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TRANSCRIPT
By Pr. Larry Kirkpatrick. Price Seventh-day Adventist Church. 22 April 2000
Organized by, Ally Mluge Jr
Introduction
Scripture Reading: Galatians 1:6-7
I marvel that ye are so soon removed from Him that called you into the grace of Christ into
another Gospel: which is not another; but there be some that trouble you, and would pervert the
gospel of Christ.
This morning, as we begin our talk about grace, we must purposefully make one fact in the
background visible, so as to approach our main subject with the proper care. The fact is
this: Satan can only win the great controversy by getting us to bite down onto the hook of a false
version of grace. Was that clear? If we are going to talk about grace, we are going to attract his
undivided attention, and that's why God needs your undivided attention. If Satan can spin God's
message of grace between the time that it leaves the pages of the Bible and gets into your heart
and mind, then he can plant his flag right there on the mountaintop of your soul.
Surely the devil isn't interested in grace." Oh, but he is. His very existence depends on it. He
cannot afford to leave the topic alone. In fact, what better, more unexpected doctrine could be
more ideal for him to weave his entangling, soul-destroying lies into? So, watch out. Be sober.
Our foe goes about, roaring like a lion, trying to scare us (1 Peter 5:8), yet also goes about
singing gently, to deceive us. He comes as an angel of light (2 Corinthians 11:13-14).
Especially is this true when our understanding of grace is on the table. I assure you -- real grace
is mutually exclusive -- it rules out all false grace. What you are about to hear is either very
wrong, or very right. But it's not in the middle somewhere. I do hope you are in the Word these
days.
What is Grace?
What is grace? Let's go to our Bibles for an answer. Why not turn with me to Titus 2:11-14:
For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men, Teaching us that, denying
ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present
world; Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our
Saviour Jesus Christ; Who gave Himself for us, that He might redeem us from all iniquity, and
purify unto Himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works.
Grace involves how we live, what we are changed from, and what we are changed to. Grace
involves salvation. In Titus two, Paul is discussing behavior, and in the ninth verse he points out
that it is because "the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men" that we will
live differently. The very first thing that this grace teaches us is to deny ungodliness and worldly
lusts. Revelation 21:27 assures us that nothing that defiles or makes a lie will enter into heaven.
Nothing. Thus it is immediately made certain that no false gospel will enter heaven. A false
gospel is a lie. The true gospel intimately impacts how we live.
Did you notice that the grace of God brings salvation? If I said "I'm bringing you five hundred
dollars tomorrow in my wallet," would you want to make a difference between the wallet and the
$500 that it carried? I would. The grace of God brings salvation. But it is not salvation. The
grace of God is a quality of God, a description of the mercy of His character. It is sent out in
search of us. We do not deserve it or merit it, but it has been sent out in search of us since God is
trying to bring salvation to us. Grace is that quality of who our heavenly Father is that makes
salvation available to us. It encompasses His mercy and a whole host of His attributes. But grace
does not equal salvation. Salvation depends on the total application of grace to us.
Through grace God wants to bring us salvation. That salvation means that we will live
differently. We will deny ungodliness and worldly lusts. There is a way that we should live under
grace, and that is "soberly, righteously, and godly." People want to talk about God's "extravagant
grace;" they want to emphasize the quantity of it; but He wants to emphasize the quality of it.
And so He says that when, through grace, salvation is occurring in your life, your life will be one
bearing the qualities of sobriety, righteousness, and godliness.
Think about those core qualities. Those are qualities of the actual grace that brings actual
salvation. If you have grace, you will be awake and clear-headed. If you have grace, your life
will be a vivacious orchestra of righteous actions. If you have grace, your life will be a pungent
expression of godliness cutting its way through the darkness engulfing the world. These aren't
cheap plastic substitutes for the real thing; they are the real thing.
A few years ago I was listening to a presentation about the gospel, and we were told that when it
comes to the gospel, "performance always lags." But performance doesn't always lag. Enoch
walked with God, and the Father took Him home to heaven. Was Enoch's experience lagging?
Not at all. And of course, we would all agree that Jesus' experience was never lagging. We could
come up with more examples, but it would be clear that experience does not always lag. If it did,
that would make a lie of the passage in Titus. After all, when does our verse say that this sober,
righteous, godly salvation experience is supposed to occur? "In this present world," or some
translations have it, "in this present age." Performance does not always lag.
We live this way, according to our text, looking for the soon return of Jesus and of God from
heaven. Furthermore, we learn in the text that we were redeemed not so that our performance
could lag, but "that He might redeem us from all iniquity." Now, iniquity is sin. Jesus has bought
us back from sin. Sin doesn't own us anymore. He bought us back to "purify" a special kind of
people to Himself, a people zealous for good works -- not a people without works or whose
works lag. Grace -- real grace -- means real Christians, changed people, people moving away
from sin at warp speed, people who moment-by-moment are living snapshots of purification.
Grace is not about all of this spiritual book-keeping that occurs outside of you, on the other side
of the sky somewhere, where angels are dancing on the heads of pins and singing "God You are
beautiful" to the sound of applause and raucious drumming. Grace is real. Grace brings salvation.
Salvation is real. Salvation showcases grace.
What does your life showcase?
Oh, I know; I'm not supposed to ask that. You see, to ask that is (we are told), to "take our eyes
off of Jesus," or to "major in minors," or to risk "interposing ourselves into the salvation
transaction."
What a lie from hell.
Those who so piously say that are really saying, "take your eyes off the showcase -- don't look!"
as if there were something offensive in there; some mysteriously contaminating peep-show
hidden away. Why yes. That's the point! The grace of God that brings salvation is supposed to be
on bold display in our lives. But our foe is nervous that we will catch hold of what grace means
and then live it before a world in moral-meltdown and a universe filled to overflowing with
curious, intelligent, pure, inquiring beings. Friends, angels are stretched across the sky bending
down with inexpressible interest in what God is doing down here on this tiny planet, this lesson-
book to the universe. He is showcasing His gospel of grace. It is the devil that doesn't want
anyone to look!
"No, no, no," they say, "Keep your eyes on Jesus." But our text said that "the grace of God that
bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men." This has happened. We have seen Jesus out there,
but now we want to see Him in here. We want to behold Him and become changed, and as we
behold Him, we will be changed.
Grace means that we change. God's grace that brings salvation has appeared to us. But how do
we lay hold upon that grace? How do we get grace?
We co-operate with God.
Yes, that's right. If you have already bought into that version of "the gospel," which Paul calls
"another gospel, which is not another," then that was your cue to run screaming from this
sanctuary. Satan, with his hypnotic singing, has convinced many Christians today that if we do
anything at all, we are somehow adding to the salvation process, somehow being saved by our
own works or a blending of our own works with God's perfect work. Man, it is said, can
contribute nothing to the salvation process, or more commonly, that he can contribute nothing
toward his own salvation. So any human co-operation with God is ruled-out by defining co-
operation as "works-salvation."
That's how you make these subtle changes; redefine truth through tiny gradations until you've
excluded it. Just shift the definitions. But why should we accept this revising? Who told us that
we had to sit back gently while someone else spin-doctored the teaching of the Bible? We are
free --free to rightly divide the Word of God! The Bible warned us about the traditions of man.
But traditions are not just golden-oldies; they can be subtle-new-ies too. Christians, blankly
consenting to be victims are still writing-off the commandments of God and replacing them with
the traditions of men. If we really were Protestants, we might have a stronger sense of this. Why
will we let this happen? Let's double-check, and make sure that we really are Bible Christians.
Divine-Human Co-operation
The best example of divine-human co-operation on record is Jesus. He was divine--He was God,
but He came in the flesh of a man; the humanity that He took was identical to our own, with no
special exemptions or exceptions. The gospels record numerous miracles done through Jesus.
But they were done through Him, rather than by Him. He sometimes commanded the sea or the
grave, and they always complied. Yet before He came here, He "emptied Himself" of His divine
power (Philippians 2:7-8) and in His life relied upon the Father as we must rely upon Him in our
life (John 5:19, 30).
Because He walked so closely with the Father, His will harmonized with His Father's, and the
miracles that were wrought came because of that intimate harmony -- that intimate co-operation.
He owned the power to do all of those miracles -- He had, after all, made the worlds (Hebrews
1:2); but He set that power aside in order to validate the example of His living for us. He gave us
the pattern, the example, of how to live (John 13:15; 1 Peter 2:21; John 17:19).
How to live by grace.
Jesus didn't need grace as we do. He was not guilty of sin, nor does guilt or condemnation reside
in the mere nature of man. A hand is not guilty for stealing or a foot for kicking; such actions
come from the brain; the extremities have no say in the matter. These actions result from minds
unsubdued to the Spirit of God, and Jesus' mind was ever subdued to the Spirit of God. Jesus
never developed the habit-patterns of sin that we have, for although tempted in all points like as
we are, He never sinned (Hebrews 4:15). Therefore He never had the propensities (in that sense)
of sin.
He lived an un condemnable life, and could thus ask who could convict Him of sin (John 8:46).
He was exactly what we needed in a Savior: "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners"
(Hebrews 7:26). But notwithstanding all this, the Father "hath made Him to be sin for us, who
knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him" (2 Corinthians 5:21). He
lived without sinning but took upon Himself the penalty of the sinner. He came to break sin in its
lair, to conquer sin in the flesh that constitutes man's broken nature (Romans 8:3). He overcame
by the power heaven, so that the grace that God would make available to us would have in it the
power to condemn sin in our flesh as well.
Some would say that this isn't grace. But they would be wrong. Grace makes a difference. Grace
is not license. Some people see grace as a license to sin (even though, they will say, you
shouldn't do it). But Jesus bought us not the privilege of sinning, but the privilege of winning. He
came not to give us a placebo, but to give us power. He came, not to please man, but to displease
the devil, and to glorify the Father. Jesus came not with cheap prizes from "Publisher's Clearing
House Sweepstakes," but to clear the house of religious cheapskates. He came to break the hold
that sin has on you and on me, and His real grace exposes the charlatans and fakes and their
teachings.
The real gospel really cleanses the temple by combining divine strength with human effort. The
result of this combination is a righteousness from God that fills the life of man with richness,
growth, and moral beauty; a righteousness that we could properly say has in it not one thread of
human devising; a righteousness that is all of God and thus contains no merit for man. Real grace
means that God's power changes those who co-operate with it. We are discussing real grace for
real need. And Jesus is our only Source. He came to bring real grace for real people.
Getting Grace into the Life of a Real Person
Jesus went up on the cross and died for us. And when He breathed His last, in triumph He
offered up His life to the Father. They took down the body of our Lord of grace, and placed it in
a tomb that Friday evening, just as the Sabbath was arriving. They placed His corpse in a
sepulcher close-by, and by order of Pilate that tomb was sealed and guarded by soldiers.
Divinity waited through the night. But early in the morning, that wonderful resurrection morning,
a blinding light split the sky as angels arrived in glory and stood outside the grave. An
earthquake rocks the land. Effortlessly, the angel rolls away the stone, his voice splitting the
darkness of the waning pre-dawn, loudly pronouncing, "Son of God, come forth; Thy Father
calls Thee!" The guards stand shocked in the flashing light. There is a stirring in the tomb. And
momentarily Jesus walks out of the grave. Because He lives, we can have grace. We can be free.
The resurrection of Jesus is our cue to turn to another key passage on grace: Romans chapter 6.
The same power that caused Jesus to rise from death, will empower you to live His way. When
the time came, Jesus did walk out of the tomb; He had victory. He is the resurrection and the life
(John 11:25). He has the keys of hell and of death (Revelation 1:18). He owns the grave. He did
all this so that real grace could come to real people like you and me. He offers you the key. He
calls you forth from the grave -- to real grace.
Real grace means release from bondage. We are to walk in newness of life. "If we have been
planted together in the likeness of His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection"
says Romans 6:5. If we will do just as Jesus did -- if we will lay hold upon the power of the
Father, of our own selves doing nothing (John 5:30), yet in fact doing what we see the Father do
(John 5:19) empowered by grace, we will not serve sin any longer. We'll recognize, as we are
shown in Romans 6:6 that "our old man is crucified with Him" when we lay hold of grace. The
power of our fallen nature combined with our habit-patterns of sin -- the wicked characters that
we have become-- will be broken and reshaped and renewed as we call to Him for power and
stop serving sin.
Do you experience the reality of Romans 6:7-8? "He that is dead is freed from sin. Now if we be
dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with Him." If we take up our cross daily as
Jesus commanded (Luke 9:23), we will die daily (1 Corinthians 15:31), and sin will not have
dominion over us. We will "live with Him," not just in some vague heavenly scene in the distant
future, but enter here and now.
