Faith In The Just One


Far be it from you to do such a thing, to put the righteous to death with the wicked, so that the righteous fare as the wicked! Far be that from you! Shall not the Judge of all the earth do what is just?” (Gen 18:25)

You know the context of this verse. But just in case there are people reading this who have never heard of Sodom and Gomorrah I will give it to you.

Abraham has been visited by three ‘men’ who we discover as we read are actually two angels and an theophany of Jehovah (God). God confirms His promises to Abraham during a meal prepared by Sarah. After the meal, the three ‘men’ set course for Sodom and Gomorrah. Abraham goes out with them to accompany them part of the way. On the way God then asks the question;

“Shall I hide from Abraham what I am about to do, seeing that Abraham shall surely become a great and mighty nation, and all the nations of the earth shall be blessed in him? For I have chosen him, that he may command his children and his household after him to keep the way of the LORD by doing righteousness and justice, so that the LORD may bring to Abraham what he has promised him.” Then the LORD said, “Because the outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is great and their sin is very grave, I will go down to see whether they have done altogether according to the outcry that has come to me. And if not, I will know.” (Gen 18:17-21)

God tells Abraham that He will destroy Sodom and Gomorrah. The modern evangelical would respond, “Good riddance!” But not Abraham. Abraham has a connection with Sodom. He is not enticed by their sin, in fact, he hates their sin. But he has family in Sodom. Lot is there with his family. Lot is a righteous man. Now there are many lessons we could learn from this, how we should pray for our loved ones, grieve over the plight of sinners, etc. But we won’t repreach lessons learned right now. We want to look at Abraham’s appeal to God.

Abraham is an extraordinary man. He is has been chosen by God to be the man through whom all the earth is blessed. He is the father of the Messiah. He is made into a great nation, indeed many nations. He is the father of faith.
In Genesis 18:25 (see above), we see why. Abraham knew God. He knew that God was holy and just. He knew that God would never punish the innocent, to the point that He would spare the wicked on their account. God is just.

Now we know that there are none who are innocent, there are none righteous, and that we all deserve death. So Abraham is not calling on God to ignore Lot’s sins, but rather expressing his full confidence in justification by faith. “Abraham believed God and it was counted to him as righteousness.” In the same way we must understand that Lot was counted righteous by his faith. It is upon this basis that we must understand Abraham’s appeal. Not that Lot does not deserve death, but that God had promised life for those to whom He imputes His righteousness.

So Abraham says to God, “Far be it from you to do such a thing, to put the righteous to death with the wicked, so that the righteous fare as the wicked!” It is not in God’s character to rescind His righteousness, nor is it in His character to punish anyone unjustly. This, of course, is where the cross comes in. The cross is the place where God did punish the Righteous One, but only after He had imputed our sins to Him. So God remains just at the cross, since Christ became sin for us, so that we could by made the righteousness of God in Him. This is the only way God may remain just, if He does not destroy everyone who has ever lived, since we are all sinners. Sin must be paid for, either by Christ or by us. Faith in Christ identifies us with Christ in His sufferings so that it can be said that our sin has been punished and His righteousness has been given to us.

Alrighty then! We have reached the actual post! Abraham asks an amazing question at the end of his appeal to God’s character. He asks, “Shall not the Judge of all the earth do what is just?” In effect he says, “God there is one thing that I know about You, and that is that You are just. You will never do wrong or treat anyone unfairly, but You will always do right.”

The fact is, God always does what is right. We may not understand what or why He does what He does, but we can trust in Him to be right in it. He takes a newborn child. He is right. He allows us to suffer. He is right. He allows us to fall into sin. He is right. The murderer goes free. He is right. Unimaginable crimes against humanity take place that God can stop if He wills, but He doesn’t and He is right. How do we make sense of this? If God is just and always right, then why are there so many wrongs in the world? Why do the wicked prosper? Well just looking at the story of Sodom and Gomorrah shows us that the wicked do not always prosper. They are destroyed. And even though it seems at times that the wicked fare better than the righteous in the he present, we have full confidence that there is a judgment coming. The righteous will be vindicated by life eternal and the wicked punished for eternity.

