JUSTIFICATION
This
writing is taken from the website:
www.bible.org. Our
sincere appreciation goes out to them for allowing us to use it.
This writing is authored by:
Lehman Strauss , Litt.D., F.R.G.S.
All
the doctrines of the Bible are important, but none is more
vital to the peace and rest of the child of God than the
Bible truth of Justification. The believer does not ascend
to the peak of Christian joy until he appreciates and
appropriates this aspect of the grace of God. Forgiveness is
wonderful; pardon is wonderful; cleansing is wonderful; but
Justification is more wonderful. In Paul’s day, and later in
the days of the Protestant Reformation, and in our own day,
it would be difficult to find a truth more cardinal to our
historic Christian faith than the doctrine of Justification.
In
the preceding lesson we discussed the doctrine of
Regeneration. Now there is a difference between Regeneration
and Justification. Regeneration is God working in us;
Justification is God working for us.
The Fact of Justification
The
question of man’s justification before God was raised early
in man’s history. In the Book of Job we read, “How should
man be just with God?” (Job 9:2), and “How then can man be
justified with God?” (Job 25:4).
In
the New Testament the Apostle Paul, chief exponent of the
doctrine of Justification, developed it more fully. After
his conversion, and during his visit to Antioch in Pisidia,
he said, “Be it known unto you therefore, men and brethren,
that through this man is preached unto you the forgiveness
of sins; And by Him all that believe are justified from all
things, from which ye could not be justified by the law of
Moses” (Acts 13:38, 39). Paul says that forgiveness and
justification are made possible through Jesus Christ, but he
makes it clear that the two are not identical. If a criminal
is found guilty and convicted of crime, he may be forgiven
by the offended party and even pardoned by the governor, but
he remains guilty of his offense. His guilt was established
and the court records carry it as such. He has been forgiven
but not justified.
The
Apostle is saying that God does two things for the guilty
but believing sinner that no man can possibly do for
another; that is, He both forgives and justifies.
Justification is more than forgiveness. We can
forgive another for his wrong, but never can we justify him.
Forgiveness assumes guilt; therefore, the guilty one cannot
be justified. On the other hand, if we justify a man, then
he needs no forgiveness, because justification assumes no
guilt. But since all men are both guilty and condemned
sinners before God, all need both forgiveness and
justification before entering the Kingdom of God.
Justification can be defined as that act of God whereby He
declares absolutely righteous any and all who take shelter
in the blood of Christ as their only hope for salvation.
Justification is a legal term which changes the believing
sinner’s standing before God, declaring him acquitted and
accepted by God, with the guilt and penalty of his sins put
away forever. Justification is the sentence of the Judge in
favor of the condemned man, clearing him of all blame and
freeing him of every charge. Justification does not make the
sinner righteous, but when God sees him “in Christ,” He
declares that he is righteous, thereby pronouncing the
verdict of “not guilty.” In modern jurisprudence a sentence
in any court must be in keeping with the facts presented. A
judge has no right to condemn the innocent or to clear the
guilty. Only God can clear the guilty.
We
must keep in mind the fact that there is a close connection
between the act of justifying and the imputed righteousness
of the one who has been justified. Though the words just,
justify, justification, right, righteous, and
righteousness are all translations from the same root,
their individual meanings may differ slightly. However, a
general meaning is common to all. The meaning of these words
is always objective, not subjective. If we looked to men for
a definition of the words justification and
righteousness, their meaning might change with time and
differ according to geographical location. Men change in
their thinking. What might be considered just and right in
one generation, or in one part of the world, might not be so
considered in another generation, or in a different part of
the world. Dr. Kenneth S. Wuest said, “God is the objective
standard which determines the content and meaning, and at
the same time keeps that content of meaning constant and
unchanging, since He only is the unchanging One.” A just
person is one who has been declared righteous by God. God is
the Author of Justification. “It is God that justifieth”
(Romans 8:33). Man has nothing to do with it except to
receive it through faith, and that as the Holy Spirit
enables him.
The Foundation of Justification
Forgiveness cannot be effected, nor righteousness declared,
until guilt has been established. If a man is not guilty, no
act or declaration of justification is needed. The man who
contends that he does not need to be justified by God must
first establish the evidence that there is no accusation
against him. But he who believes the Scriptures, and
examines his own heart honestly, must admit that he is an
accused and guilty sinner before God. We know that there is
something wrong with the human race. “All have sinned, and
come short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23).