Real grace is available for real people because we know "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 sin
once: but in that He liveth, He liveth unto God" (Romans 6:9-10). The offering of Jesus to the
Father in our behalf was entirely successful. The Father accepted that wonderful life represented
by the blood of Jesus. The sacrifice accepted, He lives unto God and we live unto God by the
power poured out from heaven, through co-operation with His grace. Jesus left the tomb -- left
the place where death reigned, because sin no longer had dominion over Him and thus death no
longer had dominion over Him. He took the keys of hell and death and went His way. And now
if you plead with God for overcoming power through Jesus, you'll be released too.
Romans 6:11-13 applies real grace to real people. Listen to what it says:
Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus
Christ our Lord. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey it in the
lusts thereof. Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin: but
yield yourselves unto God, as those that are alive from the dead, and your members as
instruments of righteousness unto God.
We are to consider ourselves truly dead unto sin. Don't get the wrong idea about this verse. We
hear the word "reckon" and we sometimes think of it as if we are going to "count" ourselves one
way while the reality is actually something else. But that is not what this is saying at all. This
text says count or considers ourselves as we actually are, not as we are not. "Likewise," that is, in
the same way, we are to recognize that we are "dead to sin and alive to God." In the same way as
it is true for Jesus (and it is so unquestionably true for Jesus!), it is just as certain and true for us.
Remember, when we accept Him as our personal Savior, we are joined with Him -- joined in His
death and joined in His resurrection. He was made to be sin for us that we might be made the
righteousness of God in Him. The merit and the glory are all His; the shame and the demerit of
the wickedness we have wrought are ours. He stepped between us and the knife, received our
penalty, empowered us to live differently, and handed us His reward. He gets the credit. We get
the salvation. And I have no objections!
Now you and I have been placed in control again. If we were not in control, then how could part
of the fruit of the Spirit be self control, "temperance," (Galatians 5:23)? If Jesus did not give us
power over the cravings of our broken nature, then how could He be fair in commanding us not
to yield our members as to remote-controlled machines through which demons can work sin and
woe? We are not to yield our "members as instruments of unrighteousness to sin," but to yield
ourselves unto God, as those that are [that really actually are], alive from the dead, and your
members as instruments of righteousness unto God."
Sin is surrender to remote-control. Righteousness is restoration of self-control. We are alive from
the dead; our faculties are refilled with life through our active reception of the power of grace.
God opens the door for us so that we walk in newness of life (Romans 6:4). Our members
become members of righteousness, not so that God remotely controls us, but remotely empowers
us to "live soberly, righteously, and godly," (when did Titus say?) "in this present world." That's
what the grace of God that bringeth salvation did when it appeared to all men in the life of our
Example, Jesus (Titus 2:11).
Under Grace
And so Paul arrives in Romans 6:14-15 just where we knew he must be going, and where we
must finish today. He pronounces the burning truth that we are not under the law, but under
grace. Listen:
For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace. What
then? shall we sin, because we are not under the law, but under grace? God forbid.
Remember, the problem is not the law, it is the dominion of sin. Jesus came to save from sin
(Matthew 1:21), not from the law. Law defines sin, and that's not the problem. If you take your
car to the mechanic, and he puts it onto the diagnostic machine and then discovers what the
problem is, is the diagnostic machine the problem? When he says "it's going to run you about
$300.00 to fix this," is he referring to his diagnostic machine? No, he's referring to the problem
with your motor! We are not under the law. Jesus does not leave Christians with a motor that is
going to show up on the diagnostic machine as still being broken. We are under grace. Grace.
Grace makes obedience to the law possible and real. So what shall we say then? Shall we sin
because we are not under the law, but under grace? God forbid.
Your sin problem and mine are no light matter. Our eternal existence is at stake. Jesus died so
that we could live, and He lives so that we can die. We must die to the old crooked nature, and
die now. Grace is not a license to sin, it is a license to be free of it. Grace is not some kind of
giant, impenetrable bubble descending upon us from heaven and locking us into salvation. It
does not immobilize our members, but makes it possible to yield our members to sober,
righteous, godly living in the last days. We must co-operate with it, and we gladly give Him all
the glory and all the credit. We are under grace. Oh how sweet it is.
Grace is not designed to numb our minds, to rip the devil off by saving us against our will, or to
justify inaction and lifeless assurance. Grace makes us free. And if you receive the Son today,
you can have this very grace. You can be free indeed (John 8:36).
Would you mind if I ask, are there any takers? Friends, this is not a one timer. But there ought to
be a time when you make a clear connection with Jesus, very clear. Here now is an opportunity
to do that. Is there anyone who will say today, "Pastor, that grace -- that grace as you've
described it today from the Word of the living God -- that's the grace I want, and that's the grace
I need. I want Jesus to give me that grace and that power. I want to be made free. Give
me that grace, God O please." Is there anyone here who will receive that grace?
How wonderful it is, this grace in which we stand! Let's thank our Father together as we close in
prayer. Let us pray that God will give to us real grace for real people. That is what Jesus died for.
Real Grace for Real People
Episode 2
Real Grace in Romans 1-3
Scripture Reading: Romans 3:24
Being justified freely by His grace through the redemption that in Christ Jesus
Grace in Romans 1:5; 16:26
Grace -- one of the most misunderstood teachings in the Bible. Some suggest that Seventh-day
Adventists don't understand grace; that we have an unbiblical understanding of it; that we place
ourselves under the law instead of under grace. Is it true? Although grace is spoken of first in
Genesis and finally in Revelation, the individual Bible writer saying the most about it is Paul.
Therefore, we will walk through his writings verse by verse and see what they say about grace.
Let's start in Romans 1:5.
Consider these first four verses of Romans chapter one. What do we learn in them? Paul is called
an apostle; that he was separated to the gospel; that this gospel was promised in the time of the
Hebrew Scriptures; that it concerns God's Son Jesus Christ, who was made of the seed of David
according to the flesh; that He was declared to have power and rose from the dead. The passage
next arrives at the fifth verse where we read:
By whom we have received grace and apostleship, for obedience to the faith among all
nations, for His name: among whom are ye also the called of Jesus Christ. Romans 1:5-6.
Hear the teaching of Paul: "By whom we have received grace and apostleship." From whom has
grace and apostleship been received? From Jesus -- the Son of God with power, which was made
of the seed of David according to the flesh. Notice that "grace" has been received. What purpose
was this grace received for? The following clause says "for obedience to the faith among all
nations, for His name." Paul received grace and apostleship for the purpose of leading believers
of every background into "obedience to the faith."
The same phrasing occurs in Romans 16:25-27:
Now to Him that is of power to stablish you according to my gospel, and the preaching of
Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery, which was kept secret since the
world began, but now is made manifest, and by the Scriptures of the prophets, according
to the commandment of the everlasting God, made known to all nations for the obedience
of faith: To God only wise, be glory through Jesus Christ forever. Amen.
The underlying Greek is the same phrase, literally, "obedience of faith" (hu-pa-koh-ayn pis-te-
ohs). The noun "faith" here is a genitive of source. The phrase speaks of the obedience which has
its source in faith. God sent Paul on His mission -- a mission to help all nations live the
obedience which has its source in faith in God.
In the close of the epistle, Paul brings the idea to the forefront again. Like two covers on the
front and back ends of the book of Romans, he iterates and reiterates the purpose of the gospel
"promised afore by His prophets in the Holy Scriptures" (Romans 1:2). Breaking into doxology
at the end of Romans, he again points "to Him that is of power to stablish you." The mystery of
the incarnation has now been made manifest. Jesus has come. He has come "of the seed of David
according to the flesh." The gospel is given that all nations may know of His coming and His
condemning of sin "in the flesh" (Romans 8:3), that they themselves might personally experience
the "obedience of faith." And all this is linked by Paul directly to grace.
We shouldn't forget that.
Grace in Romans 1:7
In Romans 1:7, Paul offers the customary greeting, "grace to you and peace," that launches so
many of his epistles. But let's look again at this verse in Romans. What is it that Paul says there?
"To all that be in Rome, beloved of God, called to be saints: grace to you and peace from God
our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ."
This is more than a hello. Paul is asking a blessing upon the Christians in Rome. Notice what is
linked together here in this verse: (1) God loves His people, (2) God calls them to be saints, and
(3) He gives grace and peace to them. You know that the underlying word for saints has the
literal meaning, "holy ones." God loves people and calls them to holiness, and gives them grace.
Holiness and grace and love go together! And what God hath joined together, let man not put
asunder.
Grace is not here a blanket to wrap sinners in. It is a light that former-sinners live out. Grace
inside empowers saintliness inside and out. God's love gives unto us "all things that pertain unto
life and godliness" (2 Peter 1:3). And among all things necessary for godliness, is grace.
Empowering grace.
Grace in Romans 3:24
The next passage in the book of Romans where we find the word "grace" is in Romans 3:24,
which reads:
Being justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.
Some say here that because we are "being justified freely by His grace," obedience is no longer
an issue for the Christian: that we are saved apart from obedience. But let's get some context,
more of the surrounding passage (Romans 3:19-31):
Now we know that what things soever the law saith, it saith to them who are under the
law: that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God.
Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in His sight: for by the
law is the knowledge of sin. But now the righteousness of God without the law is
manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets; Even the righteousness of God
which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe: for there is no
difference: For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; Being justified freely
by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus: Whom God hath set forth to
be a propitiation through faith in His blood, to declare His righteousness for the remission
of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God; To declare, I say, at this time His
righteousness: that He might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus.
Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what law? of works? Nay: but by the law of
faith. Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.
Is He the God of the Jews only? is He not also of the Gentiles? Yes, of the Gentiles also:
Seeing it is one God, which shall justify the circumcision by faith, and uncircumcision
through faith. Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish
the law.
Friends, now we have some context to work with. Let's work through the whole section, and see
what is being said about grace.
The Role of the Law
Starting in verse 19, what is Paul presenting? He states that whatever the law is saying, it is
saying to those who are under law. And why does it say what it says to those under law? "That
every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God." Interesting. Let
me ask you a question now. Does the law condemn sinners, or non-sinners? The law condemns
sinners. If you don't break the law, the law does not condemn you.
Let's get this clear in our minds. The law represents a boundary line between good and evil. It is
a divider between righteousness and sin. The law illuminates the fact that we live within the
domain of God's moral values. We have been made in His image, granted the power of free
choice. We -- by God's design -- have agency. In His law God sets before us "life and good, and
death and evil" (Deuteronomy 30:15).
Although we have free choice, we lack the inward power to follow up on the choice of our mind.
Thus, Paul says "with the mind I myself serve the law of God; but with the flesh the law of sin"
(Romans 7:25). That is, when the human mind is indwelt by the divine Spirit, we can obey.
When we choose to follow the downward pull of our fallen nature, we place our lower nature in
charge of our choices, resulting in moral failure. Adam and Eve sinned. They fell. Their nature
was changed. Now, we cannot obey -- not apart from an empowering by God.
What does the law say to those under the law? That the world -- that each one of us -- is guilty.
We all have chosen to follow our lower nature. We all have chosen to sin against God. The
function of the law is not to save us, but to show us what is right and what is wrong. In fact, it is
to show us what Jesus thinks about moral behavior. That's what the law is about. In the salvation
process, we are a race of persons who "all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God"
(Romans 3:23).
It is rather important that we understand this. So God gave a law. Not Ten Suggestions. Ten
Commandments: what Jesus thinks about moral behavior.
To be "under the law" in this passage, means to be under its authority, under its condemnation. If
you are, through the power of God obeying the law, then you are on the other side of the law. If
you are letting God's Spirit dwell life-changingly inside of you, then His strength is given in
response to your plea for help. He changes you through and through, both the more outwardly
items and also the more inward issues. He changes your very motivations. He pours His love into
your heart (Romans 5:5), and in God's love there is no hidden selfishness, no false motivation.
He empowers full obedience. Can the sinful heart produce any healthy obedience on its own?
No. But the sinful heart subdued by the Holy Spirit pours forth holy works. Do even those works
save you? No. But they are works that are on the law's good side. They are works of faith. They
glorify our Father in heaven. Such works are not produced "under the law;" they are produced
"under grace."
When Jesus points to His end-time people in the book of Revelation and announces "Here are
they that keep the commandments of God," He isn't kidding. He's being completely lucid,
completely sober. They are not a band of grim-faced people in bondage. They are a little flock of
commandment-keepers by the power of Jesus, having great peace. After all, "Great peace have
they which love Thy law, and nothing shall offend them" (Psalm 119:165). Far from being under
law, it is Seventh-day Adventists who would free people from being under law -- under the
bondage of sin.
God's design for His people is that we would be freedom-bringers. What are you?
