- Righteousness
by Faith
- Glad Tidings
- By E.J. Waggoner
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- Chapter 3 Redeemed
from the Curse, to the Blessing of Abraham
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- THE two chapters of Galatians that we
have already studied give us sufficient idea of the entire book,
so that we can practically take leave of the Galatian brethren,
and consider it as addressed solely to us. The circumstances
that called forth the writing of the epistle were that the Galatians,
having accepted the Gospel, were led astray by false teachers,
who presented to them "another gospel," that is, a
counterfeit gospel, since there is but one for all time and for
all men. The way it was presented to them was, "Except ye
be circumcised after the manner of Moses, ye can not be saved."
Outward circumcision was given as a sign of righteousness which
the individual already possessed by faith. Rom.4:11. It was a
sign that the law was written in the heart by the Spirit, and
it was, therefore, only a mockery and a sham when the law was
transgressed. Rom.2:25-29. But for one to be circumcised in order
to be saved, was to put his trust in works of his own and not
in Christ. Now, although there is in these days no question as
to whether or not a man should submit to the specific rite of
circumcision in order to be saved, the question of salvation
itself, whether by human works or by Christ alone, is as live
a one as ever.
-
Instead of attacking their error, and combating
it with hard argument, the apostle begins with experience, the
relation of which illustrates the case in hand. In this narrative
he has occasion to show that salvation is wholly by faith, for
all men alike, and not in any degree by works. As Christ tasted
death for every man, so every man who is saved must have Christ's
personal experience of death and resurrection and life. Christ
in the flesh does what the law could not do. Gal.2:21; Rom.8:3,4.
But that very fact witnesses to the righteousness of the law.
If the law were at fault, Christ would not fulfil its demands.
He shows its righteousness by fulfilling, or doing, what it demands,
not simply for us, but in us. The grace of God in Christ attests
the majesty and holiness of the law. We do not frustrate the
grace of God; if righteousness could come by the law, then would
Christ be dead in vain. But to claim that the law could be abolished,
or could relax its claims, and thus be of no account, is also
to say that Christ is dead in vain. Let it be repeated, righteousness
can not possibly come by the law, but only by the faith of Christ;
but the fact that the righteousness of the law could be attained
in no other way by us than by the crucifixion and resurrection
and life of Christ in us, shows the infinite greatness and holiness
of the law.
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- "O foolish Galatians, who did bewitch
you, before whose eyes Jesus Christ was openly set forth crucified?
This only would I learn from you, Received ye the Spirit by the
works of the law, or by the hearing of faith? Are ye so foolish?
having begun in the Spirit, are ye now perfected in the flesh?
Did ye suffer so many things in vain? if it be indeed in vain.
He therefore that supplieth to you the Spirit, and worketh miracles
among you, doeth he it by the works of the law, or by the hearing
of faith? Even as Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned unto
him for righteousness. Know therefore that they which be of faith,
the same are sons of Abraham. And the Scripture, foreseeing that
God would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached the Gospel
beforehand unto Abraham, saying, In thee shall all the nations
be blessed. So then they which be of faith are blessed with the
faithful Abraham. For as many as are of the works of the law
are under a curse; for it is written, Cursed is every one which
continueth not in all things that are written in the book of
the law, to do them. Now that no man is justified by the law
in the sight of God, is evident; for, The righteous shall live
by faith; and the law is not of faith; but, He that doeth them
shall live in them. Christ redeemed us from the curse of the
law, having become a curse for us; for it is written, Cursed
is every one that hangeth on a tree; that upon the Gentiles might
come the blessing of Abraham in Christ Jesus; that we might receive
the promise of the Spirit through faith.
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-
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- "Brethren, I speak after the manner
of men, Though it be but a man's covenant, yet when it hath been
confirmed, no one maketh it void, or addeth thereto. Now to Abraham
were the promises spoken, and to his seed. He saith not, And
to seeds, as of many; but as of one, And to thy seed, which is
Christ. Now this I say: A covenant confirmed beforehand by God,
the law, which came four hundred and thirty years after, doth
not disannul, so as to make the promise of none effect. For if
the inheritance is of the law, it is no more of promise; but
God hath granted it to Abraham by promise. What then is the law?
It was added because of transgressions, till the seed should
come to whom the promise hath been made; and it was ordained
through angels by the hand of a mediator. Now a mediator is not
a mediator of one; but God is one. Is the law then against the
promises of God? God forbid; for if there had been a law given
which could make alive, verily righteousness would have been
of the law. Howbeit the Scripture hath shut up all things under
sin, that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given
to them that believe.
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- "But before faith came, we were kept
in ward under the law, shut up unto the faith which should afterwards
be revealed. So that the law hath been our tutor to bring us
unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith. But now that
faith is come, we are no longer under a tutor. For ye are all
sons of God, through faith, in Christ Jesus. For as many of you
as were baptized into Christ did put on Christ. There can be
neither Jew nor Greek, there can be neither bond nor free, there
can be no male and female; for ye all are one man in Christ Jesus.
And if ye are Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, heirs according
to promise." Galatians 3, R.V.
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- The apostle asks those who are departing
from God and His truth, "Who hath bewitched you?" "Behold,
to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat
of rams. For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness
is as iniquity and idolatry." 1Sam.15:22,23. If you look
up this text in the Bible, you will see that in both instances
the words "is as" are added. The literal Hebrew is,
"Rebellion is the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is
iniquity and idolatry." And how so?--Plainly enough, for
stubbornness and rebellion are rejection of God; and he who rejects
God, puts himself under the control of evil spirits. All idolatry
is devil-worship. "The things which the Gentiles sacrifice,
they sacrifice to devils." 1Cor.10:20. There is no middle
ground. Christ says, "He that is not with Me is against
Me." Matt.12:30. That is, disobedience, rejection of the
Lord, is the spirit of antichrist. The Galatian brethren were,
as we have already seen, departing from God, and consequently
they were inevitably, although perhaps unconsciously, relapsing
into idolatry.
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- Spiritualism is only another name for
ancient witchcraft and soothsaying. It is a fraud, but not the
kind of fraud that most people think it is. There is reality
in it. It is a fraud in that while it professes to receive communications
from the spirits of the dead, it has communication only with
the spirits of devils, since "the dead know not anything."
To be a Spiritualist medium is to give one's self to the control
of demons. Now there is only one protection against this, and
that is to hold fast to the Word of God. He who lightly regards
God's Word, severs himself from association with God, and puts
himself within Satan's influence. Even though a man denounce
Spiritualism in the strongest terms, if he does not hold to God's
Word, he will sooner or later be carried away by the strong delusion.
Only by keeping the Word of Christ's patience can men be kept
from the temptation that is coming on all the world. Rev.3:10.
"The spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience"
(Eph.2:2), is the spirit of Satan, the spirit of antichrist;
and the Gospel of Christ, which reveals the righteousness of
God (Rom.1:16,17), is the only possible salvation from it.
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- "Who did bewitch you, before whose
eyes Jesus Christ was openly set forth crucified?" Jesus
was set forth before the Galatians, when Paul preached to them,
as openly crucified before their eyes. So vivid was the presentation,
that they could actually see Christ crucified. It was not skilful
word-painting on the part of Paul, nor imagination on the part
of the Galatians, for then it would have been only deception.
No; it was an actual fact; Christ was there, crucified, before
their eyes, and Paul by the Spirit enabled them to see Him. We
know that it was not Paul's skill in making beautiful word pictures
that enabled them to fancy that they saw the crucifixion, for
elsewhere Paul says that he determined to know nothing but Jesus
Christ and Him crucified, and that he purposely and carefully
refrained from using the wisdom of words, for fear that he should
make the cross of Christ without effect.
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- 1Cor.1:17,18; 2:1-4. The experience of
the Galatians in
- this matter was not peculiar to them.
The cross of Christ is a present thing. The expression, "Come
to the cross," is not an empty form of words, but an invitation
that can be literally complied with. Christ is crucified before
us, and each blade of grass, each leaf in the forest, reveals
the fact. Yea, we have the testimony in our own bodies, in that,
although sinful and corruptible, we yet live. Not until one has
seen Christ crucified before his eyes, and can see the cross
of Christ at every turn, does one know the reality of the Gospel.
Let those scoff who will; the fact that a blind man can not see
the sun, and denies that it shines, will not deter one who sees
it from talking of its glory. Many there are who can testify
that it is something more than a figure of speech, when the apostle
says that Christ was crucified before the eyes of the Galatians.
They have had the experience. God grant that this study of Galatians,
before it is finished, may be the means of opening the eyes of
many more, so that they may see Christ crucified before their
eyes, and know Him crucified in them and for them.
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- The question, "Received ye the Spirit
by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?" admits
of but one answer. It was by the hearing of faith. The Spirit
is given to those who believe. John 7:39;
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- Eph.1:13. The question also shows that
the Galatians had received the Holy Spirit. There is no other
way of beginning the Christian life. "No man can say that
Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost." 1Cor.12:3. In
the beginning the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters,
begetting life and activity in the creation; for without the
Spirit there is no motion--no life. "Not by might, nor by
power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts." Zech.4:6.