But what about the here and now? How can we deal with all of the wrongs that have taken place? How do we deal with the deaths of infants, for instance. By trusting solely in the justness of righteous, wise, and loving God. It is almost a cliche to quote this verse, but that does not make it untrue.

And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose. (Rom 8:28)

Commend your troubled thoughts to God. Rest in the truth that in right now our sufferings are working together for our betterment, and that in the end we will see that all things were molded by the hand of our loving, wise, omnipotent, and just God for our good and His glory.

Left Behind


Everybody who’s anybody is at the Together For The Gospel Conference this week. Which probably explains why I’m at home in my office writing a post about nothing since no one is reading anyway.
I had intended to go to the conference, but guess what? I didn’t. And I’m still not there. I’m not going. I wanted to, and still want to go, but remember…I’m not going.
I’ve been left behind. I haven’t bathed in a couple of days. I’m depressed, dejected, disillusioned, and a danger to myself.
If I haven’t blogged in a couple of days send someone after me.

:-(

Assurance: Where Does It Fit?

Michael Spencer had this to say about assurance in the comments thread of the last post:

It’s really hard for me to see how the Good News tells us to look to works for assurance. We do works for a number of Biblical reasons: God’s glory, others’ good, our joy, etc. But I can’t imagine a single thing I have ever done that I would point to someone else and say “Look at that and you’ll know that I am a Christian.”

I will try to respond to this statement by laying out a proper view of salvation, and then by showing where assurance fits in the whole scheme.
The Order of Salvation as I understand it, as well as most of church history, is as follows.
Election>-Gospel>-Regeneration>-Conversion>-Justification>-
Adoption>-Sanctification>-Perseverance>-Glorification.

These can be divided up into four categories,

1. Set Apart For Salvation-Election and Gospel.
2. Already Saved-Regeneration, Conversion, Justification, and Adoption.
3. Being Saved-Sanctification and Perseverance.
4. Future Salvation-Glorification.

In Election God chose those who would believe to salvation, not based on their belief or any goodness in them, but solely for His good pleasure. The Gospel is preached to them by the power of the Holy Spirit and the Holy Spirit, through the Gospel call, sets them apart for salvation.

In Regeneration the Holy Spirit wakes the dead, and imparts faith and repentance (Conversion). Upon Conversion they are declared righteous by God Himself (Justification) and as such they receive Adoption as children. All this is God’s work for and in us.

In Sanctification we become co-workers with God as He makes us more holy (like Christ), and we strive for the same holiness. Perseverance is also done in cooperation with God as we are kept by God and continue in faith and repentance.

Glorification is the goal of the ‘Order of Salvation’ in general. Glorification occurs not at death, but at the resurrection, which takes place at the return of Christ.

Having now set the context for salvation, we will turn our attention to proper definitions of Justification and Sanctification.

Justification is the act of God occurring after conversion (faith and repentance) by which God forgives us for all sin that we have committed and declares us righteous on the basis of faith in Christ.

Sanctification is an act of God and man together by which man is conformed to the image of Christ. Not only are God and the individual Christian at work in sanctification, but also the community of believers at large are working for the common sanctification of one another.
Justification and Sanctification are similar in the respect of our standing before God.

Justification says that we are righteous and Sanctification makes us what Justification says we are. But even in this similarity there is much that contrasts the two doctrines. Justification is a legal term which states that in the eyes of the court we are not just innocent, but righteous. Sanctification is a practical term that takes into account the fallenness of each and every one of us and prepares us for the day when we must appear before the Judge of all creation. But we have this confidence, that Sanctification will be completed when we receive our new bodies.

So where does Assurance fit in? Assurance is to be found in the first three aspects of salvation, but not in the fourth because no assurance is needed when the substance is realized. Assurance can be seen in the first three aspects of salvation in these various ways;

Set Apart For Salvation
Assurance must be found first of all in God’s electing work. It is God who has chosen us and determined to save us, therefore, this must come to pass. A further assurance is that we have been called out by the Holy Spirit. If the Spirit has called us through the preaching of the Word, then it must be that we have been set apart for salvation.

Already Saved
Assurance next is found in the work of God in our lives. After the Gospel Call has gone forth the Spirit, who goes forth in that gospel regenerates us. It is again a sovereign work of God that gives us assurance. We respond in faith and repentance, yet another assurance that we will finally be saved. At the moment of conversion we are declared righteous before God, meaning that we have assurance of our salvation based on Christ’s righteousness and not our own. We are also adopted, and that gives us assurance that we are sons of God and joint-heirs with Christ.