Verse twenty continues to clarify the role of the law: "Therefore by the deeds of the law there
shall no flesh be justified in His sight: for by the law is the knowledge of sin." Paul here states
that "the deeds of the law" do not justify -- they do not make one right with God.
Don't forget what Paul is dealing with. In Romans chapter one he points out the general
wickedness of the non-Jews, and in Romans chapter two he points out the fallacy of people being
saved by their Jewishness, particularly in light of their sinful behaviors. The people who are
"justified" in the book of Romans are not the hearers of the law, but the doers (Romans 2:13).
The Jews had been led to make the assumption that they had an easy-in on this salvation issue.
Paul is trying to shake them away from it. He points out that their deeds--their deeds considered
in an unqualified manner (apart from empowering by the Holy Spirit for example)-- cannot put
them into a guiltless relationship with God.
Another Witness to God's Righteousness
Verse twenty-one then says "But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested,
being witnessed by the law and the prophets; even the righteousness of God which is by faith of
Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe." In verse 28 we read, "without the law"
(kho-ris no-moo), literally perhaps better translated as "apart from law," is here given as how the
righteousness of God is manifested. It is testified to "by the law and the prophets."
The law itself has been a witness to what the Father and what Jesus think about moral behavior
from the beginning. It could define what God's requirements were by telling, but Jesus came to
demonstrate what God's requirements were by showing. And He did. He lived out to the fullest
expression in fallen flesh, what He had written by divine impression on tables of stone. He was
the law enfleshed, just as the Ten Commandments are God's character concisely transcribed.
In this passage Paul shows the necessity of God having a living witness for what He thinks about
moral behavior. Don't forget that the Jews had surrounded the law with layer after layer of
tradition, greatly obscuring its real meaning. So God came to show it to them in action.
That's what Jesus did.
In verses 22-23 Paul shows that since all are condemned before God, His faith is necessary for
both, Jew and gentile alike. All fall short. All are condemned by their own behavior. But through
faith, God's righteousness is available "unto all and upon all them that believe" (Romans 3:22).
Don't forget, the main issue at hand is our making sure that we have a biblical grip on what grace
is. Notice here that grace involves not our own but God's righteousness being "unto all and upon
all them that believe."
Now we finally come back to Romans 3:24. All who have sinned but return to God in belief are,
this verse says, "justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus."
"Freely" tells how we are justified. Literally, as a "gift." "Being justified as a gift," or "being
made right with God as a gift" by His grace. But let us not confuse this with the cost of
redemption. We are purchased with a price (1 Corinthians 6:19-20), a very steep one indeed.
Jesus died on the cross for us. "For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth on Him might not perish, but have everlasting life" (John 3:16).
"Freely" here is not in reference to the cost of salvation. It was the most expensive thing ever
purchased. That's why no grace that's cheap is valid. Grace is costly.
"Freely" here is in reference to whether we contribute to the cost, whether we add any of our
feeble merits to the perfect merits of Christ. To that, the answer is resounding.
No.
But here comes the monkey-wrench. Turn to James 2:24:
Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only.
James had noticed how some were saying they were made right with God apart from obedience
to Him and He pointed out what? Yes, that's right. That "faith without works is dead" (James
2:26). And I say to you that while it is true that God doesn't add our deeds into the purchase price
of our salvation (for He has wrought that out freely for us), still it is true that "faith without
works is dead." Still it is true that "by works a man is justified, and not by faith only." That is,
there is a co-operative part we play in the salvation process, although not a meritorious part.
Don't misunderstand me now. What does the Scripture say? It calls this "the redemption that is in
Christ Jesus;" not the redemption that is in me or you. There is no redemption in us. It is in
Christ. But he wants to put His righteousness "unto all and upon all that believe."
Let's keep moving. Let's make sure that Paul and James agree. Romans 3:25-27:
Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in His blood, to declare His
righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God; To declare,
I say, at this time His righteousness: that He might be just, and the Justifier of him which
believeth in Jesus. Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what law? of works? Nay: but by
the law of faith.
Christ our Propitiation
Jesus is set forth to be a propitiation--a penalty-payment. His life given in our place, His sacrifice
received by faith in His blood, faith in the life He lived-out and offered up, is set forth to declare
His righteousness. The declaration of His righteousness is at the same time a declaration of the
fairness and appropriateness of His forgiving, literally "passing over" sins.
But God didn't pass over any sins at all. Payment for every sin has been exacted through the
sacrifice of Christ. The penalty has been met in the Penalizer. The written law defined what sin
was. The living-Law showed what righteousness can do. He can save. The written law gave no
life for the sins of the world. The living-Law did. Because of His life offered up for man, God
passed over the sins of men, waiting for the arrival of Christ to carry out the penalty for our sins
upon the sinless One. This was a part of grace.
But consider the next line: "To declare I say, at this time His righteousness: that He might be
just, and the Justifier of him which believeth in Jesus." The end result of all this isn't that God
just forgives us while covering over our sins like rust under primer. Nay. It is so much more!
Grace as biblically operative is such that through it, "He might be just, and the Justifier of him
which believeth in Jesus." That is, He can be absolutely fair -- He can legitimately operate under
the same principles as all His creatures do, continuing to think what He thinks about moral
behavior, and at the same time He can justify the person who believes in Him. Authentic Bible
grace covers both bases: God's justice andHis mercy. Neither principle suffers at the expense of
the other. Grace isn't a cheap cover-up. It's an expensive restoration. And it is operational now.
Jude's Timely Warning
Does grace destroy the law? Cheap grace does. Jude warned about the cheap-grace proponents
who would present their destructive rationalizations in his and finally in our closing age. What
was his warning? Hear Jude 4: "For there are certain men crept in unawares, who were before of
old ordained to this condemnation, ungodly men, turning the grace of our God into
lasciviousness, and denying the only Lord God, and our Lord Jesus Christ."
When we put grace on sale, we cheapen it. Contemporary theology on grace differs little from
the old Roman Catholic lie of the "indulgence." Christians today are being sold a version of
grace that is the very thing Jude warns us of. It turns the grace of our God into lasciviousness,
into an obscenity--a justification for lustful behaviors. It turns grace into a license for
disobedience.
What did Paul think? He closed out this section of Scripture with the following words.
Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what law? of works? Nay: but by the law of faith.
Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law. Is He the
God of the Jews only? is He not also of the Gentiles? Yes, of the Gentiles also: Seeing it is one
God, which shall justify the circumcision by faith, and uncircumcision through faith. Do we then
make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the law.
Paul says we can't boast. We have nothing to boast of under grace. Grace gives us no license to
sin. We are not to boast. We are not to claim that we can sin lightly and He will lightly forgive
us. Weare to conclude that we are justified by faith, and that "the deeds of the law" play no
salvific role for us. Our merits cannot save us, only condemn. All are justified through faith. Do
we then make void--make empty--the law through faith?
God forbid.
We, after all, establish the law. How do we establish the law? Through faith. How do we operate
under faith? Believing in Christ, we permit Him to put the righteousness of God "unto all and
upon all that believe." That means co-operating with Him, permitting Him to put His
righteousness into me and upon me. He justifies me by His grace, through the redemption that is
in Christ Jesus.
Awesome. Biblical. Authentic grace. Historically Adventist.
Conclusion
Some people suggest that the much of the current thinking on grace in the Seventh-day Adventist
church is different than that of the Adventist pioneers. They are correct.
Some suggest that the Adventism of our spiritual pioneers was lacking in grace. They are
incorrect. There is no disagreement between what has been above presented and that which Ellen
White, A. T. Jones, E. J. Waggoner, or other pioneer Adventists believed. So what is the
difference?
The pioneer understanding of grace saw that the ark of the covenant was opened in Revelation
11:19. God's law was exposed. That was His plan, too. He purposed that His last generation of
believers would be persons who through His empowering grace kept the commandments of God
and the faith if Jesus. But today Adventists are confused. Many of our teachers are discovering
that the law is an enemy, but only because their concept of grace makes it such.
Seventh-day Adventists need to recover their understanding of grace. They need to see the value
of the law. They need to see the blending of God's glory. They need to keep in mind what
Romans 1:7 showed us. That His love, His holiness being put upon His people, and His grace all
fit together perfectly well. If obedience is today being pushed entirely out of the salvation
experience, it is because we are drifting into theological friendship with those who historically
rejected our understanding of Scripture for the very same reason. They couldn't see a
harmonization between what they thought grace was, and the remainder of the Scripture.
They left their first love and were declared fallen by heaven.
Friend, there is enough grace to give you victory. You needn't fall. Look and live. Look and love.
Look at Jesus. Receive His power. Go on to glory. There will never be a better time than now, to
study out from the Scriptures what grace is, and let it be in you all that God would have it to be.
Seventh-day Adventists are not under the law. We are freedom-bringers. The Spirit of the Lord is
upon us, because we've been annointed to preach the gospel to the poor. We are sent to heal the
broken-hearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind. We
are called to set at liberty them that are bruised. To preach the acceptable year of the Lord. Luke
4:18.
Now is the accepted time. Now is the day of salvation.
Real Grace for Real people
Episode 3
Real Grace in Romans Four
Introduction
From time to time we have to go back and dig carefully, and make certain we haven't swallowed
something beyond what we meant to. Words like "salvation," and "grace," and "faith," and
"justification" are not exempt from tampering. In fact, they attract the lint of error like Velcro.
"Grace" the word, comes up only twice in this chapter (in the fourth and sixteenth verses). Let's
work through and see what it tells us about grace. Turn to Romans 4:1-3:
What shall we say then that Abraham our father, as pertaining to the flesh, hath found? For if
Abraham were justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but not before God. For what saith
the scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness. Now to
him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt. But to him that worketh not,
but believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.
In Romans 3:28 Paul has already concluded that we are justified by faith apart from the deeds of
the law. But look at Romans 2:13: "Not the hearers of the law are just before God, but the doers
of the law shall be justified."
In Romans three Paul had argued that all -- not just non-Jews -- are condemned for disobedience
to God's will. Having come to view themselves as God's especially favored people, having lost
sight of the radical wickedness of all humanity, the mere outward participation in the forms and
traditions of Judaism to many seemed the sum of religiosity.
Poisonous Thinking
The true religious system of God had by then been overlaid with a vast structure of unsound
ideas and reasonings -- self-deceiving sophistry excusing disobeying while saying you were
obeying. Paul made this clear back in Romans 2:23: "Thou that makest thy boast of the law,
through breaking the law dishonourest thou God?" In other words, "you who claim to be living
within God's will are actually breaking it and thus dishonoring Him!"
As long as this kind of thinking among the early Jewish converts remained, the church would
never be safe. Reliance on the fact of their Jewishness betrayed their very narrow conception of
salvation. As long as faith in Christ was supplemented by their self-assured racial pride, they
would be incapable of experiencing the inward circumcision wrought through the gospel. Paul
sought to disabuse them of this misconception. Again and again he returns to the issue, pressing
to their spiritually parched lips the plea to have faith in Christ; a faith taking nothing away from
the law.
God doesn't owe anyone anything for their being Jewish or white or black or any color or ethnic
group. All have sinned and come short of the glory of God. Hear the next verses: "Now to him
that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt. But to him that worketh not, but
believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness" (Romans 4:4-
5).
We want to notice something in these verses. Look closely. What do we want to have? We want
to believe; we want to have faith. Now what don't we want to have? Well, that's not hard either.
We don't want to be working for salvation without faith. We are plainly told that if we try to live
the Christian life by earning our salvation, then it would not be "of grace." And if it's not of
grace, then its not that salvation that comes from God. For the Scriptures tell us that it is "by
grace" that we are saved (Ephesians 2:8).
The statement in Romans 4:3, "but to him that worketh not" needs to be understood, for James
tells us that works are there. "By works was faith made perfect" (James 2:22). Indeed, James
says so very plainly, "by works a man is justified, and not by faith only" (James 2:24). It is clear
that Paul in Romans is saying that faith/belief is the critical component. If you are working for
your salvation, and trying to do so without relying on Christ, then you are working out your own
salvation without God working in you, because only you are working in you. The only terms of
salvation you have then are terms of debt. Because you've done the work, you suppose the debt
of salvation is owed you.
But the salvation that is true is a lively salvation. It is the situation in which faith is working by
love (Galatians 5:6). It is a faith that is not dead or alone, as James warns of (James 2:17).
Nor miss you this fact: the belief that we find in Romans 4:5 is the belief of one in a God who
"justifieth the ungodly. See, it is a belief in which there is a real recognition of human lostness
and human sinfulness and deep, bottomless human need. It is not a faith in which man is
practically unaffected by the fall and just a kind of confused being wandering around in search of
a little guidance. Our predicament is so much worse than that! We must see our need, or we
won't seeWho we need.