The Spirit of God alone can carry out the perfect will of God,
and no works that a man can do can bring Him into the soul, any
more than a dead man can manufacture the breath by which he can
be made to live and move. Those to whom Paul addressed this Epistle
had seen Christ crucified before their eyes, and had accepted
Him through the Spirit. Have you also seen and accepted Him?
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- "Are ye so foolish? having begun
in the Spirit, are ye now perfected in the flesh?" Foolish
is but a feeble term for it. The man who has not power to begin
a work, has strength to finish it! He who has not strength to
put one foot before the other, or even to stand alone, has strength
enough in himself to win a race! Impossible. Who has power to
beget himself? No one; we come into this world without having
begotten ourselves; we are born without strength; and, therefore,
all the strength that ever manifests itself in us, comes from
another than ourselves. It is all given to us. The new-born babe
is the representative of man. "A man is born into the world."
All the strength that any man has of himself is found in the
infant as it utters its first cry with its first breath. And
even that feeble strength is not of itself. Even so in things
spiritual. "Of His own will begat He us with the Word of
truth." Jam.1:18. We can no more live righteous lives by
our own strength than we could beget ourselves. The work that
is begun by the Spirit, must be carried to completion by the
Spirit. "We are made partakers of Christ, if we hold the
beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end." Heb.3:14.
"He which hath begun a good work in you will perform it
until the day of Jesus Christ." Phil.1:6. And He alone can
do it.
- Experience in the Gospel.
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- "Have ye suffered so many things
in vain? if it be yet in vain. He therefore that ministereth
to you the Spirit, and worketh miracles among you, doeth he it
by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?" These
questions show that the experience of the Galatian brethren had
been as deep and as real as would be expected from those before
whose eyes Christ was openly crucified. The Spirit had been given
to them, miracles had been wrought among them, and even by them,
for the gifts of the Spirit accompany the gift of the Spirit;
and as the result of this living Gospel among them, they had
suffered persecution; for "all that will live godly in Christ
Jesus shall suffer persecution." 2Tim.3:12. This makes the
case the more serious. Having shared the sufferings of Christ,
they were now departing from Him; and this departure from Christ,
through whom alone righteousness can come, was marked by disobedience
to the law of truth. They were insensibly but inevitably transgressing
the law to which they were looking for salvation.
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- The questions asked in verses 3, 4, and
5 suggest their own answer. The Spirit was ministered, and miracles
were wrought, not by works of law, but by "the hearing of
faith," that is, by the obedience of faith, for faith comes
by hearing the Word of God. Rom.10:17. Thus Paul's labor, and
the first experience of the Galatians, were exactly in line with
the experience of Abraham, whose faith was accounted for righteousness.
Let it be remembered that the "false brethren" who
preached "another gospel," even the false gospel of
righteousness by works, were Jews, and claimed Abraham for their
father. It would be their boast that they were children of Abraham,
and they would appeal to their circumcision as proof of the fact.
But the very thing upon which they relied as proving them to
be children of Abraham, was proof that they were not; for "Abraham
believed God, and it was accounted to him for righteousness."
Abraham had the righteousness of faith before he was circumcised.
Rom.4:11. "Know ye therefore that they which are of faith,
the same are the children of Abraham." Abraham was not justified
by works (Rom.4:2,3), but his faith "wrought righteousness."
- The same trouble still exists. People
take the sign for the substance, the end for the means. They
see that righteousness reveals itself in good works; therefore,
they assume that the good works bring the righteousness. Righteousness
gained by trusting, good works wrought without working, seem
to them impractical and fanciful. They call themselves "practical"
men, and believe that the only way to have a thing done is to
do it. But the truth is that all such men are highly impractical.
A man absolutely "without strength" can not do anything,
not even so much as raise himself up to take the medicine that
is offered him; and any counsel for him to try to do it would
be impractical. Only in the Lord is there righteousness and strength.
Is.45:24. "Commit thy way unto the Lord; trust also in Him;
and He shall bring it to pass. And He shall bring forth thy righteousness
as the light." Ps.37:5,6. Abraham is the father of all who
believe for righteousness, and of those only. The only practical
thing is to trust, even as he did.
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- "The Scripture, foreseeing that God
would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached the Gospel beforehand
unto Abraham." This verse will bear much reading. An understanding
of it will guard one against many errors. And it is not difficult
to understand; simply hold to what it says, and you have it.
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- For one thing, the verse shows us
that the Gospel was preached at least as early as the days of
Abraham. It was God Himself who preached it; therefore,
it was the true and only Gospel. It was the same Gospel
that Paul preached; so that we have no other Gospel than that
which Abraham had. The Gospel differs in no particular
now from what it was in Abraham's day; for his day was the day
of Christ. John 8:56.
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- God requires just the same things now
that He required then, and nothing more.
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- Moreover, the Gospel was then preached
to the Gentiles, for Abraham was a Gentile, or, in other words,
a heathen. He was brought up as a heathen, for "Terah, the
father of Abraham," "served other gods" (Josh.24:2),
and was a heathen till the Gospel was preached to him. So the
preaching of the Gospel to the Gentiles was no new thing in the
days of Peter and Paul. The Jewish nation was taken out from
among the heathen, and it is only by the preaching of the Gospel
to the heathen that Israel is built up and saved. See Acts 15:14-18;
Rom.11:25,26. The very existence of the people Israel always
was and still is a standing proof that God's purpose is to save
a people from among the Gentiles. It is in fulfillment of this
purpose that Israel exists.
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-
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- Thus we see that the apostle takes the
Galatians, and us, back to the fountain-head,--to the place where
God Himself preaches the Gospel to us Gentiles. No Gentile can
hope to be saved in any other way or by any other gospel than
that by which Abraham was saved.
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- "So then they which be of faith are
blessed with faithful Abraham." Mark the close connection
between this and the preceding verse. The Gospel was preached
to Abraham in the words, "In thee shall all nations be blessed."
(It should be remembered, in passing, that the words "heathen,"
or "Gentiles," as in the Revised Version, and "nations,"
in verse 8, come from the very same Greek word.) This blessing
is the blessing of righteousness through Christ, as we learn
from Acts 3:25,26: "Ye are the children of the prophets,
and of the covenant which God made with our fathers, saying unto
Abraham, And in thy seed shall all the kindreds of the earth
be blessed. Unto you first God, having raised up His Son Jesus,
sent Him to bless you, in turning away every one of you from
his iniquities." Because God preached the Gospel to Abraham,
saying, "In thee shall all the nations of the earth be blessed,"
those who believe are blessed with the faithful Abraham. There
is no blessing for any man except the blessing which Abraham
received, and the Gospel preached to him is the only Gospel there
is for any people under heaven; for besides the name of Jesus,
in whom Abraham believed, "there is none other name under
heaven given among men whereby we must be saved." In Him
"we have redemption through His blood, even the forgiveness
of sins." Col.1:14. The forgiveness of sins carries with
it all blessings.
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- Note the sharp contrast in verses 9 and
10. "They which be of faith are blessed," but "as
many as are of the works of the law are under the curse."
Faith brings the blessing; works bring the curse, or, rather,
leave one under the curse. The curse is on all, for "he
that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not
believed in the name of the only-begotten Son of God." John
3:18. Faith removes the curse.
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- Who are under the curse?--"As many
as are of the works of the law." Note that it does not say
that those who do the law are under the curse, for that would
be a contradiction of Rev.22:14: "Blessed are they that
do His commandments, that they may have right to the tree of
life, and may enter in through the gates into the city."
"Blessed are the undefiled in the way, who walk in the law
of the Lord." Ps.119:1.
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- So, then, they that are of faith are keepers
of the law; for they that are of faith are blessed, and those
who do the commandments are blessed. By faith they do the commandments.
The Gospel is contrary to human nature, and so it is that we
become doers of the law, not by doing, but by believing. If we
worked for righteousness, we should be exercising only our own
sinful human nature, and so would get no nearer to righteousness,
but farther from it; but by believing the "exceeding great
and precious promises," we become partakers of the Divine
nature (2Pet.1:4), and then all our works are wrought in God.
"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;-stone; as it
is written, Behold, I lay in Sion a Stumbling-stone and Rock
of offense; and whosoever believeth on Him shall not be ashamed."
Rom.9:30-33.
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- No one can read Gal.3:10 carefully and
thoughtfully without seeing that the curse is transgression of
the law. Disobedience to God's law is itself the curse; for "by
one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin." Rom.5:12.
Sin has death wrapped up in it. Without sin death would be impossible,
for "the sting of death is sin." 1Cor.15:56. "As
many as are of the works of the law are under the curse."
Why? Is it because the law is a curse?--Not by any means. "The
law is holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and good."
Rom.7:12. Why, then, are as many as are of the works of the law
under the curse?--Because it is written, "Cursed is every
one that continueth not in all things which are written in the
book of the law to do them." Mark it well: They are not
cursed because they do the law, but because they do not do it.
So, then, we see that being of the works of the law does not
mean that one is doing the law. No; "the carnal mind is
enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God,
neither indeed can be." Rom.8:7. All are under the curse,
and he who thinks to get out by his own works, remains there.