God
chose the Apostle Paul to expound the doctrine of
Justification. This Paul did in detail in his Epistle to the
Romans. Romans 1:18-3:20 depicts a court scene. In 1:18-32
the unrighteousness of the Gentiles is exposed to the light.
With great delicacy Paul alluded to some of the vile
practices of which they were guilty. Then in clear and bold
logic, he listed twenty-five charges against man. In chapter
2:1-16 he shows that the self-righteous are equally guilty
before God. The moralists of Paul’s day were men of culture,
refinement, and intellect, but they too were inexcusable. In
the remainder of chapter 2, verses 17-29, the Apostle strips
the Jew of every vestige of the cloak of self-righteousness,
so that when we reach chapter 3, verse 19, God’s startling
verdict is “Guilty!” Every mouth is stopped and all the
world is accused before Him. A sad picture, but true!
Consider well and take seriously the fact of the
universality of sin. You and I are guilty and condemned. No
earthly or fleshly means, no court on earth can justify us
in God’s sight. We lack righteousness. God has a
righteousness which He desires to make ours. If we accept
it, He will pardon, forgive, free, cleanse, and justify us.
Upon this foundation God goes into action. Man’s need and
his inability to help himself occasion a move on God’s part.
He must find a way to ransom His fallen creature and to
remove both the penalty and guilt of man’s sin.
The
question arises: How can God justify the guilty sinner and
at the same time remain just? How can He declare an
unrighteous man righteous and Himself remain right? This is
the problem simply stated, and it is the basis upon which
God acts in Justification. The very nature of God demands
that He justify the righteous and condemn the guilty. If,
out of favoritism, or for other reasons, God cleared the
guilty and condemned the righteous, He would not be
administering justice. Little wonder that one theologian
suggested that the holy and righteous God faced the greatest
riddle ever when He set out to justify the ungodly.
I
must confess that, as a parent, I have been guilty of
dealing unjustly with my children, not in punishing them for
their misconduct, but in finding some excuse for it. More
than once I explained away their conduct because I did not
want to administer justice as I knew it should be
administered. In so doing I failed to deal justly on the
basis of the facts in the case. Because they were my
children and I loved them, I excused and shielded their
guilt. Now I am critical of my sons when I see them dealing
in this same way with their children. I am more ready now to
judge my grandchildren justly, but love kept me from so
judging my own children.
God, in keeping with His holiness and justice, cannot deal
unjustly with guilty sinners. He must judge and condemn the
guilty. But since all are guilty and deserving of judgment,
how can He save those whom He loves? From the human
viewpoint this is an insurmountable problem, one for which
there is no solution. But God did find a way whereby He
could remain just and at the same time justify the guilty
who would do no more than believe. How He did it is the
burden of our present study, for it brings before us one of
the most majestic and profound truths in all the Bible, the
doctrine of Justification.
The Function of Justification
What is the function of justification?
First, we know that sinners are
justified by God.
God
Himself is the Justifier. Only God can justify a man; no man
can justify another man. The tribunal of Heaven differs from
all earthly tribunals. The source of justification must be
in the one holy and righteous God. The governor of a state,
or the President of the United States, can pardon a guilty
and condemned criminal, but neither can reinstate the
criminal to the position of an innocent man. The Bible
illustrates this: “If there be a controversy between men,
and they come unto judgment, that the judges may judge them;
then shall they justify the righteous, and condemn the
wicked” (Deuteronomy 25:1). In all human jurisprudence such
a procedure is proper. If a man is not guilty of a charge
made against him, he should be justified. But in the case of
biblical justification, all men are sinners, and since all
sin is against God, He only must be satisfied. “. . . whom
He (God) called, them He also justified . . .” (Romans
8:30). “Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God’s
elect? It is God that justifieth” (Romans 8:33). “. . . That
He (God) might be just, and the Justifier of him who
believeth in Jesus” (Romans 3:26). Indeed, only God can
justify sinners.
Second, we are justified by grace.