Being Saved
As we are in the process of being saved through sanctification and perseverance we have two more assurances of our future salvation.
The first is that we are being sanctified. Not that we are made instantly perfect or that we never sin, but that over the progress of our lives after regeneration we can see a trend of actions that show us that we are becoming conformed to the image of Christ. This is not for me to give someone else assurance of my salvation (although Paul sometimes used it to prove his Apostleship), but for a confirmation of the presence of the Holy Spirit in my life. Everyone who has the Holy Spirit will be conformed to the image of Christ.
A second assurance that we have as we are being saved is that we are persevering to the end. Not only did we believe the Gospel at the beginning of our salvation, but we continue to believe the Gospel. Not only did we repent of sin at the first, but we continually are repenting of sin as it reveals itself in us. We did not place all our trust in Christ only at one moment in time, but we continue to trust Him. If we are not believing and repenting right now, then we have great reason to doubt our salvation.

And by this we know that we have come to know him, if we keep his commandments. (1Jo 2:3) …but whoever keeps his word, in him truly the love of God is perfected. By this we may be sure that we are in him: whoever says he abides in him ought to walk in the same way in which he walked. (1Jo 2:5-6)
If you know that he is righteous, you may be sure that everyone who practices righteousness has been born of him. (1Jo 2:29)

No one who abides in him keeps on sinning; no one who keeps on sinning has either seen him or known him. Little children, let no one deceive you. Whoever practices righteousness is righteous, as he is righteous. (1Jo 3:6-7)
By this it is evident who are the children of God, and who are the children of the devil: whoever does not practice righteousness is not of God, nor is the one who does not love his brother. (1Jo 3:10)

We know that we have passed out of death into life, because we love the brothers. Whoever does not love abides in death. (1Jo 3:14)

Little children, let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth. By this we shall know that we are of the truth and reassure our heart before him; for whenever our heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart, and he knows everything. Beloved, if our heart does not condemn us, we have confidence before God; and whatever we ask we receive from him, because we keep his commandments and do what pleases him. And this is his commandment, that we believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and love one another, just as he has commanded us. Whoever keeps his commandments abides in him, and he in them. And by this we know that he abides in us, by the Spirit whom he has given us. (1Jo 3:18-24)

Everyone who believes that Jesus is the Christ has been born of God, and everyone who loves the Father loves whoever has been born of him. By this we know that we love the children of God, when we love God and obey his commandments. (1Jo 5:1-2)
We know that everyone who has been born of God does not keep on sinning, but he who was born of God protects him, and the evil one does not touch him. (1Jo 5:18)

A Practical Lesson In Eisegesis And Context

Well, I admit it, I made a mistake, and I’m probably making one right now by writing this.
Mistake #1. I stopped in at the BHT today and the latest post was by Michael Spencer. It went something like this.

I am conducting a test on the minds of my critics. I am confessing it right now so if it comes up later, I can honestly say I admitted it. There. I did.

Definition of salvation that appeared today on a TR blog:

It is faith alone in the gospel truth, and we need to show our faith by our works. Fruit needs to be evident in the believers life.”

If you keep repeating “Faith alone = faith + evidential works” long enough, I guess it starts to make sense. Did Bill Clinton ever say “I guess it all depends on what alone means?”

And by the way…I’m pomo.

I tried ‘googling’ the quote that he put up, but couldn’t find the source. But I think I can defend the quote very easily just by saying that Spencer’s abbreviated form of the quote: Faith alone = faith + evidential works, is not accurate. In fact, it takes the quote and turns it upside down, jumbles it up, then puts it in a blender, and finally strains all truth out of it and comes up with the equation, Faith alone = faith + evidential works, which does not exist in the original quote.

No right minded TR would disagree with the imonk that that equation is erroneous. We are not saved by faith plus works. But to say that faith in Gospel truth will not result in evidential works is also erroneous. The writer of the quote (probably the same person who wrote Hebrews) avoids both errors and says faith in the gospel truth saves, and that the faith that saves also produces evidential works. Then adds an axiom of Christianity, Fruit needs to be evident in the believers life.

