturbing. But a person insults himself far more by denying the reality of sin in his life and not seeking God's help in removing it. Sin is our greatest enemy, for its impact upon our souls is eternally destructive. The wisest thing anyone can do is to confront his sin and then appeal to God for salvation by obedience in faith to His gospel, (Rom. 1:6,16).