The curse consists in not continuing in all things that are written
in the law; therefore, the blessing means perfect conformity
to the law. This is as plain as language can make it.
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- "Behold, I set before you this day
a blessing and a curse; a blessing, if ye obey the commandments
of the Lord your God, which I command you this day; and a curse,
if ye will not obey the commandments of the Lord your God."
Deut.11:26-28. This is the living word of God, addressed to each
one of us personally. "The law worketh wrath" (Rom.4:15),
but the wrath of God comes only on the children of disobedience
(Eph.5:6). If we truly believe, we are not condemned, but only
because faith brings us into harmony with the law--the life of
God. "Whoso looketh into the perfect law of liberty, and
continueth therein, he being not a forgetful hearer, but a doer
of the work, this man shall be blessed in his deed." Jam.1:25.
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- The Bible does not disparage good works.
On the contrary, it exalts them. "This is a faithful saying,
and these things I will that thou affirm constantly, that they
which have believed in God might be careful to maintain good
works. These things are good and profitable." Titus 3:8.
The charge against the unbelieving is that they are "unto
every good work reprobate." Titus 1:16. Timothy was exhorted
to "charge them that are rich in this world," "that
they do good, that they be rich in good works." 1Tim.6:17,18.
And the apostle Paul prayed for us all, that we might "walk
worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every
good work." Col.1:10. Still further, we are assured that
God has created us in Christ Jesus "unto good works,"
"that we should walk in them." Eph.2:10.
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- He has Himself prepared these works for
us, wrought them out, and laid them up for all who trust in Him.
Ps.31:19. "This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him
whom He hath sent." John 6:29. Good works are commended,
but we can not do them. They can be performed only by the One
who is good, and that is God. If there be ever any good in us,
it is God who worketh in us. There is no disparagement of anything
that He does. "Now the God of peace, that brought again
from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep,
through the blood of the everlasting covenant, make you perfect
in every good work to do His will, working in you that which
is well pleasing in His sight, through Jesus Christ; to whom
be glory forever and ever. Amen." Heb.13:20,21.
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- When we read the frequent statement, "The
just shall live by faith," it is necessary to have a clear
idea of what the word "just" means. If we read the
same text in the Revised Version, we shall learn. It has it,
"The righteous shall live by faith." To be justified
by faith is to be made righteous by faith. "All unrighteousness
is sin" (1Joh.5:17), and "sin is the transgression
of the law" (1Joh.3:4). Therefore, all unrighteousness is
transgression of the law, and of course all righteousness is
obedience to the law. So we see that the just, or righteous,
man is the man who obeys the law, and to be justified is to be
made a keeper of the law.
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- Righteousness is the end to be obtained,
and the law of God is the standard. "The law worketh wrath,"
because "all have sinned," and "the wrath of God
cometh on the children of disobedience." How shall we become
doers of the law, and thus escape wrath, or the curse? The answer
is, "The righteous shall live by faith." By faith,
not by works, we become doers of the law. "With the heart
man believeth unto righteousness." Rom.10:10. That no man
is justified by the law in the sight of God, it is evident. From
what does it appear?--From this,--that "the just shall live
by faith." If righteousness came by works, then it would
not be by faith; "if by grace, then is it no more of works;
otherwise grace is no more grace." Rom.11:6. "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." Rom.4:4,5.
There is no exception, no half-way working. It is not said that
some of the just shall live by faith, or that they shall live
by faith and works, but, simply, "the just shall live by
faith," and that proves that it is not by their own works.
All of the just are made and kept just by faith alone. This is
because the law is so holy. It is greater than can be done by
man; only Divine power can accomplish it; so by faith we receive
the Lord Jesus, and He lives the perfect law in us.
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-
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- "The law is not of faith." Of
course it is the written law, no matter whether in a book or
on tables of stone, that is here referred to. That law simply
says, "Do this," or, "Do not do that." "The
man that doeth them shall live in them." That is the sole
condition on which the written law offers life. Works, and works
only, commend themselves to it. How those works are obtained
is of no consequence to it, provided they are present. But none
have done the requirements of the law, and so there can be no
doers of the law, that is, none who in their own lives can present
a record of perfect obedience.
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- "The man that doeth them shall live
in them." But one must be alive in order to do. A dead man
can do nothing, and he who is "dead in trespasses and sins"
can do no righteousness. Christ is the only one in whom there
is life, for He is the life, and He alone has done and can do
the righteousness of the law. When, instead of being denied and
repressed, He is acknowledged and received, He lives in us all
the fullness of His life, so that it is no more we but Christ
living in us, and then His obedience in us makes us righteous.
Our faith is counted for righteousness, simply because our faith
appropriates the living Christ. In trust we yield our bodies
as temples of God; Christ, the Living Stone, is enshrined in
the heart, which becomes God's throne, and so the living law
is our life; for out of the heart are the issues of life.
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-
- Let the reader pay particular attention
to the fact that there is in this epistle no controversy over
the law, as to whether or not it should be obeyed. No one had
claimed that the law was abolished, or changed, or had lost its
force. The epistle contains no hint of any such thing. The question
was not if the law should be kept, but how it was to be kept.
Justification--being made righteous--was admitted to be a necessity;
the question was, Is it by faith, or by works? The false brethren
were persuading the Galatians that they must be made righteous
by their own efforts; Paul was by the Spirit showing that all
such attempts were useless, and could result only in fastening
more firmly the curse upon the sinner. Righteousness through
faith in Jesus Christ is set forth to all men in all time as
the only real righteousness. The false teachers made their boast
in the law, but through breaking it caused the name of God to
be blasphemed. Paul made his boast in Christ, and by the righteousness
of the law, to which he thus submitted, caused the name of God
to be glorified in him.
-
-
- That death is the curse is evident from
the last part of verse 13, "Cursed is every one that hangeth
on a tree." Christ was made a curse for us, in that He hung
on a tree, that is, was crucified. But sin is the cause of death.
"By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin;
and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned."
Rom.5:12. "The sting of death is sin." 1Cor.15:56.
So we have the substance of verse 10 thus, that those who do
not continue in the things written in the law are dead. That
is, disobedience is death. And this is what the Scripture says:
"When lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin; and sin,
when it is finished, bringeth forth death." Sin contains
death, and men out of Christ are "dead in trespasses and
sins." It matters not that they walk about seemingly full
of life, the words of Christ are, "Except ye eat the flesh
of the Son of man, and drink His blood, ye have no life in you."
John 6:53. "She that liveth in pleasure is dead while she
liveth." 1Tim.5:6. It is a living death--a body of death--that
is endured. Rom.7:24. Sin is the transgression of the law; the
wages of sin is death. The curse, therefore, is the death that
is carried about concealed even in the most attractive sin. "Cursed
is every one that continueth not in all things which are written
in the book of the law to do them."
-
-
-
- "Christ hath redeemed us from the
curse of the law." Let us stop right here and contemplate
this fact, leaving the way of redemption for later consideration.
We need to consider the statement very carefully, for some who
read it straightway rush off frantically exclaiming, "We
don't need to keep the law, because Christ has redeemed us from
the curse of it," as though the text said that Christ redeemed
us from the curse of obedience. Such read the Scriptures to no
profit. The curse, as we have seen it, is disobedience. "Cursed
is every one that continueth not in all things which are written
in the book of the law to do them." Therefore, Christ has
redeemed us from disobedience to the law. God sent forth His
Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, "that
the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us."
Rom.8:4.
-
-
- Some one may lightly say, "Then we
are all right; whatever we do is right so far as the law is concerned,
since we are redeemed." It is true that all are redeemed,
but not all have accepted redemption. Many say of Christ, "We
will not have this Man to reign over us," and thrust the
blessing of God from them. But redemption is for all; all have
been purchased with the precious blood--the life--of Christ,
and all may be, if they will, free from sin and death. By that
blood we are redeemed from our "vain manner of life."
1Pet.1:18, R.V.
-
-
- Stop and think what this means; let the
full force of the announcement impress itself upon your consciousness.
"Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law,"--from
not continuing in all its righteous requirements. We need not
sin any more. He has snapped asunder the cords of sin that bound
us, so that we have but to accept His salvation in order to be
free from every besetting sin. It is not necessary for us any
longer to spend our lives in earnest longings for a better life,
and in vain regrets for desires unrealized. Christ raises no
false hopes, but He comes to the captives of sin, and cries to
them, "Liberty! Your prison doors are open. Go forth."
What more can be said? Christ has gained the complete victory
over "this present evil world," over "the lust
of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life,"
and our faith in Him makes His victory ours. We have but to accept
it.
-
-
- That "Christ died for the ungodly"
is evident to all who read the Bible. He "was delivered
for our offenses." Rom.4:25. The Innocent suffered for the
guilty; the Just for the unjust. "He was wounded for our
transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement
of our peace was upon Him; and with His stripes we are healed.
All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one
to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of
us all." Is.53:5,6. But death came by sin. Death is the
curse that has passed upon all men, simply because "all
have sinned." So, as Christ was "made a curse for us,"
it follows that Christ was "made to be sin on our behalf."
