There are
those who claim we must be sanctified, that is holy,
before we can be justified. They claim universal
holiness or obedience must precede justification. Unless
they mean that justification at the last day, the claim
is not only impossible it is contradictory. It is not a
believer in Christ but the non-believer that needs to be
justified. God does not justify the godly, but the
ungodly; those that are holy but the unholy. The good
Shepherd does not seek and save those that are in His
flock but those which are lost and without a shepherd.
He pardons those who need His pardoning mercy. He saves
from the guilt of sin, and, at the same time, from the
power of sin, sinners of every kind, of every degree,
men who, till then, were altogether ungodly; in whom the
love of the Father was not; and, consequently, in whom
dwelt no good thing, but evil, pride, anger, love of the
world, the genuine fruits of the carnal mind which is
enmity against God. These are the ones that need a
Physician.
A person,
before he/she is justified, may feed the hungry, clothe
the naked, do good works, do what is good and profitable
to men. But it does not mean that they are good in
themselves, or good in the sight of God. All truly good
works follow after justification and they are good and
acceptable to God in Christ, because they spring out of
a true and living faith. All works done before
justification are not good, in the Christian sense,
because they are not based on faith in Jesus Christ,
although they may be founded on some kind of faith in
God. They may be done because God willed and commanded
them to be done, but strange as it may seem to some
people they have the nature of sin.
Those who
doubt this have not considered the reason why no works
done before justification can be truly and properly
good. The argument is, no works are good, which are not
done as God has willed and commanded them to be done.
Works done before justification are not done as God has
willed and commanded them to be done, but according to
the will of man. Therefore, no works done before
justification are good. God has willed and commanded
that all our works should be done in charity; in love.
In that love to God that produces love to all mankind.
But none of our works can be done in this love, while
the love of the Father is not in us; and this love can
not be in us till we receive the "Spirit of Adoption,
crying in our hearts, Abba, Father."
It is
important we understand the terms by which we are
justified. We are justified through faith in Him that
justifies the ungodly. Paul told the Romans, “the one
who does not work, but believes in Him who justifies the
ungodly, his faith is credited as righteousness.” He
that believes is not condemned but has passed from death
to life. For the righteousness, or mercy, of God is by
faith in Jesus Christ to all and upon all that believe.
Therefore we are justified by faith without the deeds of
the law; without previous obedience to the moral law,
which we could not, till now, perform.
It is also important we remember, faith is evidence or
conviction, of things not seen, not discoverable by our
bodily senses, as being either past, future, or
spiritual. Therefore, justifying faith implies, not only
a divine evidence or conviction that "God was in Christ,
reconciling the world unto himself;" but a sure trust
and confidence that Christ died for our sins. That He
loved us and He gave Himself as a sacrifice for us. God,
for the sake of his Son, pardons the one who has in him
no good thing. And whatever good we had or do from that
hour when we first believe in God through Christ is
brought into our heart.
This is the
fruit of faith. First the tree is good and then the
fruit is good also. Therefore, we have a sure and
constant faith, not only that the death of Christ is
available for all the world, but that He has made a full
and sufficient sacrifice for us and a perfect cleansing
of our sins, so that we may say, with the Apostle, He
loved me and gave Himself for me. For this is to make
Christ my own.
Paul claims
there is no justification without faith. He claims if we
do not believe we are condemned and so long as we don’t
believe that condemnation cannot be removed, but "the
wrath of God abides on us.
As "there is no other name given under heaven," than
that of Jesus of Nazareth, no other merit whereby a
condemned sinner can ever be saved from the guilt of sin
so there is no other way of obtaining a share in His
merit, than "by faith in His name." So that as long as
we are without this faith, we are "strangers to the
covenant of promise," we are "aliens from the
commonwealth of Israel, and without God in the world."
Whatsoever virtues we may have, what good works we may
do, there is no profit in them, for we are a "child of
wrath," still under the curse, till we believe in Jesus.
Therefore
faith is the necessary condition of justification, the
only necessary condition. This is a point that we should
carefully consider. The very moment God gives faith, for
it is the gift of God, to the ungodly that faith is
counted to him for righteousness. Until that moment the
ungodly has no righteousness at all, not so much as
negative righteousness, or innocence. But faith is
imputed to him for righteousness the very moment that he
believes Not that God does not see the ungodly as what
he is, but as "He made Christ to be sin for us, that is,
treated Him as a sinner, punishing Him for our sins, so
He counts us righteous, from the time we believe in Him:
That is, He does not punish us for our sins. He treats
us as though we are guiltless and righteous.
The
difficulty some have in accepting the proposition that
faith is the only condition of justification is due to
not understanding faith is the only thing without which
none is justified. The only thing that is immediately,
indispensably absolutely requisite in order to be
pardoned is faith. Although a man should have every
thing else without faith he cannot be justified. If a
man in a full sense of his total ungodliness, of his
utter inability to think, speak, or do good, and his
absolute destiny to hell-fire casts himself wholly on
the mercy of God in Christ, which he cannot do but by
the grace of God, is forgiven in that moment. Who can
say there is something more required of him before he
can be justified?