“Being justified freely by His grace through the redemption
that is in Christ Jesus” (Romans 3:24). Look carefully at
the text and notice that word “freely.” The Greek word (dorean)
translated “freely” means “without a cause.” The same
Greek word is so translated in John 15:25. There was no
cause in the words and works of Jesus for which men should
hate Him, yet He was hated “freely,” “without a cause.” Just
as there was no cause that men should hate our Lord, so
there was no cause that God should justify man; but He
justifies him “freely,” without a cause. Jesus came with a
heart full of love for mankind, but they hated Him. Man’s
heart has been evil continually, but God loves him.
Justification is something for nothing. In the Latin version
the word “freely” is “gratis,” “being justified gratis.”
God’s method of justifying men gives us a glorious
demonstration of His sovereign grace. Grace has dug a
foundation so deep that men have been drinking from its
cleansing, justifying stream for centuries.
After Charles Spurgeon had finished preaching a sermon on
“Justification by Grace,” a man came to him and said, “Oh
sir, I have been praying and I do not think God will forgive
me unless I do something to deserve it.” To which Mr.
Spurgeon replied, “I tell you, sir, if you bring any of your
deservings, you shall never have it. God gives away His
justification freely; and if you bring anything to pay for
it, He will throw it in your face and will not give His
justification to you.”
You
cannot buy it with money, for it is “freely by His grace.”
You cannot work for it with your hands; it is “freely by His
grace.” You cannot receive it through any rite or ceremony;
it is “freely by His grace.” You cannot lay claim to it
because you are not so bad as others, for it is “freely by
His grace.” It is useless to wait until you improve, because
it is “freely by His grace.” If you hope to be justified
before God apart from grace, you have a false idea of the
value of the Christian Gospel. Perhaps some of you think
that it is all too cheap and not worth bothering about. If
such is the case, I urge you to come with me that I may show
you what it cost God to provide justification for you and
me.
Third, we are justified by blood.
The
provision for righteousness is solely through the blood of
Christ. “Much more then, being now justified by His
(Christ’s) blood, we shall be saved from wrath through Him”
(Romans 5:9). “Being justified freely by his grace through
the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, whom God hath set
forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to
declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are
past, through the forbearance of God; To declare, I say, at
this time his righteousness, that he might be just, and the
justifier of him which believeth in Jesus” (Romans 3:24-26)
These verses are of tremendous importance because they show
the only ground of justification.
We
emphasize the phrase “to declare his righteousness,” for to
justify means to declare righteous, the basis of which is
the shed Blood of Jesus Christ. The righteousness of God for
sinners has been wrought through the redeeming process of
God’s Son. When God declares a man righteous, that
declaration and act finds its efficacy in the Blood of Jesus
Christ, Who died on Calvary. The worth of His shed Blood is
the righteous ground on which the grace of God can act in
behalf of sinners.
Did
you ever question why Christ died on the Cross? The answer
is “to declare His righteousness.” You see, God could not
remain just and at the same time allow sin to go unpunished.
Justification cannot be on arbitrary grounds. There must be
a moral basis for a holy God to justify a sinful man. God
cannot be just and the Justifier of the ungoldly (Romans
3:26) unless a just penalty has been exacted. He is never
merciful at the expense of justice. If God is to justify a
guilty sinner, He can do it only on the ground that the
payment for sin has been met. When an earthly judge shows
mercy, he is not being just; and when he is just, he cannot
show mercy. The only way that God could be both merciful and
just was through Calvary, where Jesus Christ paid the
penalty for sin. There He vindicated His Holy Law and at the
same time showed mercy to sinners. The vicarious sufferings
and death of Christ are the cause of our justification
before God.
Paul set forth this doctrine clearly in II Corinthians 5:21
when he said, “For he (God) hath made him (Jesus)
to be sin
for us, who knew no sin, that we might be made the
righteousness of God in him.” Justification is only “in
Him,” for apart from Him no basis for it exists.
Let
us put it another way--the only righteous basis for our
justification has been provided through the death of Christ.
This was the only way that God could have reckoned to us His
righteousness, and it is the one way He found of not
reckoning to us our sin.