2Cor.5:21, R.V. He bore "our sins in His own body"
up to the tree. 1Pet.2:24, margin. Note that our sins were "in
His body." It was no superficial work that He undertook.
The sins were not merely figuratively laid on Him, but they were
actually in Him. He was made a curse for us, made to be sin for
us, and consequently suffered death for us.
-
-
- To some this truth seems repugnant; to
the Greeks it is foolishness, and to the Jews a stumbling-block,
but "to us who are saved, it is the power of God."
For bear in mind that it was our sins that He bore in His own
body--not His own sins. The same scripture that tells us that
He was made to be sin for us, assures us that He "knew no
sin." The same text that tells us that He carried our sins
"in His own body," is careful to let us know that He
"did no sin." The fact that He could carry our sin
about with Him, and in Him, being actually made to be sin for
us, and yet not do any sin, is to His everlasting glory and our
eternal salvation from sin. All the sins of all men were on Him,
yet no person ever discovered the trace of sin upon Him. No sin
was ever manifested in His life, although He took all sin upon
Himself. He received it and swallowed it up by the power of the
endless life in which He swallows up death. He can bear sin,
and yet be untainted by it. It is by this marvelous life that
He redeems us. He gives us His life, so that we may be freed
from every taint of the sin that is in our flesh.
-
-
- Christ, "in the days of His flesh,
when He had offered up prayers and supplications with strong
crying and tears unto Him that was able to save Him from death,"
"was heard in that He feared." Heb.5:7. But He died!
Yes; but no one took His life from Him; He laid it down, that
He might take it again. John 10:17,18. The pangs of death were
loosed, "because it was not possible that He should be holden
of it." Acts 2:24. Why was it not possible for death to
hold Him, even though He voluntarily put Himself in its power?--Because
He "knew no sin;" He took sin upon Himself, but was
saved from its power. He was "in all things" "made
like unto His brethren," "in all points tempted like
as we are" (Heb.2:17; 4:15), and since He could of Himself
do nothing (John 5:30), He prayed to the Father to keep Him from
being overcome and thereby falling under the power of death.
And He was heard. In His case these words were fulfilled: "The
Lord God will help Me; therefore shall I not be confounded; therefore
have I set My face like a flint, and I know that I shall not
be ashamed. He is near that justifieth Me; who will contend with
Me?" Is.50:7,8.
-
-
-
- Whose sin was it that thus oppressed Him,
and from which He was delivered?--Not His own, for He had none.
It was your sin and mine. Our sins have already been overcome--vanquished.
We have to fight only with an already defeated foe. When you
come to God "in the name of Jesus," having surrendered
yourself to His death and life, so that you do not bear His name
in vain, because Christ liveth in you, you have only to remember
that every sin was on Him, and is still on Him, and that He is
the conqueror, and straightway you will say, "Thanks be
to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ."
"Now thanks be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph
in Christ, and maketh manifest the savor of His knowledge by
us in every place." 2Cor.2:14.
- The Revelation of the Cross.
-
-
- In Gal.3:13 we are brought back to the
subject presented in Gal.2:20 and 3:1,--the ever-present cross.
The subject is inexhaustible, but the following few facts may
serve to open it up to our minds:--
-
-
- 1. The redemption from sin and death is
accomplished through the cross. Gal.3:13.
-
-
- 2. The Gospel is all contained in the
cross; for the Gospel is "the power of God unto salvation
to every one that believeth" (Rom.1:16), and "unto
us which are saved" the cross of Christ "is the power
of God" (1Cor.1:18).
- 3. Christ is revealed to fallen men only
as the Crucified and risen One. There is none other name under
heaven given among men, whereby salvation may be obtained (Acts
4:12), and, therefore, it is all that God sets forth before men,
since He does not wish to confuse them. "Christ and Him
crucified," is all that Paul wished to know; it is all that
any man needs to know. Thus the one thing that men need is salvation;
if they get that, they get all things; but salvation is found
only in the cross of Christ; therefore, God puts before the eyes
of men nothing else: He gives them just what they need. Jesus
Christ is by God set forth openly crucified before the eyes of
every man, so that there is no excuse for any to be lost, or
to continue in sin.
-
-
- 4. Christ is set forth before men only
as the crucified Redeemer; and since that from which men need
to be saved is the curse, He is set forth as bearing the curse.
Wherever there is any curse, there is Christ bearing it. We have
already seen that Christ bore, and still bears, our curse, in
that He bears our sin. He also bears the curse of the earth itself,
for He bore the crown of thorns, and the curse pronounced on
the earth was, "Thorns also and thistles shall it bring
forth." Gen.3:18. So the whole creation, which now groans
under the curse, has been redeemed through the cross of Christ.
Rom.8:19-23.
- 5. It is only on the cross that Christ
bears the curse, for His being made a curse for us was indicated
by His hanging on the cross. The cross is the symbol of the curse,
but also of deliverance from the curse, since it is the cross
of Christ, the Conqueror and Deliverer. The very curse itself,
therefore, presents the cross, and proclaims our deliverance.
-
-
- 6. Where is the curse? Ah, where is it
not? The blindest can see it, if he will but acknowledge the
evidence of his own senses. Imperfection is a curse, yea, that
is the curse; and imperfection is on everything connected with
this earth. Man is imperfect, and even the finest plant that
grows from the earth is not as perfect as it might be. There
is nothing that meets the eye that does not show the possibility
of improvement, even if our untrained eyes can not see the absolute
necessity of it. When God made the earth, everything was "very
good," or, as the Hebrew idiom has it, "good exceedingly."
God Himself could see no chance, no possibility, for improvement.
But now it is different. The gardener spends his thought and
labor trying to improve the fruits and flowers under his care.
And since the best that the earth produces reveals the curse,
what need be said of the gnarled, stunted growths, the withered
and blasted buds and leaves and fruits, and the noxious, poisonous
weeds? Everywhere "hath the curse devoured the earth."
Is.24:6.
-
-
- 7. What, then, is the conclusion of the
whole matter? Is it discouragement? Nay; "for God hath not
appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus
Christ." 1Thess.5:9. Although the curse is visible everywhere,--
- "Change and decay in all around I
see,"-- yet things live, and men live. But the curse is
death, and no man and no thing in creation can bear death and
still live. Death kills. But Christ is He that liveth, and was
dead, and is alive forevermore. Rev.1:18. He alone can bear the
curse--death--and still live. Therefore, the fact that there
is life on the earth and in man, in spite of the curse, is proof
that the cross of Christ is everywhere. Every blade of grass,
every leaf of the forest, every shrub and tree, every flower
and fruit, even the bread that we eat, is stamped with the cross
of Christ. In our own bodies is Christ crucified. Everywhere
is that cross; and as the preaching of the cross is the power
of God, which is the Gospel, so it is that the everlasting power
of God is revealed in all things that He has made. That is "the
power that worketh in us." Eph.3:20. Rom.1:16-20, compared
with 1Cor.1:17,18, amounts to a plain declaration that the cross
of Christ is seen in all the things that God has made--even in
our own bodies.
-
-
-
- "Innumerable evils have compassed
me about; mine iniquities have taken hold upon me, so that I
am not able to look up; they are more than the hairs of mine
head; therefore my heart faileth me." Ps.40:12. But not
only may we with confidence cry unto God out of the depths, but
God in His infinite mercy has so ordered it that the very depths
themselves are a source of confidence. The fact that we are in
the depths of sin, and yet live, is proof that God Himself, in
the person of Christ on the cross, is present with us to deliver
us. So everything, even the curse, for everything is under the
curse, preaches the Gospel. Our own weakness and sinfulness,
instead of being a cause of discouragement, are, if we believe
the Lord, a pledge of redemption. Out of weakness we are made
strong. "In all these things we are more than conquerors
through Him that loved us." Rom.8:37. Truly, God has not
left Himself without witness among men. "He that believeth
on the Son of God hath the witness in himself." 1Joh.5:10.
-
-
- Christ bore the curse, in order that the
blessing might come to us. He bears the curse now, being crucified
before us, and in us, and we with Him, that we may continually
experience the blessing. Death to Him is life to us. If we willingly
bear about in our bodies the dying of the Lord Jesus, the life
also of Jesus will be manifested in our mortal flesh. 2Cor.4:10,11.
He was made to be sin for us, that we might be made the righteousness
of God in Him. 2Cor.5:21. What is the blessing that we receive
through the curse that He bears? It is the blessing of salvation
from sin; for as the curse is the transgression of the law (Gal.3:10),
the blessing consists in turning away every one of us from our
iniquities (Acts 3:26). Christ suffered the curse, even sin and
death, "that the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles
through Jesus Christ." And what is the blessing of Abraham?
The writer of this Epistle, having stated that Abraham was made
righteous by faith, adds: "Even as David also describeth
the blessedness of the man, unto whom God imputeth righteousness
without works, saying, Blessed are they whose iniquities are
forgiven, and whose sins are covered. Blessed is the man to whom
the Lord will not impute sin." Rom.4:6-8. And then he shows
that this blessing comes on the Gentiles as well as on the Jews
who believe, because Abraham received it when he was uncircumcised,
"that he might be the father of all them that believe."