I tell you this: he who sees his need and turns to his Maker, of that person the Scripture says,
"hisfaith is counted for righteousness."
Justification: Not What We've Been Told
Now with this "counted," we've bumped into an important word, and we need to pause for a
moment and try to understand it. A great misconception has its ground right here.
The word in the underlying Greek is logidzomai. This word logidzomai means to count
something, to estimate, to consider something, to attribute to it, to weigh something as being
equivalent to something else. It shows up in the Bible about 30 times, most of them in the New
Testament in the writings of Paul. This word has been translated to English most often with the
words "reckon," "impute," and "count." In Romans chapter four, this word occurs no less than 11
times (Romans 4:3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 22, 23, 24).
This word has often been presented in an unbiblical sense and given a mistaken sense. It has
been construed to mean to count what is not as though what is. That is, this word has been
presented as a convenient tag white-washing fact with legal fiction. Paul has, in fact, as some
have justly charged, been widely misunderstood.
Just how is this word (logidzomai) used in this chapter?
In Romans 4:3 Abraham believes and is "counted" righteous. In Romans 4:4, one who works for
salvation would be rewarded through debt, not "reckoned" as being of grace. Romans
4:5 however points out that if one believes, his faith is "counted" for righteousness. In Romans
4:6 we are reminded that to the repentant, God "imputeth" righteousness apart from
works. Romans 4:8 says that one is blessed to whom God will not "impute" sin. In Romans
4:9 we see that faith was "reckoned" to Abraham for righteousness. In Romans 4:10 Paul points
out that this was done before Abraham was circumcised. Romans 4:11 highlights that to us as
unto Abraham righteousness is to be "reckoned" also.
Who is "The Blessed Man"?
What's interesting is that in every case where we come up to this word, faith is linked with
righteousness, and works done without faith -- without God's help -- are linked with sin. Of
particular interest is Romans 4:8. This verse talks about God imputing sin. Now let me ask you,
is sin an actual thing? Oh yes. And blessed is the man to whom God will not impute sin. But to
whom is sin not imputed/counted/reckoned? To one who has truly repented, who has truly
sought for pardon. And God truly pardons. The man to whom sin is not imputed is the man from
whom sin has been removed. And only God can remove sin. Notice in verse seven that the one is
blessed "whose iniquities are forgiven." That word "forgiven" literally means to leave-off
completely. In fact, in Romans 1:27 this same word is translated "leaving." So the Scripture is
saying "blessed is the man whose sins have been left behind." The same word is used in 1
Corinthians 7:11, 12, and 13where it is translated "let not the husband put away his wife." So
Scripture says, "blessed is the man whose sins have been put away." And let me ask you, which
is more blessed -- to have your sins counted as if put away, or to have experienced their truly
having been put away?
Hebrew often expresses itself in parallel, saying the same thing in different ways. And so this
verse says, "blessed is the man whose iniquities are forgiven [that is, put away, entirely left
behind], and whose sins are covered." What does this word "covered" mean? Well, this is a
quotation straight from Psalm 32:1-2. Let's look at that together.
Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered. Blessed is the man unto
whom the LORD imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile.
O.K. then. Who is the blessed man? Yes, the man "whose transgression is forgiven;" yes, the
man "whose sin is covered;" yes, "the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity." Everyone
here will agree to those lines. But will you go all the way with God and admit that the next
specification is equally true? That the blessed man to whom the Lord no longer imputes sin is the
man "in whose spirit there is no guile"? That's what the Bible says. And how well this agrees
with Proverbs 28:13: "He that covereth his sins shall not prosper: but whoso confesseth and
forsaketh them shall have mercy." The person trying to cover his own sins is trying not only to
keep them hidden, but to keep them. But he who confesses and what? And forsakes, that is,
who puts away, who leaves behind, he is the one who is blessed, that experiences the mercy of
forgiveness.
Put very simply, just as real as the sin is, is the real removal of sin. The sin does not remain -- it
is not covered up, but it is completely dealt with. It is removed. In the heart of this person "is no
guile." Can you begin to see that the "imputing," the "counting," and the "reckoning" we are
talking about here is far from a white-wash. We speak here not of legal fictions, but of
actualities, of realities. What a gospel this is! Oh, how God is against sin. Oh, how dangerous it
is! Don't play with it, it will destroy you. God pleads with His children, "remove yourself from
these things," He says, "turn and live."
Friends, we are staring a theological forgery right in the face at this point. Justification is
nowhere limited to an external blanket white-washing sin, a velvety and cozy comforter in
transgression. Justification is the creation, in actuality, of a just person. God's changes are real;
they punctuate reality, not paper. God reaches in and makes a change as we've asked Him to. He
rips out the sin completely, in accordance with our willingness to let Him.
But …………
If we don't really want the sin removed, then He doesn't remove it. You can't fool God. God
looks on the heart. He can't be conned.
No Baggage on the Blessed Path
Back in Romans four Paul continues in verses 9-11 showing that this blessing of sin removal is
not only for Jewish folk, but for non-Jews as well. Just as Abraham did not have his sins
removed because he was circumcised but rather because he had faith in God, a non-Jewish
person can become free of sin on the very same terms -- faith in God. Consider verses 11 and 12:
And he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had
yet being uncircumcised: that he might be the father of all them that believe, though they be not
circumcised; that righteousness might be imputed unto them also: and the father of circumcision
to them who are not of the circumcision only, but who also walk in the steps of that faith of our
father Abraham, which he had being yet uncircumcised.
He "received the sign of circumcision" because it was the outward sign of a walk that was both
outward and inward. See how Paul speaks of those "who walk also in the steps of that faith of
our father Abraham, which he had being yet uncircumcised." Abraham was walking, he was
spiritually on the move. His faith was active; it worked by love (Galatians 5:6) to the
purification of the soul (1 John 3:3).
"For the promise," says Paul, "that he [Abraham] should be heir of the world, was not to
Abraham, or to his seed, through the law, but through the righteousness of faith" (Romans 4:13).
The law plays a wonderful role, but it never saves. It is a revealer, not a savior. Faith comes
down to us from God and empowers our actions; it fills them with a goodness that otherwise
could never fill them. And then our works don't save us, but accompany us. James says of
Abraham that faith worked with his works, that by works his faith was brought to perfection
(James 2:22). The Bible doesn't talk about a big "sha-zam" that comes rolling out of the sky and
rewrites our brain. Salvation doesn't occur like the metallic click of a staple-gun. Salvation, much
more than being a strange supernatural moment, is an extended supernatural walking. It is a
journey during which what we really are becomes so lucidly real that we cry out, "Jesus, Son of
David, have mercy upon me!" And we continue to move on the pilgrimage.
Are you camped here -- here on earth? Are you planning on staying? Then you will be destroyed.
We need to prepare for lift-off. We are not staying. In our Father's house are many mansions.
Not a shelter for homeless sinners, but a palace for changed sinners. The Bible, speaking not
idly, calls God's people His saints. They have in their mouth no guile (Revelation 14:5). They
walk in the steps of the faith of father Abraham. They are not fakes. They are actual. They are
not the moving dots on a charged computer screen, electronic pips fooling the eye; they are real
people, flesh and blood. Saints of flesh and blood. They are journeyers on the simple path of
faith.
The Faithful Seed
In Romans 4:14-15 Paul explains that salvation cannot come to fallen man through the law,
because it would nullify God's promise that salvation would come through faith. We now come
to Romans 4:16, the other place in this chapter where we find the word "grace." And Paul now
ties faith in with grace.
Therefore, it is of faith that it might be by grace; to the end the promise might be sure to all the
seed; not to that only which is of the law, but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham; who
is the father of us all.
It has to be by faith so that it can be by grace. Otherwise the promise could not be fulfilled to "all
the seed," all the children of faith. Everyone who says, "God, salvation through faith may not be
the terms I had in mind, but it is salvation on Your terms. I submit to Your plan. I am willing to
be saved Your way," -- everyone who will say that and live that, is of the seed of Abraham. And
God's grace-- His real grace -- is for His seed. And His seed are those who are of faith.
The next several verses reprise Abraham's experience and speak of his growth in grace. He may
have staggered at God's promises at the first, but came to the place where he was fully persuaded
that what our heavenly Father had promised He was completely willing and able to perform.
Then Romans 4:22 says "and therefore it was imputed to him for righteousness." Was he counted
as if believing when he was unbelieving? Not at all. He was not just barely persuaded that God
could deliver, but the Bible says he was "fully persuaded" that God would deliver (Romans
4:21). His faith, a very real faith, was the outcome of a righteousness that was a very real
righteousness. Not righteousness generated by being a Jew, or by doing some good thing, but a
righteousness in which works and faith were thoroughly connected.
Sin, Not Law, the Problem
Now as this chapter so helpful in understanding real grace closes, our eyes are turned to Jesus.
But we again need to clarify something. Our Father's commandments are good. His law is full of
wonderful things, not bad things. But it isn't there to save. God is not against His own law, He is
against sin. Salvation is not salvation from God's law, but from our sin. We're not saved by God's
character becoming as fallen man's character, but fallen man's character needs to become like our
holy God.
The Bible speaks of a stumbling stone -- one that the Jews stumbled at. But read the text
carefully. What is this stumbling stone? Consider Romans 9:30-33:
What shall we say then? That the Gentiles, which followed not after righteousness, have attained
to righteousness, even the righteousness which is of faith. But Israel, which followed after the
law of righteousness, hath not attained to the law of righteousness. Wherefore? Because they
sought it not by faith, but as it were by the works of the law. For they stumbled at that stumbling
stone; as it is written, Behold, I lay in Sion a stumbling stone and rock of offence: and whosoever
believeth on Him shall not be ashamed.
The Jews stumbled at that stumbling stone, and that stumbling stone was not the law -- it was
Christ. It was not obedience in the narrow, done through our own strength; it was obedience
made full through Christ. It was not a willingness to be "counted" right (in their case because
they were Jewish), but what most offended was the submission of all to Christ.
Christ the Stumbling Stone
How uncommon today is that willingness to accept Jesus in His humanity, in the completeness of
it. How uncommon to hear a passage like Hebrews 2:16-18:
For verily He took not on Him the nature of angels; but He took on Him the seed of Abraham.
Wherefore in all things it behoved Him to be made like unto His brethren, that He might be a
merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God, to make reconciliation for the sins
of the people. For in that He Himself hath suffered being tempted, He is able to succor them that
are tempted.
Jesus came and He came too-human for the Jews' taste. So they rejected Him. Today Christ's
divinity is emphasized while His humanity so often is negated. But look at God's Word. It says
that Jesus became as human as we are, that we might become as obedient as He is. Such is an
impossibility if we cannot live as He lived. 1 John 3:8 says that Jesus was manifested that He
might destroy the works of the devil. And I tell you that He was not merely manifested in some
vague way, but the most specific way. He was manifested in human flesh. Romans 8:3-4 says
that "What the law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh" -- that is, what the law
could not do for a man because his fallen nature rendered him incapable of obeying in his own
strength -- "God, sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin
in the flesh."
Jesus was sent in human flesh -- even our own flesh. Not "in the unlikeness" but "in the likeness"
of sinful flesh. Why? "For sin." And what did He do in that so very human flesh? He
"condemned sin" in it. He showed that in the power of God, man can obey Him. He can, through
faith, keep the commandments.
No Atonement Without Christ
And how important also the divinity of Christ -- that point which the Jews so opposed accepting.
His divinity testified that the higher life, the spiritual life, even the life ordained by God, was also
the life ordained for man. The value of the sacrifice must be sufficient to atone for all the sin of
all men for all time. Such a life no ordinary human character could bring to the cross. Yes, a man
could die, a thousand times ten thousands of men could die; but in their lives would not be
sufficient merit to atone for anyone's life. And what if they could? What if a thousand people
were found who were able somehow to die bearing some measure of merit for salvation? If a
thousand could die and make atonement for themselves, then the sacrifice of Christ would be
shown to be unnecessary. Yet what of the billions and billions who've lived and died having
sinned? All but the tiniest fraction of them would be lost.
No; even if a thousand could die and have some merit in themselves, would they have the power
to resurrect themselves? Never! All have sinned and come short of the glory of God (Romans
3:23). There are no candidates; there are no one thousand self-atoners. All are unjust. Only
Christ has lived in this flesh yet never sinning. The Just must die for the unjust (1 Peter 3:18).
And all have made themselves unjust but Christ.
Only His divine character was of sufficient moral value to pay the penalty for the sin of the
world. The value of all the paper money of the United States of America is (at least supposed to
be) assured because the nation has vaults filled with gold bullion scattered here and there about
the country insuring its value. But if you could pile up all of the precious metals owned by our
country for this purpose, and write a check for an amount greater than that, no one could cash it.
