- Righteousness
by Faith
- Lessons on Faith
- By A. T. Jones
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- Chapter 11 Shall
it be Grace or Son?
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It can never be repeated too often, that under
the reign of grace it is just as easy to do right, as under the
reign of sin it is easy to do wrong. This must be so, for if
there is not more power in grace than there is in sin, then there
can be no salvation from sin. But there is salvation from sin.
This no one who believes Christianity can deny.
Yet salvation from sin certainly depends upon
there being more power in grace than there is in sin. Then, there
being more power in grace than there is in sin, it cannot possibly
be otherwise than that wherever the power of grace can have control,
it will be just as easy to do right as without this it is easy
to do wrong.
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- No man ever yet naturally found it difficult
to do wrong. His great difficulty has always been to do right.
But this is because man naturally is enslaved to a power--the
power of sin--that is absolute in its reign. And so long as that
power has sway, it is not only difficult but impossible to do
the good that he knows and that he would. But let a mightier
power than that have sway, then is it not plain enough that it
will be just as easy to serve the will of the mightier power,
when it reigns, as it was to serve the will of the other power,
when it reigned?
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- But grace is not simply more powerful
than is sin. If this were indeed all, even then there would be
fullness of hope and good cheer to every sinner in the world.
But this, good as it would be, is not all. It is not nearly all.
There is much more power in grace than there is in sin. For "where
sin abounded, grace did much more abound." And just as much
more power in grace than there is in sin, just so much more hope
and good cheer there are for every sinner in the world.
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- How much more power, then, is there in
grace than there is in sin? Let me think a moment. Let me ask
myself a question or two. Whence comes grace? From God, to be
sure. "Grace be unto you, and peace, from God our Father,
and from the Lord Jesus Christ." Whence comes sin? From
the devil, of course. Sin is of the devil, for the devil sinneth
from the beginning. Well, then, how much more power is there
in grace than there is in sin? It is as plain as ABC that there
is just as much more power in grace than there is in sin, as
there is more power in God than there is in the devil. It is
therefore also perfectly plain that the reign of grace is the
reign of God, and that the reign of sin is the reign of Satan.
And is it not therefore perfectly plain also that it is just
as easy to serve God by the power of God as it is to serve Satan
with the power of Satan?
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- Where the difficulty comes in, in all
this, is that so many people try to serve God with the power
of Satan. But that can never be done. "Either make the tree
good and his fruit good, or else make the tree corrupt and his
fruit corrupt." Men cannot gather grapes of thorns nor figs
of thistles. The tree must be made good, root and branch. It
must be made new. "Ye must be born again." "In
Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth anything nor uncircumcision,
but a new creature." Let no one ever attempt to serve God
with anything but the present, living power of God that makes
him a new creature, with nothing but the much more abundant grace
that condemns sin in the flesh and reigns through righteousness
unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. Then the service
of God will indeed be in "newness of life." Then it
will be found that His yoke is indeed "easy" and His
burden "light." Then His service will be found indeed
to be with "joy unspeakable and full of glory."
- Did Jesus ever find it difficult to do
right? Every one will instantly say, No. But why? He was just
as human as we are. He took flesh and blood the same as ours.
"The Word was made flesh and dwelt among us." And the
kind of flesh that He was made in this world was precisely such
as was in this world. "In all things it behooved him to
be made like unto his brethren." "In all things!"
It does not say, In all things but one. There is no exception.
He was made in all things like as we are. He was of Himself as
weak as we are, for He said, "I can of mine own self do
nothing."
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- Why, then, being in all things like as
we are, did He find it always easy to do right? Because He never
trusted to Himself, but His trust was always in God alone. All
His dependence was upon the grace of God. He always sought to
serve God, only with the power of God. And therefore the Father
dwelt in Him, and did the works of righteousness. Therefore it
was always easy for Him to do right. But as He is, so are we
in this world. He has left us an example, that we should follow
His steps. "It is God which worketh in you both to will
and to do of his good pleasure," as well as in Him. All
power in heaven and in earth is given unto Him, and He desires
that you may be strengthened with all might, according to His
glorious power. "In him dwelleth all the fullness of the
Godhead bodily," and He strengthens you with might by His
Spirit in the inner man, that Christ may dwell in your heart
by faith, that you may be "filled with all the fullness
of God."
- True, Christ partook of the divine nature
and so do you if you are a child of promise and not of the flesh,
for by the promises ye are partakers of the divine nature. There
was nothing given to Him in this world and He had nothing in
this world that is not freely given to you or that you may not
have.
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- All this is in order that you may walk
in newness of life, that henceforth you may not serve sin, that
you may be the servant of righteousness only, that you may be
freed from sin, that sin may not have dominion over you, that
you may glorify God on the earth, and that you may be like Jesus.
And therefore "unto every one of us is given grace according
to the measure of the gift of Christ. . . . Till we all come
in the unity of the faith, and the knowledge of the Son of God,
unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fullness
of Christ." And I "beseech you also that ye receive
not the grace of God in vain."
- RH Sept. 1, 1896
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