The blessing is freedom from sin, even as the curse is the doing
of sin; and as the curse reveals the cross, so we find that the
very curse is by the Lord made to proclaim the blessing. The
fact that we live, although we are sinners, is the assurance
that deliverance from the sin is ours. "While there's life
there's hope," says the adage. Yes, because the Life is
our hope. Thank God for the blessed hope! The blessing has come
upon all men; for "as by the offense 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."
Rom.5:18. God, who is "no respecter of persons," "hath
blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in
Christ." Eph.1:3. It is ours to keep. If any one has not
this blessing, it is because he has not recognized the gift,
or has deliberately thrown it away.
-
-
- "Christ hath redeemed us from the
curse of the law,"--from sin and death. This He has done
by "being made a curse for us," and so we are freed
from all necessity of sinning. Sin can have no dominion over
us if we accept Christ in truth, and without reserve. This was
just as much a present truth in the days of Abraham, Moses, David,
and Isaiah, as it is to-day. More than seven hundred years before
the cross was raised on Calvary, Isaiah, who testified of the
things which he understood, because his own sin had been purged
by a live coal from God's altar, said: "Surely He hath borne
our griefs, and carried our sorrows; . . . He was wounded for
our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement
of our peace was upon Him; and with His stripes we are healed.
. . . The Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all."
Is.53:4-6. "I have blotted out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions,
and, as a cloud, thy sins; return unto Me; for I have redeemed
thee." Is.44:22. Long before Isaiah's time, David wrote:
"He hath not dealt with us after our sins; nor rewarded
us according to our iniquities." "As far as the east
is from the west, so far hath He removed our transgressions from
us."
-
-
- "We which have believed do enter
into rest," because "the works were finished from the
foundation of the world." Heb.4:3. The blessing that we
received is "the blessing of Abraham." We have no other
foundation than that of the apostles and prophets. Eph.2:20.
It is a full and complete salvation that God has provided; it
awaits us as we come into the world; and we do not relieve God
of any burden by rejecting it, nor do we add to His labor by
accepting it.
-
-
-
- Christ hath redeemed us, "that we
might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith."
Do not make the mistake of reading this as though it were "that
we might receive the promise of the gift of the Spirit."
It does not say that, and it does not mean that, as a little
thought will show. Christ has redeemed us, and that fact proves
the gift of the Spirit, for it was only "through the eternal
Spirit" that He offered Himself without spot to God. Heb.9:14.
But for the Spirit, we should not know that we were sinners;
much less should we know redemption. The Spirit convinces of
sin and of righteousness. John 16:8. "It is the Spirit that
beareth witness, because the Spirit is truth." 1Joh.5:6.
"He that believeth hath the witness in himself." Christ
is crucified in every man; that, as we have already seen, is
shown in the fact that we are all under the curse, and Christ
alone, on the cross, bears the curse. But it is through the Spirit
that Christ dwells on earth among men. Faith enables us to receive
the testimony of this witness, and rejoice in that which the
possession of the Spirit assures.
-
-
- Note further: The blessing of Abraham
comes on us, in order that we may receive the promise of the
Spirit. But it is only through the Spirit that the blessing comes;
therefore, the blessing can not bring to us the promise that
we shall receive the Spirit. We already have the Spirit with
the blessing. But, having the blessing of the Spirit, namely,
righteousness, we are sure of receiving that which the Spirit
promises to the righteous, namely, an everlasting inheritance.
In blessing Abraham God promised him an inheritance. The expression,
"the promise of the Spirit," is used, as is plainly
to be seen, in the same sense as "the promise of God,"
"the gift of God;" that is, the promise or the gift
which God bestows. The Spirit is the pledge of all good.
-
-
- All God's gifts are in themselves promises
of more. There is always much more to follow. God's purpose in
the Gospel is to gather together in one all things in Jesus Christ,
"in whom also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestinated
according to the purpose of Him who worketh all things after
the counsel of His own will; that we should be to the praise
of His glory, who first trusted in Christ. In whom ye also trusted,
after that ye heard the Word of truth, the Gospel of your salvation;
in whom also after that [or when] ye believed, ye were sealed
with that Holy Spirit of promise, which is the earnest of our
inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession,
unto the praise of His glory." Eph.1:10-14.
- Of this inheritance we must speak further
later on. Suffice it now to say that it is the inheritance promised
to Abraham, whose children we become by faith. The inheritance
belongs to all who are children of God through faith in Christ
Jesus; and the Spirit that marks our sonship is the promise,
the pledge, the first-fruits of that inheritance. Those who accept
Christ's glorious deliverance from the curse of the law,--redemption
not from obedience to the law, for obedience is not a curse,
but from disobedience to the law,--have in the Spirit a taste
of the power and the blessing of the world to come.
-
-
- It will be seen that Abraham is the one
about whom this chapter centers. He is the one to whom the Gospel
of world-wide salvation was preached. He believed, and received
the blessing, even the blessing of righteousness. All who believe
are blessed with believing Abraham. They who are of faith, the
same are the children of Abraham. Christ hath redeemed us from
the curse, in order that the blessing of Abraham might come on
us. "To Abraham and his seed were the promises made."
"If the inheritance be of the law, it is no more of promise;
but God gave it to Abraham by promise." Thus it is clear
that the promise to us is the promise that was made to Abraham,--the
promise of an inheritance,--and in which we share as his children.
Christ hath redeemed us from the curse, that we might receive
the inheritance of righteousness. Christ through the eternal
Spirit offered Himself without spot to God, to purge our consciences
from dead works to serve the living God; because "He is
the Mediator of the new covenant, that by means of death . .
. they which are called might receive the promise of eternal
inheritance." Heb.9:14,15.
-
-
- "Now to Abraham and his seed were
the promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of many; but
as of one; and to thy Seed, which is Christ." There is here
no play upon words; the issue is a vital one. The controversy
is over the way of salvation, whether it is by Christ alone,
or by something else, or by Christ and something or somebody
else. Many people imagine that it is by them,--that they must
save themselves by making themselves good. Many others think
that Christ is a valuable adjunct, a good assistant to their
efforts; while others still are willing to give Him the first
place, but not the only place. They regard themselves as good
seconds. It is the Lord and they who do the work. But our text
shuts off all this assumption and self-assertion. Not seeds,
but the seed. Not many, but one. "And to thy Seed, which
is Christ." Christ is the One.
-
-
- We hear much about the "spiritual
seed" and the "literal seed" of Abraham. If that
contrast meant anything at all, it would mean a fanciful seed
as opposed to a real seed. The opposite of spiritual is fleshly,
and the fleshly seed, as we shall see later on, is not the real
seed, but only a bond-servant, to be cast out, having no share
whatever in the inheritance. So there is no fleshly seed of Abraham.
The spiritual seed, however, is a literal, or real, seed, even
as Christ is "a quickening Spirit," and yet most real.
It is possible for men walking about in the body, in this world,
to be wholly spiritual, and such they must be, or else they are
not children of Abraham. "They that are in the flesh can
not please God." "Flesh and blood doth not inherit
the kingdom of God." There is only one line of descendants
from Abraham, only one set of real children, and they are those
who are of faith,--those who, by receiving Christ by faith, receive
power to become sons of God.
-
-
-
- But while the Seed is singular, the promises
are plural. It is not merely one specific promise that was made
to Abraham and his Seed, but promises. God has nothing for any
man that was not promised to Abraham; and all the promises of
God are conveyed in Christ, in whom Abraham believed. "For
how many soever be the promises of God, in Him is the yea; wherefore
also through Him is the Amen, unto the glory of God through us."
2Cor.1:20.
-
-
- That the thing promised, and the sum of
all the promises, is an inheritance, is clearly seen from Gal.3:15-18.
The sixteenth verse has just been noted, and the seventeenth
verse tells us that the law, coming in four hundred and thirty
years after the promise was made and confirmed, can not make
it of none effect; "for if the inheritance be of the law,
it is no more of promise; but God gave it to Abraham by promise."
Verse 18. What this promised inheritance is may be seen by comparing
the verse just quoted with Rom.4:13: "For the promise, that
he should be the heir of the world, was not to Abraham, or to
his seed, through the law, but through the righteousness of faith."
And so, although the heavens and the earth which are now are
"reserved unto fire against the day of judgment and perdition
of ungodly men," when "the heavens being on fire shall
be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat,"
we, "according to His promise, look for new heavens and
a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness." 2Pet.3:7,12,13.
This is the heavenly country for which Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
looked.