Mistake #2. I put myself as a guinea pig in imonk’s experiment. I admit it. But, I just don’t see the problem with the quote. And we here at TR Doxoblogy would also like a reference to look at. Just throwing up quotes out of context is about as profitable as actually reading the BHT.

Someone Wasted A Lot Of Time On This…

…but it’s still cool.

Did you ever wonder what religion your favorite Super-hero adheres to? Yeah, me neither, but I still found out today!

Religion of Comic Book Characters (esp. Super-Heroes)

HT: Dan Phillips

Dan Phillips filters it through a Christian worldview here.

The Imputation Of Christ’s Righteousness

There is no substitutionary atonement if there is no Imputation of our sin to Christ and no imputation of Christ’s righteousness to us. Otherwise, how could he be a substitute if there is no exchange of place or position? How could it be that Christ should die for sin without actually taking sin upon himself? And how could it be that he die to make us righteous if he does not freely give us his own righteousness?

Should he die without our sins being placed upon him, he is not our substitute. Should he rise again without giving us his righteousness, he is not our substitute. But he did take our sins upon himself, and he did give us his righteousness, so he is our substitute.

For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.
(2Co 5:21)

First, “He (the Father) made Him (Christ) to be sin who knew no sin…”
The action of punishing us in the Son is made by the Father himself. Christ’s becoming sin was not just so that we could look to Him as a great moral example. He is that, but that was not his ultimate purpose. His greatest purpose in taking our sin upon Himself was so that the Father could punish him for our sin. So the Father made Christ to be sin, yet at the same time he knew no sin. What we see here is actually the Father treating the Son as though he were the embodiment of sin. Even so, he was still the spotless lamb. He was without blemish. This is an important fact. Christ remained sinless even as he became sin. Otherwise, his becoming sin would not be a taking of our sin upon himself, but actually becoming the sinner himself, and a sinful sacrifice will not do.

Second, “…so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.”
1. This is a complimentary statement to the one given before. Christ became sin, while yet sinless, so that we could become righteousness, while yet sinners. In the same way that the Father treats the Son as though he were a sinner, he treats us as though we were righteous. He can do this and remain just because he has already punished us in his Son. Our sin was placed in his account, and then, his righteousness was placed in our account. There it is. That’s the imputation of our sin to Christ and of Christ’s righteousness to us.

2. Our sin is no longer counted against us. There is no sin in our account.

“…that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation.” (2Co 5:19)

Sin is no longer counted against us, but righteousness is counted in our favor. This righteousness is Christ’s righteousness, because we have none.

as it is written: “None is righteous, no, not one;
(Rom 3:10)

Since we have no righteousness to be counted in our account, this righteousness is an alien righteousness. And this alien righteousness must have a source. The source of the righteousness that is imputed to us is Christ.

3. This righteousness is not our faith, but comes to us by faith. In other words, our faith itself is not counted as righteousness to us, but by our faith we receive Christ’s righteousness which is imputed to us by virtue of his substitutionary work. If it were merely our faith that is counted as our righteousness, then faith without the death of Christ would be enough. But faith in and of itself is valueless. When Moses says, “Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness”, he does not mean that faith all by itself without any righteous merit is pretended by God to be righteousness, but that righteousness was put into Abraham’s account because of faith in God, who is righteous and freely gives righteousness by the merits of his Son to all who will believe.

4. This righteousness is the righteousness that Christ earned as a man during his life. For the Son, being righteous from all eternity, must also live a human life of obedience in order to merit righteousness for those who believe.

Since therefore the children share in flesh and blood, he himself likewise partook of the same things, that through death he might destroy the one who has the power of death, that is, the devil, and deliver all those who through fear of death were subject to lifelong slavery. For surely it is not angels that he helps, but he helps the offspring of Abraham. Therefore he had to be made like his brothers in every respect, so that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in the service of God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people.
(Heb 2:14-17)

As created beings, God required righteous obedience form Adam and Eve. God requires righteous obedience from all of the human race. None have complied with this demand except for the man, Christ Jesus.