The righteousness of Christ is
imputed to the believer; the sin of the unbeliever is
imputed to Christ as if that sin were Christ’s. Think you it
was a fair exchange? Little wonder that men will love and
serve the Lord Jesus by life and by death! Praise God for
the atonement, for without it He could not reckon us other
than what we actually are, nor could He deal with us
differently from what we deserve. God can make bad men good
only through the death of His Son, for we are justified by
His Blood.
Fourth, we are justified by faith.
“Therefore, being justified by faith, we have peace
with God through our Lord Jesus Christ” (Romans 5:1).
“Therefore, we conclude that a man is justified by faith
without the deeds of the law” (Romans 3:28). “But to him
that worketh not, but believeth on Him that justifieth
the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness”
(Romans
4:5). Faith is the vital point of contact between the sinner
and God. All may be justified, but only those who
believe are justified. Remember, there is no meritorious
value in faith itself. The Blood of Christ and the grace of
God compose the basis of justification and the principle
upon which it is offered to man. This is the God-ward aspect
of justification, but like all the blessings of salvation,
the sinner cannot receive it until he accepts it, and this
he does when he acknowledges his guilt and puts personal
faith in what God has done for him in Christ.
Paul gave Abraham as an excellent biblical illustration of
justification by faith. He says, “. . . Abraham believed
God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness” (Romans
4:3, cf. Genesis 15:6; Galatians 3:6). Abraham had nothing,
or did nothing, that would stand boasting before God. He
simply believed God, and through his faith in the truth
which God had spoken, God in grace freely justified him. It
was Abraham’s faith that was reckoned unto him for
righteousness. Verse 5 tells us that only one kind of man
can be justified; not the self righteous worker, but the
ungodly man who believes, for, says Paul: “. . . to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the
ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness” (Romans
4:5). Do not misunderstand Paul. He is not inferring that
faith is righteousness, but rather that faith is the means
through which righteousness is reckoned. Faith is not the
end in itself; it is a means to the end.
Abraham’s justification is the pattern of the justification
of all men. The principle on which God declared him
righteous is the principle on which He declares any man
righteous. When God, by a judicial decision, made Abraham a
righteous man, He did it on the principle of faith, “that he
(Abraham) might be the father of all them that believe”
(Romans 4:11). Abraham was justified, not by rites of
religion, for circumcision was not required until later, nor
by the deeds of the law, for the law was not yet given, but
through faith in God’s Word.
The
Bible so solemnly shows us that he who justifies himself by
his own works must be condemned by God, but he who condemns
himself and trusts in Christ will find complete
justification in Him.
I
would not work my soul to save,
That work my Lord has done;
But I would work like any slave
For love of God’s dear Son.
One
further thought. In a comprehensive statement of the Gospel,
Paul wrote, “Who was delivered for our offenses, and was
raised again for our justification”
(Romans 4:25).
Christ’s resurrection was as necessary for our justification
as was His death. Had He not risen, man would be yet in his
sins (I Corinthians 15:17), because Christ would not be what
He claimed to be. He had to rise from death and appear
before God in our behalf in order to secure for us the
benefits of His death. Had death triumphed over Him, our
justification would have been forever impossible. That He
should pass into Heaven to appear for us was as necessary as
His death on the cross (Matthew 16:21). On account of our
offenses He died, and on account of our justification He
arose, the latter being the ratifying counterpart of the
former, the confirmation of the completeness and
satisfaction of the atonement.
Fifth, we are justified by the
Spirit.
“And such were some of you; but ye are washed, but ye are
sanctified, but ye are justified in the name of the Lord
Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God” (I Corinthians 6:11). I
understand this verse to mean that the Holy Spirit is the
agent and power by which we are declared righteous. It is
the Spirit who regenerates us (John 3:5; Titus 3:5) and puts
us in Christ. “For by one Spirit are we all baptized into
one body . . .” (I Corinthians 12:13). All three Persons in
the Holy Trinity are active in the justification of sinners.
The believing sinner’s righteousness is the plan of God the
Father, the provision of God the Son, and by the power of
God the Holy Spirit.
There is no conflict between Paul and James in their
presentation of the Doctrine of Justification. Both were
inspired by the Holy Spirit, therefore both are correct.
Paul says, “Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by
faith without the deeds of the law” (Romans 3:28).
James says, “Ye see then how that by works a man is
justified, and not by faith only” (James 2:24).