-
-
- "Christ hath redeemed us from the
curse; . . . that we might receive the promise of the Spirit
through faith." This "promise of the Spirit" we
have seen to be the possession of the whole earth made new--redeemed
from the curse; for "the creation itself also shall be delivered
from the bondage of corruption into the liberty of the glory
of the children of God." The earth, fresh and new from the
hand of God, perfect in every respect, was given to man for a
possession. Gen.1:27,28,31. Man sinned, and brought the curse
upon himself. Christ has taken the whole curse, both of man and
of all creation, upon Himself. He redeems the earth from the
curse, that it may be the everlasting possession that God originally
designed it to be, and He also redeems man from the curse, that
he may be fitted for the possession of such an inheritance. This
is the sum of the Gospel. "The gift of God is eternal life
through Jesus Christ our Lord." Rom.6:23. This gift of eternal
life is included in the promise of the inheritance, for God promised
the land to Abraham and to his seed for "an everlasting
possession." Gen.17:7,8. It is an inheritance of righteousness,
because the promise that Abraham should be heir of the world
was through the righteousness of faith. Righteousness, eternal
life, and a place in which to live eternally,--these are all
in the promise, and they are all that could possibly be desired
or given. To redeem man, but to give him no place in which to
live, would be an incomplete work; the two things are parts of
one whole, for the power by which we are redeemed is the power
of creation,--the power by which the heavens and the earth are
made new. When all is accomplished, "there shall be no more
curse." Rev.22:3.
- The Covenants of Promise.
-
-
- That the covenant and promise of God are
one and the same thing, is clearly seen from Gal.3:17, where
it appears that to disannul the covenant would be to make void
the promise. In Genesis 17 we read that God made a covenant with
Abraham to give him the land of Canaan--and with it the whole
world--for an everlasting possession; but Gal.3:18 says that
God gave it to him by promise. God's covenants with men can be
nothing else than promises to them: "Who hath first given
to Him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again? For of Him,
and through Him, and to Him, are all things." Rom.11:35,36.
It is so rare for men to do anything without expecting an equivalent,
that theologians have taken it for granted that it is the same
with God. So they begin their dissertations on God's covenant
with the statement that a covenant is "a mutual agreement
between two or more persons, to do or refrain from doing certain
things." But God does not make bargains with men, because
He knows that they could not fulfil their part. After the flood
God made a covenant with every beast of the earth, and with every
fowl; but the beasts and the birds did not promise anything in
return. Gen.9:9-16. They simply received the favor at the hand
of God. That is all we can do. God promises us everything that
we need, and more than we can ask or think, as a gift. We give
Him ourselves, that is, nothing, and He gives us Himself, that
is, everything. That which makes all the trouble is that even
when men are willing to recognize the Lord at all, they want
to make bargains with Him. They want it to be a "mutual"
affair--a transaction in which they will be considered as on
a par with God. But whoever deals with God must deal with Him
on His own terms, that is, on a basis of fact--that we have nothing
and are nothing, and He has everything and is everything, and
gives everything.
-
-
-
- The covenant, that is, the promise of
God to give men the whole earth made new, after having made them
free from the curse, was "confirmed before of God in Christ."
He is the Surety of the new covenant, even the everlasting covenant.
"For how many soever be the promises of God, in Him is the
yea; wherefore also through Him is the Amen, unto the glory of
God through us." 2Cor.1:20, R.V. In Him we have obtained
the inheritance (Eph.1:11), for the Holy Spirit is the first-fruits
of the inheritance, and the possession of the Holy Spirit is
Christ Himself dwelling in the heart by faith. God blessed Abraham,
saying, "In thy Seed shall all the kindreds of the earth
be blessed," and this is fulfilled in Christ, whom God has
sent to bless us in turning us away from our iniquities. Acts
3:25,26.
-
-
- "When God made promise to Abraham,
because He could swear by no greater, He sware by Himself; .
. . for men verily swear by the greater; and an oath for confirmation
is to them an end of all strife. Wherein God, willing more abundantly
to show unto the heirs of promise the immutability of His counsel,
confirmed it by an oath; that by two immutable things, in which
it was impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation,
who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before
us; which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and
steadfast, and which entereth into that within the veil; whither
the forerunner is for us entered, even Jesus, made an high priest
forever after the order of Melchizedek." Heb.6:13-20. Compare
Gen.22:15-18.
- It was the oath of God, therefore, that
confirmed the covenant made to Abraham; that promise and oath
to Abraham are our ground of hope, our strong consolation; they
are "sure and steadfast," because the oath sets forth
Christ as the pledge, the surety, and "He ever liveth."
He upholds all things by the word of His power. Heb.1:3. "In
Him all things consist." Col.1:17, R.V. Therefore, when
God "interposed Himself by an oath," which is our consolation
and hope in fleeing for refuge from sin, He pledged His own existence,
and with it the entire universe, for our salvation. Surely a
firm foundation for our hope is laid in His excellent Word.
-
-
- Do not forget as we proceed that the covenant
and the promise are the same thing, and that it conveys land,
even the whole earth made new, to Abraham and his seed; and remember
also that, since only righteousness is to dwell in the new heavens
and the new earth promised to Abraham and his seed, the promise
includes the making righteous of all who believe. This is done
in Christ, in whom the promise is confirmed. Now, "though
it be but a man's covenant, yet if it be confirmed, no man disannulleth,
or addeth thereto." Gal.3:15. How much more must this be
the case with God's covenant! Therefore, since perfect and everlasting
righteousness was assured by the covenant made with Abraham,
which was also confirmed in Christ, by the oath of God, it is
impossible that the law, which was spoken four hundred and thirty
years later, could introduce any new feature. The inheritance
was given to Abraham by promise, but if after four hundred and
thirty years it should transpire that now the inheritance must
be gained in some other way, then the promise would be of no
effect, and the covenant would be made void. But that would involve
the overthrow of God's government, and the ending of His existence;
for He pledged His own existence to give Abraham and his seed
the inheritance and the righteousness necessary for it. "For
the promise, that he should be the heir of the world, was not
to Abraham, or to his seed, through the law, but through the
righteousness of faith." Rom.4:13. The Gospel was as full
and complete in the days of Abraham as it has ever been or ever
will be. No addition to it, or change in its provisions or conditions,
could possibly be made after God's oath to Abraham. Nothing can
be taken away from it as it thus existed, and not one thing can
ever be required from any man more than what was required of
Abraham.
-
-
- This is the question that the apostle
Paul asks in verse 19, both for the purpose of anticipating the
objections of the Antinomians, and also that he may the more
emphatically show the place of the law in the Gospel. The question
is a very natural one. Since the inheritance is wholly by promise,
and a covenant confirmed can not be changed,--nothing can be
taken from it, and nothing added to it,--why did the law come
in four hundred and thirty years afterward? "Wherefore then
serveth the law?" More literally, Why then the law? What
business has it here? What part does it act? Of what use is it?
- The Question Answered.
-
-
- "It was added because HE two chapters
of Galatians that we have already s entering of the law"
at Sinai was not the beginning of its existence. The law of God
existed in the days of Abraham, and was kept by him. Gen.26:5.
God proved the children of Israel, as to whether they would keep
His law or not, more than a month before the law was spoken upon
Sinai. Ex.16:1-4,27,28.
- CCCC
-
- The word here rendered "added"
is the same as that rendered "spoken" in Heb.12:19:
"They that heard entreated that the word should not be spoken
to them any more." It is the same word that occurs in the
Septuagint rendering of Deut.5:22, where we read that God spoke
the ten commandments with a great voice; "and He added no
more." So we may read the answer to the question, "Wherefore
then the law?" thus: "It was spoken because of transgressions."
It is the reprover of sin.
- "Moreover the law entered, that the
offense might abound." Rom.5:20. In other words, "that
sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful." Rom.7:13.
It was given under circumstances of the most awful majesty, as
a warning to the children of Israel that by their unbelief they
were in danger of losing the promised inheritance. They did not,
like Abraham, believe the Lord; and "whatsoever is not of
faith is sin." But the inheritance was promised "through
the righteousness of faith," and, therefore, the unbelieving
Jews could not receive it. So the law was spoken to them, to
convince them that they had not the righteousness that was necessary
for the possession of the inheritance; for, although righteousness
does not come by the law, it must be witnessed by the law. Rom.3:21.
In short, the law was given to show them that they had not faith,
and so were not true children of Abraham, and were therefore
in a fair way to lose the inheritance. God would have put His
law into their hearts, even as He put it into Abraham's heart,
if they had believed; but when they disbelieved, yet still professed
to be heirs of the promise, it was necessary to show them in
the most marked manner that their unbelief was sin. The law was
spoken because of transgression, or, what is the same thing,
because of the unbelief of the people.
-
- "Behold, his soul which is lifted
up is not upright in him; but the just shall live by his faith."
Hab.2:4. The people of Israel were full of self-confidence and
of unbelief in God, as is shown by their murmuring against God's
leading, and by their assumption of ability to do anything that
God required, or to fulfil His promises. They had the same spirit
as their descendants, who asked, "What shall we do, that
we might work the works of God?" John 6:28. They were so
ignorant of God's righteousness that they thought that they could
establish their own righteousness as an equivalent. Rom.10:3.
Unless they saw their sin, they could not avail themselves of
the promise. Hence, the necessity of the speaking of the law.
- "Are they
not all ministering spirits, sent forth to do service for the
sake of them that shall inherit salvation?" Heb.1:14, R.V.
