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"NOT
GUILTY!"
THE BIBLICAL
DOCTRINE OF JUSTIFICATION
Justification means to absolve, to
vindicate, or to set right. It is a
judicial act of God based upon
Christ’s completed work. It is his
divine declaration of "not
guilty" expressed toward
sinners. So we can see that
Justification is the very opposite
of condemnation. While it does not
ignore God’s righteous
requirements, it nevertheless
declares that these requirements are
all fully met in Jesus. It is
important to note that this act of
God does not make people righteous
but it declares them righteous,
based upon the complete
righteousness of Christ. The
business of making people righteous
is reflected in a second great
biblical doctrine, that of
sanctification. This second doctrine
speaks of the drastic change in
character accompanying those who
have been justified.
As we know,
the rediscovery of justification by
faith was the basis of the great
Reformation. Some have even called
this doctrine the
"mainspring" or the
"main hinge" of the
Reformation. It seems strange today
that almost five hundred years after
the Reformation began this doctrine
continues to remain one of the
least-understood mysteries of the
Bible. Let us look into it.
SHADOWS OF JUSTIFICATION IN
THE OLD TESTAMENT
Paul in
introducing the subject of
justification states in Romans 3:21
that both the law and the prophets
testify concerning it. This is just
another way of saying that the whole
Bible talks about it. Then Paul goes
on to mention how this important
doctrine is seen in two Old
Testament characters, in Abraham and
in David.
In Genesis
15:6 it is said: "Abram
believed the LORD, and he credited
it to him as righteousness." To
credit in the Hebrew language is to
think, to reckon, or to account.
Because of Abram’s faith, God did
an amazing thing, he reckoned him as
righteous. Later in Genesis 26:5 God
says of him: "Abraham obeyed
me and kept my requirements, my
commands, my decrees and my
laws." How could such a
thing be? God says that Abraham kept
all his laws over half a millennium
before the law was ever given!
Obviously through justification all
the claims of the law were fully
satisfied in advance.
It is clear
that this amazing credited or
imputed righteousness has something
to do with us Gentiles, because it
was given before Abraham was ever
circumcised. Thus he becomes "the
father of all who believe but have
not been circumcised, in order that
righteousness might be credited to
them" (Rom. 4:11). We see
again in Romans 4:23-24: "The
words ‘it was credited to him’
were written not for him alone, but
also for us, to whom God will credit
righteousness-- for us who believe
in him who raised Jesus our Lord
from the dead."
We also
see that another famous Old
Testament person experienced this
credited or imputed righteousness.
His name was David, and he was king
in Israel. We know that David once
fell into the awful sin of adultery
and later to hide his sin he
committed murder. David then sought
the Lord with great penitence and
finally was able to say: "Blessed
is he whose transgressions are
forgiven, whose sins are covered.
Blessed is the man whose sin the
LORD does not count against
him" (Psa. 32:1-2; cf. Rom.
4:7-8).
HOW DOES JUSTIFICATION WORK?
Let us
try to understand how this
justification or credited
righteousness works. We know from
the New Testament that it is
ultimately based upon the completed
work of Jesus our Messiah. In Romans
5:18 we read: "Consequently,
just as the result of one trespass
was condemnation for all men, so
also the result of one act of
righteousness was justification that
brings life for all men."
In 2 Corinthians 5:19 it is said "that
God was reconciling the world to
himself in Christ, not counting
men's sins against them." In
2 Corinthians 5:21 we read that "God
made him who had no sin to be sin
for us, so that in him we might
become the righteousness of
God." Hebrews 10:14 goes on
to make plain that by the one
sacrifice of himself, the Lord has
made us perfect forever.
How
incredible all this is! We are made
perfect forever in Jesus! All this
sounds very much like Ecclesiastes
3:14. It says, "I know that
everything God does will endure
forever; nothing can be added to it
and nothing taken from it." As
the popular theologian, Dr. J.I.
Packer says: "Justification is
decisive for eternity, being in
effect the judgment of the last day
brought forward."* Paul sums it
up another way in Romans 8:30: "And
those he predestined, he also
called; those he called, he also
justified."
It is
also clear in the Bible that
justification goes far beyond what
mere obedience to the law could ever
accomplish. In Acts 13:39 we read:
""Through him everyone
who believes is justified from
everything you could not be
justified from by the law of
Moses."
Thus
the Bible makes plain that the
medium of this justification is
belief or faith in Jesus. In Romans
3:25 it is said: "God
presented him as a sacrifice of
atonement, through faith in his
blood." It is obvious in
the scripture that even this faith
is not something wholly dependent
upon us, but is also from God.
Ephesians 2:8-9 says: "For
it is by grace you have been saved,
through faith-- and this not from
yourselves, it is the gift of God--
not by works, so that no one can
boast." We remember the
story in Mark 9:24 of the frustrated
father and his demon-possessed son.
He cried out to Jesus, "I do
believe; help me overcome my
unbelief." Jesus
immediately answered this cry and
healed the boy. No, not even our
faith is from us alone. Someone has
described this saving faith of ours
as being like the hand of a beggar
reaching up to God.
EFFECTS OF JUSTIFICATION
So we see that
the immediate benefit of
justification is the remission of
all sin, with the sinner being
declared righteous. This is a
declaration from God himself and
from heaven’s highest court that
the believing sinner is now
justified. It is a legal decree of
"not guilty" or an
acquittal that applies equally to
all who believe. As the commentator
Warren Wiersbe states, "No
Christian is ‘more justified’
than another Christian."** Thus
the worst sinner who is justified by
faith in Jesus is as much justified
as the great evangelist and man of
God, Billy Graham. While there can
be a difference in the degree of our
sanctification, there is no
difference in the degree of our
justification. God sees us all
through the perfect sacrifice of
Jesus. We now appear to him as if we
had never sinned. We are all
regarded as being righteous just as
Christ is righteous (1 Cor. 1:30).
Thus he has made us "accepted
in the Beloved" (Eph. 1:6
NKJV).
Through
justification we now have peace with
God and with our own conscience. In
Romans 5:1 we read: "Therefore,
since we have been justified through
faith, we have peace with God
through our Lord Jesus Christ."
Through the justification that comes
by grace and through faith we are
delivered forever from the tyranny
of guilt. The Bible adds for us in
Romans 8:1: "Therefore,
there is now no condemnation for
those who are in Christ Jesus."
Paul asks in Romans 8:33-34: "Who
will bring any charge against those
whom God has chosen? It is God who
justifies. Who is he that condemns?
Christ Jesus, who died-- more than
that, who was raised to life-- is at
the right hand of God and is also
interceding for us." What a
great salvation God has procured for
us sinners!
There is
more. Not only are we justified in
God’s eyes and free from
condemnation but we are ushered into
God’s eternal kingdom. We are
ushered in as righteous people. In
Romans 8:17 we read this precious
promise: "Now if we are
children, then we are heirs-- heirs
of God and co-heirs with
Christ." The implications
of this incredible promise still
remain far beyond the limits of our
understanding.
Justification also brings life, even
eternal life for all people who
believe (Rom. 5:18). It marks the
beginning of the abundant life or
the fullness of life spoken of in
scripture. It is to be a life
unfettered and unhampered with
guilt, condemnation, fear, dread or
by the great drudgery of works
righteousness. It is a life where we
enjoy his blessing and his presence
forever.
-Jim Gerrish
Publication date:
2006
* J.I. Packer, Sola Fide: The
Reformed Doctrine of Justification.
** Warren Weirsbe, The Bible
Exposition Commentary, on Gal.
2:15-16.
Publication
date, 2005
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