Paul is explaining how a sinner is justified (pronounced
righteous) by God, namely, by faith alone. James is
stating how a believer who has been justified by God is
justified before men, namely, by works. James is
speaking of the evidence of justification. He makes his
point clear by use of illustration: “Was not Abraham our
father justified by works, when he had offered Isaac his son
upon the altar?” (James 2:21). Of course he was! But when
did Abraham offer Isaac upon the altar? It was many years
after he was justified before God. God justified Abraham
before Isaac was born (Genesis 15:6). Abraham justified
himself before men after he had been declared acquitted by
God. What was true of Abraham was likewise true of Rahab
(James 2:25). Both have reference to justification before
men. When a man says he has been justified by God, his
fellowmen have a right to expect him to prove his faith by
his good works.
The
Biblical account of the council at Jerusalem (Acts 15:1-29),
shows that Paul and James were in perfect agreement. In
Romans Paul is merely emphasizing the truth that faith is
the means of justification, while James stresses the fact
that good works are the fruit of justification. Paul says,
“Do not depend on your good works to justify you.” James
says, “Do not neglect to perform good works if you are
justified.” Both are right. When a man is justified by
faith, good works are sure to follow.
A
solemn word of warning is in order here. When the covetous
Pharisees derided our Lord, who knew their hearts, Jesus
answered them, “Ye are they which justify yourselves before
men, but God knoweth your hearts; for that which is highly
esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God” (Luke
16:15). There is a false exterior justification that has the
approval and approbation of men, but is despised of God
because the heart is not right. There is always the danger
of men trying to live the Christian life when they are not
Christian at heart. Remember, it is by God’s perfect
standard of justification that we all will be tried. The
Pharisees made open and loud professions before men, but
their hearts were full of covetousness. So much lower than
God’s standard of holiness is man’s that things which are
approved of men may be counted as evil in the sight of God.
Let us make certain that by faith we are justified before
God.
Nor
can it be said that Paul contradicted himself when he wrote,
“For not the hearers of the law are just before God, but the
doers of the law shall be justified” (Romans 2:13). Paul
wrote this to those who were boasting that the Law was given
to them. They gloried in the Law. They trusted in the Law.
But the Law condemned them because they could not
keep it. Paul was telling them that if they hoped to be
justified by the Law, they had to be more than hearers--they
must be doers. But where is there a man who ever kept
the whole law? There was but One. His name is Jesus Christ,
and He was the only Just Man. He needed not to be justified
since He was already holy and just. If any person would be
saved by keeping the Law, then he must keep it wholly, not
merely in part, for “. . . he is a debtor to do the whole
law” (Galatians 5:3). “For whosoever shall keep the whole
law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all” (James 2:10).
If
a man’s obedience to some part of the law is his boast, he
may glory before man “but not before God” (Romans 4:2).
The Fruits of Justification
Paul’s summary of his argument of this great truth lists the
blessings which accompany it. Here is the believer’s
heritage in Christ. These results of justification by faith
are given to us in Romans, chapter 5.
Paul commences in verse 1 with the word “therefore.” This
word definitely connects that which is to follow with that
which has been said in previous chapters. It gathers up the
truth of what precedes and sheds light upon the truth about
to be affirmed. We began with man down in the depth of sin,
Jew and Gentile alike, both guilty and condemned before God.
Then we saw the record of the pure love and grace of God, in
sending Jesus Christ to die in the sinner’s place and for
sin, showing that the sinner could be justified before God,
“through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.”
“Therefore,” says Paul, “in view of what God in His Son has
done for man, these are the blessings that pour forth from
God to all who receive His justifying grace.”
A. We Have Peace With God (Romans
5:1)
This phrase sets forth the greatness of our new standing
before Him. This peace is not subjective; it is objective.
It is not the tranquility and quietness of our own feelings
and emotions. Elsewhere Paul speaks of the “peace of God”
(Philippians 4:7), an experience of those believers who
learn to cast their cares on Him. “Peace with God” means
that the strife between God and the believer has ended,
hostilities have ceased, and no longer are we His enemies.
Praise God! The war is done, armistice has been declared,
and God holds nothing whatever against us. Sin has been
fully and finally judged in the Person of Christ, our
Substitute and Sin-Bearer. God was satisfied with the
sacrifice of His Son, and never again will He take up a case
against those who have been justified by faith.