Beyond a certain finite point the check would bounce; there wouldn't be enough reserve value to
cover the check. Only Christ, a divine character (yet coming in human flesh), is who He is. Only
He has in Himself sufficient value of character to pay the penalty for everyone's sin for all time.
Only He is Jesus.
And He paid this penalty. Yet not so we might run around continually sinning and indifferent to
morality, not because we somehow thought that justification was a VISA card to buy sin having
no expiration date. Look at Romans 8:4. Yes, there was a divine goal in the atonement of Christ:
"That the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after
the Spirit." He died so that we might truly live a life ceased from sin. He died so that in our lives
sin might be utterly cut-off, stopped, chopped, ended. He died that we might work out our own
salvation with fear and trembling, not so that we might live out a riot of sin in high-handed
indifference.
When we let Him work in us, He will work in us. He will justify us. He will not justify our
sinning, but He will justify us -- He will make us actually right inside.
What did Abraham find about trying to help God fulfill His promises? He found that God didn't
need any help, and that even could he have contributed something, it would have been spiritually
unhealthy for Abraham to have helped out. If Abraham had sought for justification -- not just an
external declaration of, but an actual experience of being internally made right with
God -- through his own strength done without God's strength, he'd have something that self could
take pride in. No. "Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness."
Abraham believed God and that opened the door for God to work in fullness in his life. God's
strength to empower obedience was poured out to Abraham, not because of some random sparkle
of goodness lurking in Abraham's bosom, but because Jesus had promised the Father that He
would die for fallen man. Abraham trusted God instead of the flesh. That was righteousness.
Man is not God, and God is not man. We must never say that Jesus did not become as human as
we are, or that He is not as divine -- truly divine -- as He is. If His humanity is stripped away, He
is not one with us and cannot condemn sin in our flesh; He cannot destroy the works of the devil.
If He is not God then His character carries no more weight to atone for sin than yours or mine.
And that's not enough. For God so loved the world that He died to make possible the salvation of
"whosoever" would believe on Him (John 3:16). A whole world needs Jesus as Savior. He must
be God in the maximum sense or the world lacks a Savior. A good man, nay, the best of men, if,
when all pretensions are stripped away, is nothing more than a very good man -- is no Savior.
Conclusion
Grace that is ungrace is not grace. And justification that is unjust is not justification.
Hear the last lines of Romans four:
Now it was not written for his [Abraham's] sake alone, that it was imputed to him; but for us
also, to whom it shall be imputed, if we believe on Him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the
dead; who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification. (Romans
4:23-25).
Hear this very clearly: real grace is here to change us. It is made available to us by our Lord
Jesus, who was delivered for our offences, who was raised again for our justification. Not a
paper justification or a fairytale, but a biblical justification. Not for heavenly lawyer-stuff, but to
produce a living people who are worshippers of a living God. Heaven is not silent. God is not
dead. Our future is not our past but our present. And our present is where the rubber meets the
spiritual road. May we purpose ourselves to walk in the steps of faith of our father Abraham, to
whom none of this was any easier than it is for us, but who made the journey that was possible
only through real grace given by a real Savior. Accept no cheap substitutes, for ye are bought
with a price. When you are "counted,""reckoned," or "imputed," as just, it will be because you
cooperated with Jesus in His efforts to change you. The merits all flow from Him, the mercy all
flows to us, and the glory all goes to God.
Real Grace for Real People
Episode 4
Real Grace in Romans Five
Introduction
We'll take another chapter today in our look at grace. Recall that the reason for this series is the
current emphasis on "grace" within Adventism -- something that we would gladly applaud were
it only matched by a sound exposition of what grace is and means. Today we sometimes hear a
very cheap version of grace, one in which obedience is bad. Where did we get this? Any such
portrayal of grace should be sickening to the Bible Christian. Jesus said, "If you love Me, keep
My commandments" (John 14:15). How then could the grace coming from the same source as
the commandments be so antagonistic to God's law? Remember His law He calls "My
commandments," just as in speaking of His grace He says, "My grace is sufficient for thee" (2
Corinthians 12:9).
When we began this process, we decided we would chase Paul's use of the word "grace" through
the book of Romans, and see where that took us.
Remember our findings from the previous messages. In Real Grace For Real People, we saw that
actual grace leads us to live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present world. in Real Grace
in Romans 1-3 we saw something of what is actually the very, very great expense of grace and
that at the end of time teachers would come attempting to turn it into a license to sin. In Real
Grace in Romans Four we took a closer look at what it means to "impute," and caught some
folks with their hand in the theological cookie-jar. The "blessed man" is not the fellow who's
been forgiven but left a slave of sin; he's the man who through God's empowerment has
consented to let His heavenly Father take his sins away. With those ideas in mind, let's continue
our study now in Romans chapter five.
This Grace Wherein We Stand (Romans 5:2)
Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ: By
whom also we have access by faith into this grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of the
glory of God. And not only so, but we glory in tribulations also: knowing that tribulation
worketh patience; And patience, experience; and experience, hope: And hope maketh not
ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given
unto us (Romans 5:1-5).
Our chapter here begins in speaking of those who are justified by faith, who have peace with
God. All of this, of course, comes to us only through Jesus Christ. Now we consider carefully as
Paul links this with grace: "By whom also we have access by faith into this grace wherein we
stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God."
Literally, "access" here is to "bring forward." Three times this word comes in our New
Testament, all by Paul. In Ephesians 2:18, we find that "For through Him [Jesus] we both [Jews
and non-Jews] have access by one Spirit unto the Father." Ephesians 3:12 is the other, "In whom
[i.e. Jesus] we have boldness and access with confidence by the faith of Him [Jesus]."
The grace by which we stand -- by which we live victoriously over evil -- only comes to us
through Jesus' empowerment of our faith. Remember, apart from God's intervention, our faith
would be ineffectual and inoperative, essentially non-existent. Jesus' sacrifice on the cross opens
the door. It grants heaven not license to cheat in the great controversy, but the means of going
forward. The Holy Spirit in olden days was given on credit so to speak -- Jesus' sacrificial death
upon the cross in humankind's place was then yet future. But now that He's followed through, the
penalty of the law has been met in its Author, in its origin-point. Justice has been met. Now God
can apply the benefits of His atonement, not in forgiving only, but in restoring.
To forgive us but not to change us would be a cruel trick. It would support the devil's charge that
God's law really is unfair. It would call into question His (God's) character. Instead of Deliverer
He would be a supreme Placebo-pusher, an arbitrary punisher of the helpless; just as our
adversary wishes us to think of our Maker.
But Jesus brings us forward -- He grants us access by one Spirit to the Father, His forgiveness
and His power. Remember, in our last study we found that to be justified was more than merely
to be counted right. It means to be literally, actually, effectually "made right" with God. he is at
peace with God who has pled for change and let Him make him internally right with Yahweh. He
stands boldly, obediently. The Spirit of God makes a difference. He works from the inside out,
working more than a token work. Never forget that our access to grace comes through Jesus and
by means of faith. Faith includes our cooperative involvement. He gives the strength, we make
the decision, and because God has worked we lay hold of His power living out the decision to
obey. This is where we stand in grace.
Nor should we forget that our passage speaks of the development of Christian character.
"Tribulation worketh patience; and patience, experience, and experience, hope, etc." How does
heaven go about the process of developing that in God's people? By the Holy Spirit who is
poured out into our hearts, the "one Spirit" by whom we enjoy access to the Father. Thus heaven
produces a victorious people.
The Gift by Grace (Romans 5:15)
Let's take this in its pieces. Consider Romans 5:12-14:
Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon
all men, for that all have sinned: For until the law sin was in the world: but sin is not imputed
when there is no law. Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over them that had
not sinned after the similitude of Adam's transgression, who is the figure of Him that was to
come.
Romans 5:12-21 outlines the reign of sin versus the reign of grace. Verses 13 and 14 are
parenthetical. Notice in Romans 5:12 that we learn sin entered this world and death by sin
through one man -- Adam. The passage now makes a persistent comparison of Adam with
Christ. By implication, if sin entered through Adam, and death through sin, then sin's opposite,
righteousness, enters through Christ, and life through righteousness. As sin enters through Adam,
so it leaves through Christ, who came to destroy the works of the devil, chief of which is the
mystery of iniquity, the mysterious and unjustified existence of sin. Through His ministry Christ
ends all sin and all death. Adam had the dubious distinction of contaminating the world through
his actions, but Christ has the noble distinction of decontaminating the world through His
actions.
Adam's descendents inherited a broken up, twisted up, weakened nature, but all who accept
Christ by faith receive "the gift by grace" (Romans 5:15), "the gift of righteousness" (Romans
5:17), the reign of grace "through righteousness unto eternal life" (Romans 5:21).
Before Adam's sin, nothing on earth had died. All that had been created had lived. Satan was
injected into the garden after having been cast down out of heaven in his rebellion. But still no
one had died. It was only in Adam and Eve's disobedience to God that sin entered and death
through sin. And two deaths entered at that point: the penalty death (second death), directly
linked with morality, and the mere physical death (first death), to which the creation in general
became subject. Because Jesus was willing at the moment that Adam sinned to promise to give
His life in humanity's place, Scripture calls Him "The Lamb slain from the foundation of the
world" (Revelation 13:8). As soon as death cast its palling shadow across the doorway of
humanity, Jesus stuck His foot in the door. He promised to give His life in place of ours,
unilaterally intervening, granting opportunity to receive salvation.
Adam and Christ
We pick up the contrast in Romans 5:15:
But not as the offence, so also is the free gift. For if through the offence of one many be dead,
much more the grace of God, and the gift by grace, which is by one man, Jesus Christ, hath
abounded unto many.
Through the offense of one, this verse views many as dead. Romans 5:12 stated clearly that
"death passed upon all men for that all have sinned." The Bible everywhere makes clear that our
own sins condemn us, not the sins of our ancestors or descendants. We are born with weakness
(Romans 5:6), but not with guilt or in guilt. Weakened through Adam, all since have made their
own choice to follow the inclinations of that fatal revision of human nature, to sin, and thus it is
as if all are standing in line waiting to receive their chosen fate -- eternal destruction. But along
that pathway stands One pleading with everyone passing over it. Jesus offers to take the place of
everyone who has sinned, to release them from that single-file procession of death.
"Much more the grace of God, and the gift by grace, which is by one Man, Jesus Christ, hath
abounded to many." Everyone can step aside from that line and enter life eternal. But they must
accept the one Man, Jesus Christ and all that that acceptance means. Whereas sin reigned unto
death through Adam, the reign of grace through righteousness comes through Jesus Christ. Next
isRomans 5:16):
And not as it was by one that sinned, so is the gift: for the judgment was by one to
condemnation, but the free gift is of many offences unto justification.
Through Adam, judgment and condemnation have settled over guilty humanity as a vulture upon
the carrion. By that departure of Adam and Eve from the right the whole race was turned into a
band of cutthroats. Naturally we now cleave to the evil; it is our nature. "But thanks be to God,
which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ," (1 Corinthians 15:57). The gift of
Christ is not like the offense of Adam. By Adam's moral failure, the race was ruined. By Christ's
moral victory -- and that gained in the fallen flesh of Adam -- "the free gift is of many offenses
unto justification." That is, the gift is comprehensive. It covers our entire need. We have
committed many offences, and so we need a full-featured form of justification.
Obedience Goes to the Cross
Adam sinned once and led the race to ruin. But Jesus lived without sinning even one day of His
life for 33 years, took that obedience to the cross, signed-off there on the penalty for sin, and
with His much more abounding flourish, granted us release from bondage; even the power to live
righteous lives putting His life in our place. He went to heaven, into the heavenly sanctuary from
whence He now transmits the effectual power of His atonement not only to forgive but to heal;
not only to pardon, but to cleanse from all unrighteousness.
The free gift is "of many offenses unto justification." It is sufficient to heal all the open wounds
of sin we've compiled into our experience, and go beyond to make us actually right with God. It
is not an outward white-wash, but an inward washing-white. When David repented He asked
God not merely to forgive him, but to "create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit
within me" (Psalm 51:10).
Now Romans 5:17:
For if by one man's offence death reigned by one; much more they which receive abundance of
grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by One, Jesus Christ.
Death reigned by one. Adam bought us all an involuntary ticket to the morgue. Whether we
receive the penalty of eternal death or not, we do all at least go down into the first death, the
sleep death. But see, "much more they which receive" go into the reign of grace. Indeed, this
verse even puts it that they themselves reign "by One, Jesus Christ."