For every high priest chosen from among men is appointed to act on behalf of men in relation to God, to offer gifts and sacrifices for sins. He can deal gently with the ignorant and wayward, since he himself is beset with weakness. Because of this he is obligated to offer sacrifice for his own sins just as he does for those of the people…In the days of his flesh, Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears, to him who was able to save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverence. Although he was a son, he learned obedience through what he suffered. And being made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey him, being designated by God a high priest after the order of Melchizedek.
(Heb 5:1-10)

It is by virtue of this righteous obedience of Christ that fulfilling God’s demands of obedience can be said of us. His obedience is imputed to us while our disobedience is imputed to him.

For as by the one man’s disobedience the many were made sinners, so by the one man’s obedience the many will be made righteous.
(Rom 5:19)

SBC Disaster Relief First On Scene During Onset Of The Tribulation

Washington D. C.- After the man of sin (George W. Bush) was revealed earlier this week when he tried to have ‘WWW’ stamped on everyone’s heads, Southern Baptists moved into action. While people stood in line to have their heads stamped, SBC Disaster Relief volunteers gave out water, tracts, and a smile to those waiting.

“It’s a rough time. And we haven’t seen the worst of it yet. The next three years or so are going to be alright,” says an SBC Disaster Relief spokesperson. “It’s the following three years that we’re preparing for.” According to the Bible, there will be three and half years of peace before the beast shows his true colors.

A man standing in line, Tim Lahaye, said, “We’re optimistic. I voted for him both times. I would vote for him again, you know, if he weren’t already dictator of the world.”

Jack Van Impe was not available for comment.

Since I Have To…

Buggy tagged me with a meme. :-(
I wasn’t going to do it, but then a homeschool mom told me to, so I guess I have to. But before I begin, let me ask you a question. “Who needs character?”:-)

Ten Simple Pleasures

1. God.
2. My wife running her fingers through my gorgeous locks.
3. Hitting the ‘sweet spot’ on a baseball.
4. Reading.
5. Body-slamming my boys.
6. 6 P.M.
7. Sleeping through Bob Ross.
8. Dove chocolates.
9. Fried Chicken, biscuits, and gravy.
10. Killing a meme.

I tag John the Baptist, John the Apostle, John Chrysostom, John Wycliffe, John Huss, John Calvin, John Owen, John Wesley, John MacArthur, John Piper, and Asahael Nettleton.

Bunyan: Justification By An Imputed Righteousness

This is a rather lengthy excerpt from John Bunyan’s unfinished treatment of the doctrine of Justification, titled Justification By an Imputed Righteousness. To read the entire treatise, click here.

That which I call, and that rightly, the mysterious act of our redemption, is Christ’s sufferings as a common,4 though a particular person and as a sinner, though always completely righteous. That he suffered as a common person is true. By common, I mean a public person, or one that presents the body of mankind in himself. This a multitude of scriptures bear witness to, especially that fifth chapter to the Romans, where, by the apostle, he is set before us as the head of all the elect, even as Adam was once head of all the world. Thus he lived, and thus he died; and this was a mysterious act. And that he should die as a sinner, when yet himself did ‘no sin,’ nor had any ‘guile found in his mouth,’ made this act more mysterious (1 Pet 1:19, 2:22, 3:18). That he died as a sinner is plain- ‘He hath made him to be sin. And the Lord laid upon him the iniquity of us all’ (Isa 53). That, then, as to his own person he was completely sinless is also as truly manifest, and that by a multitude of scriptures. Now, I say, that Christ Jesus should be thus considered, and thus die, was the great mystery of God. Hence Paul tells us, that when he preached ‘Christ crucified,’ he preached not only the ‘wisdom of God,’ but the ‘wisdom of God in a mystery,’ even his ‘hidden wisdom,’ for, indeed, this wisdom is hidden, and kept close from the ‘fowls of the air’ (1 Cor 1:24, 2:7,8; Job 28:20,21).

It is also so mysterious, that it goes beyond the reach of all men, except those to whom an understanding is given of God to apprehend it (1 John 5:20). That one particular man should represent all the elect in himself, and that the most righteous should die as a sinner, yea, as a sinner by the hand of a just and holy God, is a mystery of the greatest depth!

Second. And now I come to show you how the elect are concerned therein; that is, in this mysterious act of this most blessed One; and this will make this act yet more mysterious to you.