Just what office the "thousands of angels" who were
at Sinai had to perform, we can not know; but we do know that
they have a close and deep interest in everything that concerns
man, although the preaching of the Gospel is necessarily not
committed to them. When the foundations of the earth were laid,
"all the sons of God shouted for joy;" and a multitude
of the heavenly host sang praises when the birth of the Saviour
of mankind was announced. They are attendants upon the King of
kings, waiting to "do His pleasure, harkening unto the voice
of His word." It would not be otherwise than that they should
attend as a royal body-guard when the law was proclaimed, and,
of course, they were not there merely for pomp and parade. Stephen
said to the murderous Sanhedrim: "Ye stiff-necked and uncircumcised
in heart and ears, ye do always resist the Holy Ghost; as your
fathers did, so do ye. Which of the prophets have not your fathers
persecuted? and they have slain them which showed before of the
coming of the Just One; of whom ye have been now the betrayers
and murderers; who have received the law by the disposition of
angels, and have not kept it." Acts 7:51-53. Of him who
is now the adversary, the devil, it was said, "Thou sealest
up the sum," measure, or pattern. Eze.28:12. The French
of Segond has it, "Thou puttest the seal to perfection,"
and the Danish, "Thou stampest the seal upon the fit ordinance,"
indicating that before his fall he was what might be termed the
keeper of the seal, and that it was his duty to affix it to every
ordinance passed. Angels "excel in strength," and the
fact that they were all present at the giving of the law shows
that it was an event of the greatest magnitude and importance.
- For the present
we may pass by the question of time involved in the phrase, "till
the Seed should come, to whom the promise was made," since
our present study is the relation of the law to the promise.
The law was given to the people from Sinai "in the hand
of a Mediator." Who was this Mediator?--There can be only
one answer: "There is one God, and one Mediator between
God and men, the Man Christ Jesus." 1Tim.2:5. "Now
a mediator is not a mediator of one, but God is one." God
is one, the people are the other, and Christ Jesus is the Mediator.
Just as surely as God is one party to the transaction, Christ
must be the Mediator, for there is no other mediator between
God and men. "Neither is there salvation in any other; for
there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby
we must be saved." Acts 4:12.
- Man has wandered
from God, and rebelled against Him. "All we like sheep have
gone astray." Our iniquities have separated between us and
Him. Is.59:1,2. "The carnal mind is enmity against God;
for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be."
Rom.8:7. Christ came that He might destroy the enmity, and reconcile
us to God; for He is our peace. Eph.2:14-16. Christ "suffered
for sins, the Just for the unjust, that He might bring us to
God." 1Pet.3:18. Through Him we have access to God. Rom.5:1,2;
Eph.2:18
- In Him the carnal
mind, the rebellious mind, is taken away, and the mind of the
Spirit given in its stead, "that the righteousness of the
law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but
after the Spirit." Rom.8:3,4. Christ's work is to save that
which was lost, to restore that which was broken, to reunite
that which was separated. His name is "God with us;"
and so with Him dwelling in us we are made "partakers of
the Divine nature." 2Pet.1:4
-
- It should be understood that Christ's
work as Mediator is not limited either as to time or extent.
To be Mediator means more than to be intercessor. Christ was
Mediator before sin came into the world, and will be Mediator
when no sin is in the universe, and no need for expiation. "In
Him all things consist." He is the very impress of the Father's
being. He is the life. Only in and through Him does the life
of God flow to all creation. He is, then, the means, medium,
mediator, the way, by which the light of life pervades the universe.
He did not first become Mediator at the fall of man, but was
such from eternity. No one, not simply no man, but no created
being, comes to the Father but by Christ. No angel can stand
in the Divine presence except in Christ. No new power was developed,
no new machinery, so to speak, was required to be set in motion
by the entering of sin into the world. The power that had created
all things only continued in God's infinite mercy, to work for
the restoration of that which was lost. In Christ were all things
created, and, therefore, in Him we have redemption through His
blood. Col.1:14-17. The power that pervades and upholds the universe
is the power that saves us. "Now unto Him that is able to
do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according
to the power that worketh in us, unto Him be glory in the church
by Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end. Amen."
- "Is the
law then against the promises of God?"--Not by any means.
Far from it. If it were, it would not be in the hands of a Mediator,
Christ; for all the promises of God are in Him. 2Cor.1:20. So
we find the law and the promise combined in Christ. We may know
that the law was not and is not against the promises of God,
from the fact that God gave both the promise and the law. We
know, also, that the giving of the law introduced no new element
into the covenant, since, having been confirmed, nothing could
be added to or taken from it. But the law is not useless, else
God would not have given it. It is not a matter of indifference
whether we keep it or not, for God commands it. But, all the
same, it is not against the promise, and brings no new element
in. Why?--Simply because the law is in the promise. The promise
of the Spirit includes this: "I will put My laws into their
mind, and write them in their hearts." Heb.8:10. And this
is what God indicated had been done for Abraham when "He
gave him the covenant of circumcision." Read Rom.4:11; 2:25-29;
Phil.3:3.
- The law, as already
seen, is not against the promise, because it is in the promise.
The promise that Abraham and his seed should inherit the world,
was "through the righteousness of faith." But the law
is righteousness, as God says: "Harken unto Me, ye that
know righteousness, the people in whose heart is My law."
Is.51:7. So, then, the righteousness which the law demands is
the only righteousness that can inherit the promised land, but
it is obtained, not by the works of the law, but by faith. The
righteousness of the law is not attained by human efforts to
do the law, but by faith. See Rom.9:30-32. Therefore, the greater
the righteousness which the law demands, the greater is seen
to be the promise of God; for He has promised to give it to all
who believe. Yea, He has sworn it. When, therefore, the law was
spoken from Sinai, "out of the midst of the fire, of the
cloud, and of the thick darkness, with a great voice," accompanied
by the sounding of the trump of God, and with the whole earth
quaking at the presence of the Lord and all His holy angels,
thus indicating the inconceivable greatness and majesty of the
law of God, it was, to every one who remembered the oath of God,
but a revelation of the wondrous greatness of God's promise;
for all the righteousness which the law demands, He has sworn
to give to every one who trusts Him. The "loud voice"
with which the law was spoken, was the loud voice that from the
mountain-tops proclaims the glad tidings of the saving mercy
of God. See Is.40:9. God's precepts are promises; they must necessarily
be such, because He knows that men have no power. All that God
requires is what He gives. When He says, "Thou shalt not,"
we may take it as His assurance that if we but trust Him He will
preserve us from the sin against which He warns us. He will keep
us from falling.
-
- Jesus said of
the Comforter, "When He is come, He will reprove the world
of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment." John 16:8.
Of Himself He said, "I came not to call the righteous, but
sinners to repentance." Mark 2:17. "They that are whole
have no need of the physician, but they that are sick."
A man must feel his need before he will accept help; he must
know his disease before he can apply the remedy. Even so the
promise of righteousness will be utterly unheeded by one who
does not realize that he is a sinner. The first part of the comforting
work of the Holy Spirit, therefore, is to convince men of sin.
So "the Scripture hath concluded all under sin, that the
promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that
believe." "By the law is the knowledge of sin."
Rom.3:20. He who knows that he is a sinner is in the way to acknowledge
it; and "if we confess our sins, He is faithful and just
to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness."
1Joh.1:9. Thus the law is in the hands of the Spirit an active
agent in inducing men to accept the fullness of the promise.
No one hates the man who has saved his life by pointing out to
him an unknown peril; on the contrary, such an one is regarded
as a friend, and is always remembered with gratitude. Even so
will the law be regarded by the one who has been prompted by
its warning voice to flee from the wrath to come. He will ever
say, with the psalmist, "I hate vain thoughts, but Thy law
do I love."
- "If there
had been a law given which could make alive, verily righteousness
would have been of the law." This shows us that righteousness
is life. It is no mere formula, no dead theory or dogma, but
is living action. Christ is the life, and He is, therefore, our
righteousness. "The Spirit is life because of righteousness."
The law written on two tables of stone, could not give life,
any more than could the stones on which it was written. All its
precepts are perfect, but the flinty characters can not transform
themselves into action. He who receives only the law in letter,
has a "ministration of condemnation," and death. But
"the Word was made flesh." In Christ, the Living Stone,
the law is life and peace. Receiving Him through the "ministration
of the Spirit," we have the life of righteousness, which
the law approves.
- This twenty-first
verse shows that the giving of the law was to emphasize the importance
of the promise. All the circumstances attending the giving of
the law,--the trumpet tone, the awful voice, the quaking earth,
the "fire, and blackness, and tempest," the thunders
and lightnings, the bounds about the mount, beyond which it was
death to pass,--all these told that "the law worketh wrath"
to "the children of disobedience." But the very fact
that the wrath which the law works comes only on the children
of disobedience, proves that the law is good, and that "the
man that doeth them shall live in them." Did God wish to
discourage the people?--Not by any means. The law must be kept,
and the terrors of Sinai were designed to drive them back to
the oath of God, which four hundred and thirty years before had
been given to stand to all people in all ages as the assurance
of righteousness through the crucified and ever-living Saviour.
- Note the similarity
between verses 8 and 22. "The Scripture hath concluded [that
is, shut up] all under sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus
Christ might be given to them that believe." "The Scripture,
foreseeing that God would justify the heathen through faith,
preached before the Gospel unto Abraham, saying, In thee shall
all nations be blessed." We see that the Gospel is preached
by the same thing--the Scripture--that shuts men up under sin.