Abundance Waiting for those Willing to receive It
How do we get to that? By receiving abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness. Notice
that the reign of grace doesn't come through a simplistic, narrow, or convenient slice of
translucent forgiveness hacked off the edge of the gospel. Forgiveness is only part of a package
deal. God forgives and He cleanses. He's not content to give us just the table-scraps of grace,
halfway solutions. He gives us "abundance" of grace. That's just the kind of God our God is. The
smallest portion He gives is more than we can make change for. Thus salvation is all of God, and
has in it not one thread of human devising -- not one fragment or figment of saving credit goes to
us, but still we cooperate. Still the "much more" of the gospel is for "they which receive." And
all can receive. If they're willing.
Are you willing?
See, what this means is more than many have heard of. When you ask Jesus to forgive you of
your sins, and take you, and be your personal Savior, it means that you are saying, "Jesus, I am
willing to go so far as even to receive the gift of righteousness." Are you willing to let God make
you right?
All of this is available through the gospel. Look with wide eyes at Romans 5:18:
Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by the
righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life.
Through Adam's sin, a race was lost. Through Christ's obedience, a race is saved (if we are
willing to be saved). Notice ultimately, "for that all have sinned," judgment came upon all men
unto condemnation." How many are excepted here? None! "All men" stand condemned and
needing salvation. But just as all stand in need, so through our Lord Jesus Christ all have
received something. Read it again: "Even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon
all men unto justification of life."
By what Jesus did, "the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life." Listen, how many
people did Jesus taste death for? The Bible says for "every man" (Hebrews 2:9). The free gift is
for everyone who will receive it.
Jesus in the Pathway
O friends! Jesus stands alongside that single-file line of death. He urges everyone living to
receive His precious O so precious free gift. He has tasted death for you and for me. See,
everyone has to go past Christ if he would confirm his fealty to sin. Everyone has to say, "excuse
me Jesus, but I'm on my way to destruction, please step aside," in order to be lost. Everyone at
some point is confronted with the cross in their pathway. Jesus has wrought out "justification of
life" for every man.
Friends, whatever we may have acquired through Adam, is cancelled out by what Jesus has done.
And it's a gift, so there is no merit from us in it. It is given to all. The gift has landed at every
doorstep. UPS has come. The precious package has been delivered. But some will refuse to open
it. How sad that is, for how available God's grace is. For Romans 5:19 tells us that " For as by
one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be
made righteous."
One man's disobedience led the race to ruin. All chose to follow their weakened inclinations to
the dust of death. But "by the obedience of One" our Lord would make "many" what? Come
now, say it: "righteous." Not only the limited expectation of being "counted" righteous, but here
we have it --no question about it -- "made" righteous.
That's what grace does. Grace makes righteous.
What real people need is not the phony kind of grace limited to forgiveness and hopeless living
in the fallen humanity we're all born with. What we need is the kind of grace that makes
righteous. Again, that's real grace for real people. So practical. So lovely. So desirable.
Real Grace Makes a Difference
The chapter closes with Romans 5:20-21:
Moreover the law entered, that the offence might abound. But where sin abounded, grace did
much more abound: That as sin hath reigned unto death, even so might grace reign through
righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord.
One quality about grace we can be sure of, it "much more" abounds. Sin reigned unto death. It
entered through poor Adam. But Jesus had mercy on the race. As soon as there was sin there was
a Savior. He stuck His foot in the door as soon as sin entered. He said, "Here I shall intervene.
The reign of sin was put on notice from day one. Jesus would come. Jesus would bring real
grace. And real grace would make a difference on this planet of pain, and reign through non-
fictional righteousness unto eternal life.
Hear now these lines in closing, from none other than E. J. Waggoner speaking to this verse over
a century ago:
The Bible does not teach us that God calls us righteous simply because Jesus of Nazareth was
righteous eighteen hundred years ago. It says that by His obedience we are made righteous.
Notice that it is present, actual righteousness. The trouble with those who object to the
righteousness of Christ being imputed to believers is that they do not take into consideration the
fact that Jesus lives. He is alive today, as much as when He was in Judea. "He ever liveth," and
He is "the same yesterday, and today, and forever." His life is as perfectly in harmony with the
law now as it was then. And He lives in the hearts of those who believe on Him. Therefore it is
Christ's present obedience in believers that makes them righteous. They can of themselves do
nothing, and so God in His love does it in them . . . . People are not simply counted righteous,
but actually made righteous, by the obedience of Christ, who is as righteous as He ever was, and
who lives today in those who yield to Him. His ability to live in any human being is shown in the
fact that He took human flesh eighteen hundred years ago. What God did in the person of the
Carpenter of Nazareth, He is willing and anxious to do in every man that believes. (Waggoner on
Romans, p. 101-102).
Friends, there is real grace for us in Romans Five. Our lives are to be changed by
this real gospel --this real grace. Throw out the old version if it doesn't match these Scriptures.
God stands ready through the One who went up to the cross to raise you up with Christ in
newness of life.
In this hour we've come to, nothing less will get us through. Cling to our Jesus brothers and
sisters. O cling to Him. He ever liveth to restore real people. And to that may we all say: amen.
Real Grace for Real People
Episode 5
Real Grace in Romans 6-8
This presentation doesn't deal exhaustively with Romans six, which you will find some
discussion of in Real Grace for Real People.
Introduction
We live in a society based on the "excuse" plan. That is, instead of being responsible people, we
tend to discover, search for, invent, and subscribe to excuses. So often we look for the answer to
our problems outside of ourself. "I'm not the problem." Ever heard anyone say that? Haven't we
all said it at one time or another? And probably there have been occasions where we weren't the
main part of the problem. But more often than not, the truth be told, we manage, if nothing else,
to contribute to the problem.
But this is a church and this is a Sabbath morning worship service, and we are Christians.
Somehow Christians are exempt from this, right? No. Christians have often been coaxed into
viewing God's plan of salvation as a universal patch-it kit. Whatever we don't get fixed in our life
before it closes--before heaven makes a determination whether we really let Jesus be our
personal Savior in the way He had in mind or not--whatever is left is supposed to be filled in,
covered over, patched-up, by God's "grace." Thus we are saved.
Well, a solid look into the Bible is going to lead us to revise that kind of thinking. But instead of
taking on the whole thing, let's, on this Sabbath morning, look into one of the common excuses
current among Christians. The one I am thinking of runs more or less like this: "I have a fallen
nature, and so everything I do is tainted with sin anyway. So God doesn't really expect me to
overcome, but just to try real hard and then He'll make up the difference. I am so glad for grace."
Let's work on this. Let's take a spiritual look today at what the Bible says about real grace and
our situation. Romans chapters six through eight speak of the situation we are in as regarding our
body. For example, Romans 6:6 says, "Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with Him, that
the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin." Romans 7:24 states
"O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?"
And Romans 8:10 records "And if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin; but the
Spirit is life because of righteousness." So, some say that because of our fallen nature we have an
excuse to sin. Perhaps to some it may look that way for the moment. Don't plan on God leaving
us there though. Let's try to get a handle on some of these statements. What is this "body of sin"?
An Excuse for Failure to Overcome?
Whatever it is, notice carefully what verse six says about it: "Our old man is crucified with Him."
The result? The destruction or at least the rendering inoperative of the "old man," with the result
that after that "we should not serve sin." Now let's realize something. The body of sin is
something that can be overcome through the power of heaven applied to the life. Romans
6:12 says, "Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey it in the lusts
thereof." Yes, the body pulls on us from the inside, it urges us, because our natures are fallen, to
indulge ourselves in selfishness at whatever cost. Sin wants to reign in our mortal body. But does
a Christian permit it to reign?
The fallen nature must never rule the Christian. The mortal body is a broken body. We should
not obey the impulse to sin arising from our mortal body. But without God's help we are
powerless to overcome our nature. From time to time in its own best interest, our nature might
make a change. We've heard of unconverted, non-Christian people getting victory over smoking
or other self-destructive vices. But even some who are controlled by their fallen nature can
readily see that it is in their own best, selfish interest to make such a change.
But in Christianity, a person living under grace is not living so as to perpetually offer excuses for
those animalistic pulls from his nature toward selfish indulgence; instead he lives under the reign
of grace where the Spirit of God is at work to change what we are into what God knows we want
to be. God's Spirit is a Workman deeply desiring to remake us in His image.
But what about the experience of Paul? Why does he say in Romans seven that he can't do what
he wants to do? Is this all that we can hope for in a Christian experience? Is that grace? Why
does he finally cry out, "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this
death?" (Romans 7:24).
I mean, it sounds as if he has an excuse for failing to overcome. He has a body just like you and
I, and appears here to call it "the body of this death." Isn't that what you and I have? Don't we
know by experience the "O wretched man that I am" feeling? Yes, we darkly do. But consider
Paul's next words: not an excuse, but an explanation.
"I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. So then with the mind I myself serve the law of
God; but with the flesh the law of sin" (Romans 7:25). Paul is not saying that he can't obey God's
law, but rather that he can obey it when he makes the right choice. "So then with the mind I
myself serve the law of God." Nor is it his mind on its own apart from God's supernatural power.
He wants to obey God, but he has not the power within himself. So he turns to God to provide it.
Will Worship?
To some this may sound like "will-worship" (Colossians 2:23). But the will is a crucial part of
the image of God in man. It is no exaggeration to say that everything depends upon the right
action of the will. Paul's complaint about the Colossian's "will-worship" is not difficult ot
understand. They added numerous rules and regulations "after the commandments and
doctrines of men" (Colossians 2:22). Obeying the commandments and doctrines of God is not
will worship but God worship. "If you love Me," said Jesus, "Keep My commandments" (John
14:15). Mindless asceticism -- being hard on your body as some kind of payment to a God who
is hard on your soul -- is not heaven's plan. But what God asks is only our "reasonable service"
(Romans 12:1). Woe to those misguided Christians who chip away at what God requires by
teaching even the breaking of the least of His commandments.
Do you recall what Jesus said in Matthew 18:3? It goes like this: "Verily I say unto you, Except
ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven."
Some count it as the highest achievement when the Christian begins to question everything. Now
God doesn't mind our questions, but He urges us to have faith more than doubt, humility more
than self-conceited intellectualism. Little children obey more and ask questions less. Our service
is not to be unthinking, but is to be unwavering. We are to cultivate faith and obedience rather
than the other.
Legalism and the Psychological War
Some would have us think our having a burning desire to obey God is a form of legalism. Well,
such "legalism" is a fantasy they have dreamed up to satisfy their own inward sophistries. All we
like sheep have gone astray. We all have, buried deep within ourselves, the seed of self-
destruction. But it will be determined by the trend of our own personality whether we water the
seed with justifications for sin leading to pride, or sin leading to dissipation and self-hate.
Satan's deceptions take many forms. To the spiritually "advanced," nose-in-the-air, "I'm so
spiritual that I've gone beyond obedience" crowd, Satan offers a form of Christianity in which all
borderlines of truth are muted. Lacking such definition, the self-declared spiritually elite can
meander through the fields of his own sins, selectively indulging while all the while telling
himself that he is a servant of God. Perhaps even thinking himself to be one whom God would
have press forward in helping the deluded "fundamentalists."
To the person caught in a trap of low self-respect, even in some form of self-hatred, the devil
launches other deceptions, chief among them perhaps even the thought, "Well, maybe I am a
legalist after all, as they've been saying so long." O mark it well Christian; Satan's schemes
always lead to the breaking of God's law, for this is how souls are destroyed. Satan's plan is
always to attack God's law. But he has learned how to do it with all the subtlety for which he is
so renowned.
Satan wants to take advantage of our good intentions. He wants to confuse us by means of our
conscience. So the Christian, who humbly is seeking for what is right is bombarded with these
subtle inward insinuations about being too pious, trying too hard, seeking to be saved by one's
works, etc. Watch out dear children! What does the devil do? He goes about like a roaring lion
seeking whom he can devour, right? Don't miss something in that passage. You see, the reason a
lion roars is to strike fear into his pray; it's not to let you know he's coming, it is to cause you to
fear. And that's just exactly what he's been doing to Adventists. Only his roar comes in subtle
tones carefully modulated to put you off your guard.
The lion's roar today is, "You're obsessing with standards." "Ah, you're one of the 'concerned
brethren.'" "That's very literalist of you." "Brother, you're doing that because of tradition."
"You're a raving fundamentalist." "You propose a yo-yo form of salvation." One book published
a few years ago (1994) even suggests that an interest in character perfection will lead to
"insanity." Then of course there are all the variants on legal: "legalist," legal-thinker," "Pharisee,"
"narrow," "fundamentalist," "fundamentalistic-person," "black-and-white thinker," etc. The list
of epithets applied by those revising the gospel of Adventism today seems beyond exhaustion.