Now, then, we will speak of this first, as to how Christ prepared himself thus mysteriously to act. He took hold of our nature. I say, he took hold of us, by taking upon him flesh and blood. The Son of God, therefore, took not upon him a particular person, though he took to him a human body and soul; but that which he took was, as I may call it, a lump of the common nature of man; and by that, hold of the whole elect seed of Abraham; ‘For verily he took not on him the nature of angels, but he took on him the seed of Abraham’ (Heb 2:16) Hence he, in a mystery, became us, and was counted as all the men that were or should be saved. And this is the reason why we are said to do, when only Jesus Christ did do. As for instance-

1. When Jesus Christ fulfilled the righteousness of the law, it is said it was fulfilled in us, because indeed fulfilled in our nature: ‘For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, 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,’ &c. (Rom 8:3,4). But because none should appropriate this unto themselves that have not had passed upon them a work of conversion, therefore he adds, ‘Who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit’ (v. 4). For there being a union between head and members, though things may be done by the head, and that for the members, the things are counted to the members, as if not done only by the head. ‘The righteousness of the law is fulfilled in us’; and that truly, because fulfilled in that common
nature which the Son of God took of the Virgin. Wherefore, in this sense we are said to do what only was done by him; even as the client doth by his lawyer, when his lawyer personates him; the client is said to do, when it is the lawyer only that does; and to overcome by doing, when it is the lawyer that overcomes; the reason is, because the lawyer does in the client’s name. How much more then may it be said we do, when only Christ does; since he does what he does, not in our name only, but in our nature too; ‘for the law of the spirit of life in Christ.’ not in me, ‘hath made me free from the law of sin and death’ (Rom 8:2); he doing in his common flesh what could not be done in my particular person, that so I might have the righteousness of the law fulfilled in me, [that is, in] my flesh assumed by Christ; though impossible to be done [by me], because of the weakness of my person. The reason of all this is, because we are said to be in him in his doing, in him by our flesh, and also by the election of God. So, then, as all men sinned when Adam fell, so all the elect did righteousness when Christ wrought and fulfilled the law; ‘for as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive’ (1 Cor 15:22).

2. As we are said to do by Christ, so we are said to suffer by him, to suffer with him. ‘I am crucified with Christ,’ said Paul. And again, ‘Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind; for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin’ (1 Peter 4:1). Mark how the apostle seems to change the person. First he says, it is Christ that suffered; and that is true; but then he insinuates that it is us that suffered, for the exhortation is to believers, to ‘walk in newness of life’ (Rom 6:4). And the argument is, because they have suffered in the flesh, ‘For he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin; that he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God’ (1 Peter 4:1,2). We then suffered, when Christ suffered; we then suffered in his flesh, and also our ‘old man was crucified with him’ (Rom 6:6); that is, in his crucifixion; for when he hanged on the cross, all the elect hanged there in their common flesh which he assumed, and because he suffered there as a public man.

3. As we are said to suffer with him, so we are said to die, to be dead with him; with him, that is, by the dying of his body. ‘Now, if we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with him’ (Rom 6:8). Wherefore he saith in other places, ‘Brethren, ye are become dead to the law by the body of Christ’; for indeed we died then to it by him. To the law-that is, the law now has nothing to do with us; for that it has already executed its curse to the full upon us by its slaying of the body of Christ; for the body of Christ was our flesh: upon it also was laid our sin. The law, too, spent that curse that was due to us upon him, when it condemned, killed, and cast him into the grave. Wherefore, it having thus spent its whole curse upon him as standing in our stead, we are exempted from its curse for ever; we are become dead to it by that body (Rom 7:4). It has done with us as to justifying righteousness. Nor need we fear its damning threats any more; for by the death of this body we are freed from it, and are for ever now coupled to a living Christ.