The word "conclude" means literally "shut up,"
just as is given in verse 23. Of course, a person who is shut
up by the law is in prison. In human governments a criminal is
shut up as soon as the law can get hold of him; God's law is
everywhere present, and always active, and, therefore, the instant
a man sins he is shut up. This is the condition of all the world,
"for all have sinned," and "there is none righteous,
no, not one."
- Those disobedient
ones to whom Christ preached in the days of Noah were "in
prison." 1Pet.3:19,20. But they, like all other sinners,
were "prisoners of hope." Zech.9:12. God "hath
looked down from the height of His sanctuary; from heaven did
the Lord behold the earth; to hear the groaning of the prisoner;
to loose those that are appointed to death." Ps.102:19,20.
Christ is given "for a covenant of the people, for a light
of the Gentiles; to open the blind eyes, to bring out the prisoners
from the prison, and them that sit in darkness out of the prison
house." Is.42:6,7
-
- Let me speak
from personal experience to the sinner who does not yet know
the joy and freedom of the Lord. Some day, if not already, you
will be sharply convicted of sin by the Spirit of God. You may
have been full of doubts and quibbles, of ready answers and self-defense,
but then you will have nothing to say. You will then have no
doubt about the reality of God and the Holy Spirit, and will
need no argument to assure you of it; for you will know the voice
of God speaking to your soul, and will feel, as did ancient Israel,
"Let not God speak with us, lest we die." Then you
will know what it is to be shut up in prison,--in a prison whose
walls seem to close on you, not only barring all escape, but
seeming to suffocate you. The tales of people condemned to be
buried alive with a heavy stone upon them, will seem very vivid
and real to you, as you feel the tables of the law crushing out
your life, and a hand of marble seems to be breaking your very
heart. Then it will give you joy to remember that you are shut
up for the sole purpose that "the promise by faith of Jesus
Christ" might be accepted by you. As soon as you lay hold
of that promise,--the key that will unlock any door in Doubting
Castle,--the prison doors will fly open, and you can say, "Our
soul is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the fowlers; the
snare is broken, and we are escaped." Ps.124:7.
- We have just
read that the Scripture hath shut up all under sin, that the
promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that
believe. Before faith came, we were kept in ward under the law,
shut up unto the faith which should afterwards be revealed. We
know that whatsoever is not of faith is sin (Rom.14:23); therefore,
to be under the law is identical with being under sin. We are
under the law solely because we are under sin. The grace of God
brings salvation from sin, so that when we accept God's grace
we are no longer under the law, because we are freed from sin.
Those who are under the law, therefore, are the transgressors
of the law. The righteous are not under it, but are walking in
it.
- "So that
the law hath been our tutor unto Christ, that we might be justified
by faith." The words "to bring us" are marked
both in the old version and the new as having been added to the
text, so we have dropped them out. It really makes no material
difference with the sense whether they are retained or omitted.
It will be noticed also that the new version has "tutor"
in the place of "schoolmaster." This is better, but
the sense is still better conveyed by the word that is used in
the German and Scandinavian translations, which signifies "master
of a house of correction." The single word in our language
corresponding to it would be jailer. The Greek word is the word
which we have in English as "pedagogue." The paidagogos
was the slave who accompanied the boys to school to see that
they did not play truant. If they attempted to run away, he would
bring them back, and had authority even to beat them to keep
them in the way. The word has come to be used as meaning "schoolmaster,"
although the Greek word has not at all the idea of a schoolmaster.
"Taskmaster" would be better. The idea here is rather
that of a guard who accompanies a prisoner who is allowed to
walk about outside the prison walls. The prisoner, although nominally
at large, is really deprived of his liberty just the same as
though he were actually in a cell. The fact is that all who do
not believe are "under sin," "shut up" "under
the law," and that, therefore, the law acts as their jailer.
It is that that shuts them in, and will not let them off; the
guilty can not escape in their guilt. God is merciful and gracious,
but He will not clear the guilty. Ex.34:6,7. That is, He will
not lie, by calling evil good; but He provides a way by which
the guilty may lose their guilt. Then the law will no longer
be against them, will no longer shut them up, and they can walk
at liberty. Only One Door
- Christ says,
"I am the door." John 10:7,9. He is also the sheepfold
and the Shepherd. Men fancy that when they are outside the fold
they are free, and that to come into the fold would mean a curtailing
of their liberty; but it is exactly the reverse. The fold of
Christ is "a large place," while unbelief is a narrow
prison. The sinner can have but a narrow range of thought; the
true "free thinker" is the one who comprehends with
all saints what is the length, and breadth, and depth, and height
of the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge. Outside of Christ
is bondage; in Him alone is there freedom. Outside of Christ,
the man is in prison, "holden with the cords of his sins."
Prov.5:22. "The strength of sin is the law." It is
the law that declares him to be a sinner, and makes him conscious
of his condition. "By the law is the knowledge of sin;"
and "sin is not imputed when there is no law." Rom.3:20;
5:13. The law really forms the sinner's prison walls. They close
in on him, making him feel uncomfortable, oppressing him with
a sense of sin, as though they would press his life out. In vain
he makes frantic efforts to escape. Those commandments stand
as firm as the everlasting hills. Whichever way he turns he finds
a commandment which says to him, "You can find no freedom
by me, for you have sinned." If he seeks to make friends
with the law, and promises to keep it, he is no better off, for
his sin still remains. It goads him and drives him to the only
way of escape--"the promise by faith of Jesus Christ."
In Christ he is made "free indeed," for in Christ he
is made the righteousness of God. In Christ is "the perfect
law of liberty."
-
- "But,"
says one, "the law says nothing of Christ." No; but
all creation does speak of Christ, proclaiming the power of His
salvation. We have seen that the cross of Christ, "Christ
and Him crucified," is to be seen in every leaf of the forest,
and, indeed, in everything that exists. Not only so, but every
fiber of man's being cries out for Christ. Men do not realize
it, but Christ is "the Desire of all nations." It is
He alone that "satisfies the desire of every living thing."
Only in Him can relief be found for the world's unrest and longing.
Now since Christ, in whom is peace, "for He is our peace,"
is seeking the weary and heavy-laden, and calling them to Himself,
and every man has longings that nothing else in the world can
satisfy, it is evident that if the man is awakened by the law
to keener consciousness of his condition, and the law continues
goading him, giving him no rest, and shutting up every other
way of escape, the man must at last find the Door of Safety,
for it always stands open. He is the City of Refuge, to which
every one pursued by the avenger of blood may flee, sure of finding
a welcome. In Christ alone will the sinner find release from
the lash of the law, for in Christ the righteousness of the law
is fulfilled, and by Him it is fulfilled in us. Rom.8:4. The
law is so far from requiring men to keep it in order to be saved,
as some suppose, that it will not allow anybody to be saved unless
he has "the righteousness which is of God by faith,"--the
faith of Jesus Christ.
- Strangely enough,
many have supposed that there was a definite time fixed for faith
to come. This passage has been "interpreted" to mean
that men were under the law until a certain time in the history
of the world, and that at that time faith came, and then they
were henceforth free from the law. The coming of faith they make
synonymous with the manifestation of Christ on earth. We can
not say that anybody ever thought so, for such an
"interpretation" indicates utter absence of thought
about the matter. It would make men to be saved in bulk, regardless
of any concurrence on their part. It would have it that up to
a certain time all were in bondage under the law, and that from
that time henceforth all were free from sin. A man's salvation
would, therefore, depend simply on the accident of birth. If
he lived before a certain time, he would be lost; if after, he
would be saved. Such an absurdity need not take more of our time
than the statement of it. No one can seriously think of the idea
that the apostle is here speaking of a fixed, definite point
of time in the history of the world, dividing between two so-called
"dispensations," without at once abandoning it.
- When, then, does
faith come? "Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the
Word of God." Rom.10:17. Whenever a man receives the Word
of God, the word of promise, which brings with it the fullness
of the law, and no longer fights against it, but yields to it,
then faith comes to him. fRead the eleventh chapter of Hebrews,
and you will see that faith came from the beginning. Since the
days of Abel, men have found freedom by faith. The only time
fixed is "now," "to-day." "Now is the
accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation." "To-day
if ye will hear His voice, harden not your hearts."
- "As many
of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ."
"Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus
Christ were baptized into His death?" Rom.6:3. It is by
His death that Christ redeems us from the curse of the law; but
we must die with Him. Baptism is "the likeness of His death."
We rise to walk "in newness of life," even Christ's
life. See Gal.2:20. Having put on Christ, we are one in Him.
We are completely identified with Him. Our identity is lost in
His. It is often said of one who has been converted, "He
is so changed you would not know him; he is not the same man."
No, he is not. God has turned him into "another man."
Therefore, being one with Christ, he has a right to whatever
Christ has, and a right to "the heavenly places" where
Christ sits. From the prison house of sin, he is exalted to the
dwelling-place of God. This, of course, presupposes that baptism
is with him a reality, not a mere outward form. It is not simply
into the visible water that he is baptized, but "into Christ,"
into His life.