And what is it all? It is the sound of the lion's roar. They are trying to shout down the truth, not
merely to drown it out, but to prevent even its verbal or written expression. Can we wonder that
at this time God has seen fit to let the internet unleash itself upon the world? If the pulpit goes
silent, He will give His message through other means. "I have set watchmen upon thy walls, O
Jerusalem, which shall never hold their peace day nor night: ye that make mention of the Lord
keep not silence" (Isaiah 62:6).
When you hear the lion's roar, realize that he is roaring because it is he who is afraid. He doesn't
want you to see or hear or give the real thing! So he roars. He will roar until his lion teeth fall
out. Watch out. He is seeking to devour you. He wants to scare you with words, with the
attitudes you may fear your friends at church will begin to entertain about you if you become too
earnest. Watch out. This is the hour of his power, the power of darkness; don't fail now, right as
we approach the point of testing. Realize, the great tests are still coming. Don't cave now; don't
sell out now. Things are just starting really to get interesting!
Quickened by His Spirit
We may look to our weakened humanity for an excuse not to obey. But there is a solution to this.
Listen:
"For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh; but they that are after the Spirit
the things of the Spirit. For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded is life and
peace. Because the carnal mind is enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law of God,
neither indeed can be. So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God. But ye are not in the
flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any men have not the
Spirit of Christ, he is none of His. And if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin; but
the Spirit is life because of righteousness. But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the
dead dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies
by His Spirit that dwelleth in you. Therefore, brethren, we are debtors, not to the flesh, to live
after the flesh. For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die: but if ye through the Spirit do mortify
the deeds of the body, ye shall live. For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons
of God" (Romans 8:5-14).
The mind is where all the decisions are made, even those characterized by the "fleshly" agenda.
To be carnally ("fleshly") minded is death. But to be spiritually (filled with the presence and
motivations of the Holy Spirit) minded is life and peace. The fleshly mind is an enemy of God. It
refuses to obey Him. "So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God." This explains what
Paul was saying when he cried out "O wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this
body of death?" He stated the same thing later when he said that the carnal mind "is not subject
to the law of God, neither indeed can be."
What then of the Christian? "But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit
of God dwell in you." Is the Spirit of God dwelling inside of the nonchristian? No. Is the Spirit of
God dwelling inside of the Christian person? Yes. So if the Spirit of God is dwelling inside of
you, then are you in the flesh? No -- you are in the Spirit! Can you have the Spirit in you and not
have Christ in you? Never! "And if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin; but the
Spirit is life because of righteousness."
If Christ is in you, the body is dead because of sin. Remember, we are "planted together in the
likeness of His death" (Romans 6:5). "As many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were
baptized into His death" (Romans 6:3).
I'm not talking so much about a mystical union here. Much more, I am talking about the fact that
Jesus offers His perfect life in place of your imperfect life in the heavenly sanctuary right now
from the chamber room of the most holy place in heaven. Before the Father He pleads His life in
the place of your life. But He doesn't merely say, "Accept My life in the place of this unchanged
sinner," but rather, "Father, because My life was given in place of his life, and You accepted it,
today I am here in heaven interceding. He has prayed to be changed inwardly, and with Your
permission I have sent him overcoming power, and he has accepted it. Because of mercy He has
received Your grace, and he is a changed person because of it."
Crucified With Christ
But what could this Scripture mean that if Christ is in us, then "the body is dead because of sin"?
Consider Galatians 2:20: "I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ
liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who
loved me, and gave Himself for me." Paul says he is crucified with Christ, and yet he (Paul)
lives. But that makes sense, for Christ was crucified and today He (Christ) lives. But Paul says
that the life that is in him is not his own, but that "Christ liveth in me." Now notice this too. He
says he is living life now "in the flesh." He is not living a life of fleshliness, but he is living life
obedient now while Still dwelling in fallen flesh. That is because if you permit the Spirit of God
to be in you, then you can live in fallen flesh and be victorious all the way anyway. "The Spirit is
life because of righteousness."
"The body is dead because of sin," because Jesus paid the penalty for sin when He expired on the
cross for humankind. The body was condemned, so it died in figure with Jesus on the cross. We
had no part in atonement, but we had part in condemnation. It was Jesus whom God called back
out of the grave, who resurrected, not us. We made no offering accepted by God; our lives were
unacceptable, condemnable, and suitable for destruction.
No friends, the law has no power for man. It condemns. But it also illumines. And then the Spirit
of God can work for us, for then only do we sense our need. What we need is the righteousness
of God. And this righteousness He is more than willing to supply.
Mark you, this righteousness does not come by means of the law. The law is not its source. Only
the divine is the source for our righteousness. Only through Jesus Christ may we attain unto
righteousness, but through Him we may indeed attain unto real righteousness. Even I say, the
righteousness of the law. For the Scripture saith, "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, who walk
not after the flesh, but after the Spirit" (Romans 8:3-4). If you don't believe this, then your
argument is not with me. I'm just the preacher. Your argument is with God.
Who are Christ's? "They that are Christ's have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts"
(Galatians 5:24). Colossians 1:22 says that we have been reconciled by Christ "In the body of
His flesh through death, to present you holy and unblameable and unreproveable in His sight."
The death of Christ on the cross for us accomplishes something brothers and sisters. If we will
lay hold-- truly lay hold of what God has there done for us -- we shall be presented before God as
"holy," "unblameable," and "unreproveable" in His sight. And His sight is all-penetrating.
Nothing is hidden from Him with whom we have to do. His word is a discerner of the thoughts
and intents of the heart (Hebrews 4:12).
Made Complete in Him Through His Power
We are made complete in Christ in whom dwells all power. Is that power ineffectual, quiescent,
a glowing electrical spastic nothingness since it is not applied to us? I think not. God longs to
apply His power to us. But He won't do it without our consent, and so so many of us remain
powerless. It is more convenient to be powerless. It makes a great excuse. So since God won't
help me I'm doomed to go on the tired way, sinning and living, sinning and living, until I come
to my end and discover that the wages of sin is death of an eternal duration.
Consider the testimony of Colossians 2:11-12 which says of Christ that in Him "we are
circumcised with the circumcision made without hands, in putting off the body of the sins of the
flesh by the circumcision of Christ: buried with Him in baptism, wherein also ye are risen with
Him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised Him from the dead." Just as
Christ now appears in heaven in a tabernacle not made with hands, one He pitched and not man,
so too He offers us the circumcision made without hands. It is the circumcision of Christ's heart
applied to our own.
Steadfastly our Savior resisted the temptation to indulge His humanity. His example of how to
live would have been ruined for us had He consented to respond to the flesh. So He didn't. His
burial therefore means the incapacitation of our fallen nature; no longer does it hold controlling
power over us. The "motions of sins" (Romans 7:5) which had been the outworking of our
broken nature in our thoughts and behavior are neutralized. Now we are risen with Christ. Now
our members become "instruments of righteousness" (Romans 6:13).
The Counterfeit is Growing Bold
We must guard against automatically assuming that if we seem to be persecuted, it's because we
are living godly in Christ Jesus; we can never assume that we've spiritually "arrived." But at the
same time it is true that real grace, effectually working in our lives as we cooperate with God's
Spirit will in fact lead us to live lives that are godly in Christ Jesus, and our bodies will become
"instruments of righteousness." Don't be surprised if your life warm with the presence of God's
Spirit brings out the coldness in others -- even in the church. It is a starkly blinking red glowing
sign of our age that not only in the world outside our borders but more than ever within the
precincts of the church we find departure from right.
How many in our day pride themselves on their enlightenment, walking in a theological dream-
world of their own making and their own mind. Tripping in the dazzling glare of a "progressive"
approach to Christianity, they truly seek that which is the least spiritual, has the least of Christ's
cross in it, is the least humiliating to their broken nature. Whatever theory they concoct or is
concocted for them they slurp up in haste, for it provides a means of quieting the violated
conscience. What they desire is a method of forgetting God which shall pass as a method of
remembering Him. And this they find.
Two classes of religionist revel in this new version of grace. Those who would be saved in their
sins, and those who would be saved by their merits. The borderlines of sin are explained away in
intellectual smoke-signals opening the door for whatever sin one would like to bask in, while the
other class attains to salvation by their advancement in accommodation and "maturity." When
you get to the place where you can call evil good and good evil, you've arrived.
May God have mercy on us pastors in the day of judgment (as you know we already are in) for
being unbarking dogs and blind watchmen. We have slept at our posts and the enemy has entered
the camp in force. He has brought in a blurry theological mixture he calls "grace," and stupidly
we have swallowed great drafts from the poisonous cup.
The gospel of God's grace breaks the power of the body of sin. Whether we understand that body
to be the fallen human nature we bear, or the habit patterns of sin built up over years, or
whatever we may think it to be, if we will be "in the Spirit" rather than under the bondage of our
flesh, God will have His way and our lives will thrill with the victory.
Conclusion
What is stronger brothers and sisters? The power of the body twisted by sin or the power of the
Creator who gives grace? If sin abounds, if there is much of it, isn't it true that grace more
abounds, that there is much more power in grace than there can be in sin? Real grace means real
life in the Spirit, real victory. It means the effective creative power of Christ in the life. His
power makes worlds and remakes sinners. It gives hope to the hopeless. It takes away our
excuses and replaces them with our praises. We are buried with Him by baptism into death, that
like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should
walk in newness of life. Let this be our prayer.
Real Grace for Real People
Episode 6
Real Grace at the Wedding Feast
Grace and the Great Controversy
Grace -- real grace -- is in good supply, but so few of God's people embrace it. I have no doubt
that when a preacher determines to prepare a message on grace a platoon of demons are
immediately dispatched to look over his shoulder to overwhelm his mind with darkened wave of
well-crafted deceptions. The demons, if they can, will cause him to veer far afield from the truth.
Have you heard of what is today called the having of a "grace orientation," said to mean "the
unconditional love of God and salvation as an unearned gift"?
Be careful of your definitions. Statements can be true in what they state, but misleading in what
they do not say. God's love is unconditional, but is it true that to follow that idea through to its
logical outcome is to understand that "salvation is totally in God's hands"? Be careful. Is
salvation "totally" in God's hands? Consider the parable brothers and sisters, of the wedding
garment:
And Jesus answered and spake unto them again by parables, and said, The kingdom of heaven is
like unto a certain king, which made a marriage for his son, And sent forth his servants to call
them that were bidden to the wedding: and they would not come. Again, he sent forth other
servants, saying, Tell them which are bidden, Behold, I have prepared my dinner: my oxen and
my fatlings are killed, and all things are ready: come unto the marriage. But they made light of it,
and went their ways, one to his farm, another to his merchandise: And the remnant took his
servants, and entreated them spitefully, and slew them. But when the king heard thereof, he was
wroth: and he sent forth his armies, and destroyed those murderers, and burned up their city.
Then saith he to his servants, The wedding is ready, but they which were bidden were not
worthy. Go ye therefore into the highways, and as many as ye shall find, bid to the marriage. So
those servants went out into the highways, and gathered together all as many as they found, both
bad and good: and the wedding was furnished with guests. And when the king came in to see the
guests, he saw there a man which had not on a wedding garment: And he saith unto him, Friend,
how camest thou in hither not having a wedding garment? And he was speechless. Then said the
king to the servants, Bind him hand and foot, and take him away, and cast him into outer
darkness; there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. For many are called, but few are chosen
(Matthew 22:1-14).
Our King, the Father, made a marriage for His Son, Jesus. All humanity was called to the
wedding. In fact, the wedding itself is a figure of the plan of salvation, the union of humanity
with divinity. Don't get me wrong; by this I simply mean that God is working-out His plan to
remove sin from His universe so that we can dwell in His presence as restored beings. But there
is a problem of vast proportion; humanity has corrupted itself, become broken. Meanwhile, God
is holy, and His holy law still stands, still defines the boundary line between heaven's
selfless morality and the bitter selfishness of Satan's kingdom. And countless beings scattered
throughout the creation of God look on as Satan's charges that God's law is unfair echo through
heaven. Every angelic mind is focused on the question, Can God really be both just and the
Justifier of fallen humans who have believed on Jesus? (Romans 3:26).
Failure of the Hebrews
Yes, all humanity was called to the wedding. But first the Hebrew nation was called. To that
people God had granted special privileges. Massive was their responsibility to live-out and to
share what they had been given. They had been granted special opportunities, including being
made keepers of the oracles of God (Romans 9:4). To them were given the covenants, and the
promise of Messiah to come through their race.
But history records a sad fact. Through long ages they persisted in going the wrong way from
God. After every intervention by heaven, in short order they would depart straight-away from
His will and plunge back into wickedness. With all their opportunities, the results showed little
more than their deep indifference to God's spiritually-based kingdom. And so finally at the
rejection of His entreaties He rejected them as a unique people, and went beyond.