4. As we are said thus to be dead, so we are said also to rise again by him-’Thy dead men,’ saith he to the Father, ‘shall live, together with my dead body shall they arise’ (Isa 26:19).5 And again, ‘After two days he will revive us; in the third day – we shall live in his sight’ (Hosea 6:2). Both these scriptures speak of the resurrection of Christ, of the resurrection of his body on the third day; but behold, as we were said before to suffer and be dead with him, so now we are said also to rise and live in God’s sight by the resurrection of his body. For, as was said, the flesh was ours; he took part of our flesh when he came into the world; and in it he suffered, died, and rose again (Heb 2:14). We also were therefore counted by God, in that God-man, when he did this; yea, he suffered, died, and rose as a common head.6 Hence also the New Testament is full of this, saying, ‘If ye be dead with Christ’ (Col 2:20). ‘If ye be risen with Christ’ (3:1). And again, ‘He hath quickened us together with him’ (2:13). ‘We are quickened together with him.’ ‘Quickened,’ and ‘quickened together with him.’ The apostle hath words that cannot easily be shifted or evaded. Christ then was quickened when he was raised from the dead. Nor is it proper to say that he was ever quickened either before or since. This text also concludes that we-to wit, the whole body of God’s elect, were also quickened then, and made to live with him together. True, we also are quickened personally by grace the day in the which we are born unto God by the gospel; yet afore that, we are quickened in our Head; quickened when he was raised from the dead, quickened together with him.

5. Nor are we thus considered-to wit, as dying and rising, and so left; but the apostle pursues his argument, and tells us that we also reap by him, as being considered in him, the benefit which Christ received, both in order to his resurrection, and the blessed effect thereof.
(1.) We received, by our thus being counted in him, that benefit which did precede his rising from the dead; and what was that but the forgiveness of sins? For this stands clear to reason, that if Christ had our sins charged upon him at his death, he then must be discharged of them in order to his resurrection. Now, though it is not proper to say they were forgiven to him, because they were purged from him by merit; yet they may be said to be forgiven us, because we receive this benefit by grace. And this, I say, was done precedent to his resurrection from the dead. ‘He hath quickened us together with him, HAVING forgiven us all trespasses.’ He could not be ‘quickened’ till we were ‘discharged’; because it was not for himself, but for us, that he died. Hence we are said to be at that time, as to our own personal estate, dead in our sins, even when we are ‘quickened together with him’ (Col 2:13). Therefore both the ‘quickening’ and ‘forgiveness’ too, so far as we are in this text concerned, is to him, as we are considered in him, or to him, with respect to us. ‘Having forgiven you ALL trespasses.’ For necessity so required; because else how was it possible that the pains of death should be loosed in order to his rising, so long as one sin stood still charged to him, as that for the commission of which God had not received a plenary satisfaction? As therefore we suffered, died, and rose again by him, so, in order to his so rising, he, as presenting of us in his person and suffering, received for us remission of all our trespasses. A full discharge therefore was, in and by Christ, received of God of all our sins afore he rose from the dead, as his resurrection truly declared; for he ‘was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification’ (Rom 4:25). This therefore is one of the privileges we receive by the rising again of our Lord, for that we were in his flesh considered, yea, and in his death and suffering too.
(2.) By this means also we have now escaped death. ‘Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him. For in that he died, he died unto,’ or for, ‘sin once; but in that he liveth, he liveth unto God’ (Rom 6:9,10). Now in all this, considering what has been said before, we that are of the elect are privileged, for that we also are raised up by the rising of the body of Christ from the dead. And thus the apostle bids us reckon: ‘Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ’ (Rom 6:11). Hence Christ says, ‘I am the resurrection and the life,’ for that all his are safe in him, suffering, dying, and rising. He is the life, ‘our life’; yea, so our life, that by him the elect do live before God, even then when as to themselves they yet are dead in their sins. Wherefore, hence it is that in time they partake of quickening grace from this their Head, to the making of them also live by faith, in order to their living hereafter with him in glory; for if Christ lives, they cannot die that were sharers with him in his resurrection.7 Hence they are said to ‘live,’ being ‘quickened together with him.’ Also, as sure as at his resurrection they lived by him, so sure at his coming shall they be gathered to him; nay, from that day to this, all that, as aforesaid, were in him at his death and resurrection, are already, in the ‘dispensation of the fulness of times,’ daily ‘gathering to him.’ For this he hath purposed, wherefore none can disannul it -’In the dispensation of the fulness of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are in earth; even in him’ (Eph 1:10).
(3.) To secure this the more to our faith that believe, as we are said to be ‘raised up together’ with him, so we are said to be ‘made to sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus’ (Eph 2:6). We died by him, we rose by him, and are together, even all the elect, set down ‘together’
in ‘heavenly places in Christ Jesus’; for still, even now he is on the right hand of God, he is to be considered as our public man, our Head, and so one in whom is concluded all the elect of God. We then are by him already in heaven; in heaven, I say, by him; yea, set down there in our places of glory by him. Hence the apostle, speaking of us again, saith, That as we are predestinate, we are called, justified, and glorified; called, justified, glorified; all is done, already done, as thus considered in Christ (Rom 8:30). For that in his public work there is nothing yet to do as to this. Is not HE called? Is not HE justified? Is not HE glorified? And are we not in him, in him, even as so considered? Nor doth this doctrine hinder or forestal the doctrine of regeneration or conversion; nay, it lays a foundation for it; for by this doctrine we gather assurance that Christ will have his own; for if already they live in their head, what is that but a pledge that they shall live in their persons with him? and, consequently, that to that end they shall, in the times allotted for that end, be called to a state of faith, which God has ordained shall precede and go before their personal enjoyment of glory. Nor doth this hinder their partaking of the symbol of regeneration,8 and of their other privileges to which they are called in the day of grace; yea, it lays a foundation for all these things; for if I am dead with Christ, let me be like one dead with him, even to all things to which Christ died when he hanged on the tree; and then he died to sin, to the law, and to the rudiments of this world (Rom 6:10, 7:4; Col 2:20). And if I be risen with Christ, let me live, like one born from the dead, in newness of life, and having my mind and affections on the things where Christ now sitteth on the right hand of God. And indeed he professes in vain that talketh of these things, and careth not to have them also answered in himself. This was the apostle’s way, namely, to covet to ‘know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death’ (Phil 3:10). And when we are thus, that thing is true both in him and us. Then as is the heavenly, such are they that are heavenly; for he that saith he is in him, and by being in him, a partaker of these privileges by him, ‘ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked’ (1 Cor 15:48; 1 John 2:6).