Oh, there would still be a people in which God would succeed in combining humanity with
divinity-- there would still be a successful follow-through on the plan of redemption -- there
would still be manifested before the onlooking universe the result of His plan of grace: sons and
daughters of God would be produced. But now the tree of Israel was expanded. The unwilling
nation was snipped out of it and the willing were grafted in. Israel remained, but the wild-shoots
were grafted in. God would furnish His wedding with guests.
He called and called and called. But they would not come. In sorrow and in anger He thus
declares "they which were bidden were not worthy." You see, one had to be "worthy" to attend
the wedding. One had to be part of the Father's kingdom instead of part of Satan's
kingdom. Romans five outlines for us the fact that there are two kingdoms vying for our fealty
today: a kingdom of sin and death, and a kingdom of righteousness and grace. Those adhering to
the kingdom of sin and death wish to have no part with the King, no matter how benevolent He
is. They refuse to come to the wedding, refuse to give up their old nature and become (as the
Scripture says), "partakers of the divine nature" (2 Peter 1:4).
A Desperate Need
The fallen nature of humanity is broken. It must be healed. It cleaves exclusively to itself; it has
no place for anyone else or for even its only means of healing. Jesus, Yeshuah, Salvation, is no
savior or salvation to the fallen nature. He is its destruction. Our nature refuses to be renewed; it
is the nature of a devil. It is an unworthy nature.
So how do we get to "worthiness"? It can't be done on our own apart from God, because we have
no power to improve ourselves. But there is a way; there is a means of preparation; there is an
experience whereby we may have our part in the wedding feast.
But it is only possible through real grace.
Real grace changes people. And we need to be changed people. We all must be ready for the
wedding, and we can't be ready by just wishing it or going "as we are." The invitation comes to
us as we are, but to go in to the wedding means to accept our King's plans for preparation.
What did we discover in the parable? Just before the wedding began the king went in and
inspected the guests present at the wedding. This wedding was no common affair. Remember, it
was actually a figure of the plan of salvation, the union of humanity with divinity. God wants to
change and restore people. They are invited to the wedding; they are invited to be changed.
How?
Let's look at it.
The Wedding Garment is Provided For Us
What did Jesus say? "Again, he sent forth other servants, saying, Tell them which are bidden,
Behold, I have prepared my dinner: my oxen and my fatlings are killed, and all things are ready:
come unto the marriage. But they made light of it, and went their ways." See what God says? "I
have prepared My dinner: My oxen and My fatlings are killed," and what? "all things are ready."
A moment later we read that "The wedding is ready." Do you see this? Before the King goes in
to inspect the guests, He has prepared everything. He has supplied the necessary nourishment to
successfully conduct the wedding feast!
Do you remember that powerful verse from 2 Peter 1:3: "According as His divine power hath
given unto us all things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of Him that
hath called us to glory and virtue." Now this verse cannot be true unless the King provides for the
guests what they need to attend the wedding. And what they need to attend the wedding feast is
nothing less than the very righteousness of Christ -- the wedding garment!
Turn with me to Revelation 3:18. Jesus urged His end-time people to do this: "Buy from Me gold
tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich and white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, and that
the shame of thy nakedness do not appear." Ointment for the eyes is needed too, so that we may
see. But let's keep our focus on the white raiment. What is that? The same book tells us. Turn to
Revelation 19:7-9, and notice: "Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honour to Him: for the
marriage of the Lamb is come, and [now watch this!] His wife hath made herself ready. And to
her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen, clean and white: for the fine linen is the
righteousness of saints. And he saith unto me, Write, Blessed are they which are called to the
marriage supper of the Lamb."
Now notice. This is the same book. Its third chapter speaks to us of the need of God's people in
the end of time to have "white raiment" so as to be clothed. The nineteenth chapter tells us that
this "clean and white" clothing is for "the marriage of the Lamb," and that the wife, the church,
has made herself ready, that she is wearing this garment, and that in actuality it is the
"righteousness of saints." Other translations call it "the righteous deeds of the saints."
A Righteousness Not Allowed
Now I hope you are paying close attention. What we have here is something that is not allowed
for in the conventional, popular, evangelical theology of salvation. The Bible presents the
situation as being that where there is salvation, there are deeds, behavior, acts, whichever label
you want to use, works even, of righteousness. Notice also that it is said of the bride that "She
hath made herself ready."
This is not allowed.
Nonetheless, this is the testimony of Scripture. What does it mean? Friends, there truly is a
cooperative part in the plan of salvation. Notice, "and to her was granted" that she would be
wearing the white garment, the righteousness of Christ. Only as a gift is her wearing of this
garment possible. And yet, we discover that the Bible uses the wording "she hath made herself
ready." Is heaven here trying to tell us that she merits some credit in salvation? That she has,
somehow, in some small degree, saved herself? No. All it is saying is that she cooperated with
her Savior's plan of redemption and He (the Savior) receives all the credit. All that this is saying
is that she cooperated. The gift of Christ's righteousness was never earned by her. "To her it was
granted." But when God gave her the wedding garment, she put it on.
Now maybe you are saying, "This is an abberation, a place where the Bible-writer used poor
wording, and now overmuch is being made of it." Turn to Revelation 7:13-14. There we read,
"And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are these which are arrayed in white
robes? And whence came they? And I said unto him, sir, thou knowest. And he said to me, These
are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white
in the blood of the Lamb."
These people "have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb." Did
they do it on their own, apart from God? Never. They needed access to the solvent, the blood of
the Lamb. But they cooperated with God. They "washed their robes."
Law Orientation or Disobedience Orientation?!
For a long time now Christians have been told otherwise than this. A new word has entered the
vocabulary: "legalism." If you are trying to obey God, it may be whispered that you have a "law
orientation," and not a "grace orientation." If you speak of conditions in the gospel, you are said
to be speaking of a "works salvation." All this, friends, is an attempt to shout down the real
gospel and replace it with a phony. Always when we seek to preach the authentic gospel, the one
the Adventist pioneers understood, this attack is made. The true gospel is being smeared friends,
by those who are its enemies.
By the way, did you know that the devil wants us to go to the wedding feast? That he wants us to
show up there along with everyone else who's going? That's a fact. He would prefer for you to
go. But he wants to send you through the doors into the palace as an unprepared person. He
knows this will mean your destruction. He knows the King is going to enter and inspect the
guests. So he has two tickets to paradise for you. One ticket says "sin and live," and the other
ticket says "the gospel is passive." That is, you can actively sin, and be passively saved. And this
he calls "grace."
It is forever true, everything that we of ourselves can do is defiled by sin. That is, stated another
way, everything that we try to do on our own apart from God is tainted by sin. We are fallen and
we cannot obey -- not without divine help. But we have divine help, if we will receive it. This
changes everything, because it involves real grace.
God's Golden Streets or Our Own Blacktop
Man constantly tries to manufacture a grace of his own. Constantly we are prone to seek to
supplement the road to heaven in some way, to add a stretch covered with our own blacktop. It is
true that humanity is at heart, in its fallen state, ever trying to climb up the salvation ladder some
other way, to add a rung or two of our own. But this is not the only trap. There is another one just
as destructive, and it is one we have to discuss and give a corrective for. This is the view that
believing in Jesus somehow releases us from the necessity of obeying God. It is said that since
by faith alone we become partakers of the grace of Christ, now our works have nothing to do
with our redemption that salvation is totally in God's hands.
But what happened back in our parable? The King, at the wedding feast and just immediately
before the wedding, comes in to see the guests. And there he finds "a man which had not on a
wedding garment: And he saith unto him, Friend, how camest thou in hither not having a
wedding garment? And he was speechless." If salvation is "totally in God's hands," then why is
this invitee to the wedding condemned for not wearing the wedding garment? In accordance with
eastern tradition, the king had provided the wedding garment. But the guest refused to put it on.
He came in his own clothes.
At great cost heaven has provided the garment of Christ's righteousness. What an insult it would
be not to put it on; to think we can appear before the King in our own righteousness. How
speechless we would be.
If our heart has been renewed by the Spirit of God, then our lives will show it. If we are wearing
the wedding garment, our lives will show it. The wedding garment is Christ's own righteousness.
Christ is God. God is love. If we put on Christ (Galatians 3:27; Romans 13:14), we put on love.
With this love poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit (Romans 5:5), what we are will be
changed. This supernatural love brings me the capacity to control my hasty ways. It protects me
against manifesting my selfish tendencies. It changes me and makes God now my friend and
Satan now my enemy. Drastic alterations come even in the motives that underlie my actions. If
this divine love is implanted in my soul, won't His law of love be carried out in my life? Can this
kind of love be put inside of me and I remain unloving still?
The so-called faith in Christ used as an excuse to release us from the necessity of obeying His
law is nothing but presumption. "By grace are ye saved through faith," but "faith, if it have not
works, is dead" (Ephesians 2:8; James 2:17). If you give yourself to Jesus, then no matter how
sinful your life may have been, for His sake you are accounted righteous. Christ's character
stands in place of your character. You are accepted before God is if you had never sinned. But
grace does more than this! There is a change in your heart when Jesus is present in it. By faith
we cling to Jesus, the connection to Him is kept open. We keep ourselves surrendered to Him
and He works in us to will and to do what He wants to do.
With Christ at work inside of us, we do the same good works that He did -- works of
righteousness, works that are obedient. Since we are sinful and unholy in our natures, we cannot
perfectly obey the law of God, we cannot make ourselves righteous. We must have Christ in us,
changing the whole equation. We have, originating inside of us, nothing of which to boast, but
Christ's righteousness is imputed to us and the same righteousness of God is imparted in us and
through us by the work of the Holy Spirit. When we put on the wedding garment, then the
righteousness of the law is fulfilled in us (Romans 8:4).
What then? Do we receive any credit personally for being saved? Not at all. In the garment of
salvation of which we speak there is not one thread or stitch of anything produced by a man or a
woman apart from God. God is in it. Jesus came and lived in a fallen human body without
sinning. By His perfect obedience, He made it possible for every human being to obey God's
commandments. If it is possible to obey the commandments of God, then where is your or my
excuse for sinning? We no longer have one. The power to obey is not in the human agent. It is in
God. So we must put on the garment.
How astonishing the fact that so many have today been taught such a brutal lie. They expect to
be saved by Christ's death, while they refuse to live His self-denying life. They rant about what
they call grace, and seek to cover themselves with the appearance of righteousness. But many
don't care to be transformed by Jesus. Under a distortion of grace they shelter themselves from
the real bankruptcy and shallowness of their spirituality. But the righteousness of Christ will not
cover even the smallest cherished sin -- not one.
Sin is the forgotten doctrine of our time. "The wages of sin is death," death I say, "but the gift of
God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Romans 6:23). Getting a grip on what real
grace is is a matter of eternal life or eternal death.
A Wedding Furnished With Guests Because of Real Grace
Now you might say, "Pastor, I thought we were going to follow the word 'grace' through the
Bible. But in this parable that word does not appear." Agreed. The literal word "grace" does not
here appear. But grace is still here. After all, this parable speaks to us of God changing a people,
making them "meet" (Colossians 1:12) to be "partakers of the inheritance of the saints of light."
The word used in the parable is "worthy."
That's an astonishing word. After all, we are so unworthy. In us is no good thing; in us is no
latent righteousness. We aren't inert, just needing a little push from God to become good; we are
disasterously bad, and it will take everything God has to change us. If the righteous man is only
"just barely saved," where will the sinner appear? (1 Peter 4:18). Well, the sinner won't appear in
heaven. But the righteous man at least will. And why will he? Why will he be there? Because
Jesus proved that divinity and humanity combined can fully obey God's law. The only man or
woman who will ever be righteous will be the man or woman who puts on Christ, who lets him
put His righteousness in him and upon him. (Romans 3:22).
Brothers and sisters, the King is coming. He has prepared a wedding for His Son. Have you put
on His robe of righteousness? Are you ready for the wedding?
Don't forget. Jesus worked His first ministerial miracle at a wedding. I don't believe that He has
stopped. There is real grace at the wedding feast. We cannot earn our salvation -- not for a
moment. But if we have given ourselves to God, if His Spirit is in us, then "how shall we that are
dead to sin live any longer in it?" (Romans 6:2).
The wedding has been furnished with guests. The guests have been furnished with robes. The
robes have been wrought out by Christ. On that day when we meet again, when our tear-ducts
have been emptied in joyful reunions and even the physical embrace of our Lord Jesus, make
sure you are there. The way things are going, that day may arrive sooner than we think. God
gather us there then. May not one be missing. We ask it in Jesus' name. Amen.