But to pass this digression, and to come to my argument, namely, that men are justified from the curse of the law, before God, while sinners in themselves; this is evident by what hath already been said; for if the justification of their persons is by, in, and through Christ; then it is not by, in, and through their own doings. Nor was Christ engaged in this work but of necessity, even because else there had not been salvation for the elect. ‘O my father,’ saith he, ‘if it be possible, let this cup pass from me’ (Matt 26:39). If what be possible? Why, that my elect may be saved, and I not spill my blood. Wherefore he saith again, Christ ought to suffer (Luke 24:26). ‘Christ must needs have suffered,’ for ‘without shedding of blood is no remission’ of sin (Acts 17:3; Heb 9:22).

4 By ‘common,’ is here meant that Christ is the federal head of all his saints; they have an equal or common right equally to participate in his merits.-Ed.

5 How full of consolation is this voice from the tomb! Lowth’s translation is very striking—’Thy dead shall live, my deceased; they SHALL arise. Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the dust; for thy dew is as the dew of the dawn! But the earth shall cast forth, as an abortion, thy deceased tyrants.’ Antichrist shall ‘cease from troubling,’ and be only seen afar off in torments.-Ed.

6 Christ (amazing love!) ‘was made a curse for us,’ and thereby redeemed us from the curse of the law. He subjected himself to the law in active as well as passive obedience, and his obedience even to death was for our justification.-Mason.

7 Those whom God justifies, he also glorifies; and because Christ lives, blessed be God! we shall live also. Nevertheless, the strongest believer has as much need to come to Christ every day for fresh strength, as if he had never believed before; and if he were to depend on his own faithfulness, and not on the faithfulness of the Son of God, he would soon desert the Lord Jesus Christ.-Mason.

8 The symbol of regeneration, or water baptism. Although the regenerate believer feels an assurance that he forms part of Christ’s mystical body, and is saved by grace, and loves God because God first loved him, this does not prevent, but approves, his following the example of his Redeemer, in a symbolical or water baptism. Thus he publicly puts on Christ; he is buried with him in baptism, and rises to newness of life. Colossians 2:12, 13.-Ed

Certainty And Assurance

Is there a difference between ‘certainty’ and ‘assurance’ as they relate to the individual’s salvation? And a related question, must salvation be empirically proven in order for it to be real? Finally, is certainty opposed to faith?
You guys talk and I’ll listen.

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