He sees the
believer just as if he had never sinned. Declared righteous
through the redemption which is in Christ, the believer can
now say with Andrew Bonar:
I
hear the word of love,
I gaze upon the Blood;
I see the mighty sacrifice,
And I have peace with God.
‘Tis everlasting peace,
Sure as Jehovah’s name;
‘Tis stable as His steadfast throne,
For evermore the same.
A
judicial peace between a holy God and a guilty sinner has
been established. Jesus Christ “made peace through the blood
of his cross . . . And you, that were sometime alienated and
enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath he
reconciled in the body of his flesh through death, to
present you holy and unblameable and unreproveable in his
sight” (Colossians 1:20-22).
B. We Have Access to God (Romans 5:2)
Before our sins were put away, we had absolutely no right of
approach to God. Sin shuts man out from God’s presence. Our
first parents were driven out from the garden; Cain was
driven out from the presence of the Lord; Israel was kept
afar off from the foot of Mount Sinai lest some of the
people should approach it. Only the high priest could come
before the Divine Presence, and that only once each year,
and not without blood. Of Jehovah, the Prophet wrote: “Thou
art of purer eyes than to behold evil, and canst not look on
iniquity” (Habakkuk 1:13). But Christ having taken away my
sin, I now have access into God’s presence. Since only the
righteous can enter, the believer has access because he has
been justified--declared righteous. He now can be introduced
to the private chamber of the King of kings, even into the
holiest of all. Furthermore, it is important that we do not
overlook the fact that this access is both a present and a
permanent possession. Remember, we could never open the way
nor introduce ourselves to God. We were brought there by
Christ Who said, “I am the Door; by me if any man enter in,
he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find
pasture” (John 10:9).
Beloved, let us not neglect our privilege--“in and out.”
Shame on believers to have access to so much and possess so
little! We have access into His grace. It is our own fault
if we are empty. But let us never lose sight of the glorious
fact that our Lord Jesus Christ, through His death, is the
sole ground of our justification. We have access only
through Him. Even in our daily prayer life, He warned us
that we can be successful only as we pray, as He said, “In
My Name.” It is “through Him we have access” (Ephesians
2:18). “In Christ Jesus our Lord . . . we have boldness and
access” (Ephesians 3:11, 12). “Having therefore, brethren,
boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus”
(Hebrews 10:19). This truth is emphasized for us in I Peter
3:18, where we read: “For Christ also hath once suffered for
sins, the Just for the unjust, that He might bring us to
God.” The last phrase of this verse, “that He might bring us
to God,” can be translated, “that He might provide for us
access into the presence of God.” This blessed privilege is
all of grace.
C. We Rejoice in Hope of the Glory of
God (Romans 5:2)
When a man is justified by faith, he rejoices in the present
because of the future glory. The writer knows from
experience that when the truth of justification burst upon
his soul, his joy and rejoicing increased. Knowing that we
shall enter into and share Christ’s glory should make us
rejoice now. There is glory for the believer which has not
yet been manifested. It is future -- “When Christ, who is our
life, shall be manifested, then shall ye also with him be
manifested in glory” (Colossians 3:4 R.V.). It is His own
glory which He has given to us (John 17:22), and it is the
result of our being declared righteous through faith in His
Blood. It is “the glory which shall be revealed in us”
(Romans 8:18), for “whom he justified, them he also
glorified” (Romans 8:30). This means that justification by
faith guarantees for us our future. It works! It will last!
D. We Glory in Tribulation Also
(Romans 5:3)
There is no promise in God’s Word that those who are
justified by faith shall escape tribulation. But our present
hope and future glory are not jeopardized by tribulation.
Tribulation cannot touch the security of the justified. The
mere professor is easily moved by tribulation (Matthew
13:21), but in the justified, tribulation works a positive
good. Those who are justified by faith can take pleasure in
tribulation (II Corinthians 12:10), for we know that it is
“but for a moment,” and that it “worketh for us a far more
exceeding and eternal weight of glory” (II Corinthians
4:17).
Someone may ask, “How can you take such an attitude toward
your troubles?” Charles Hodge has said, “Since our relation
to God is changed, the relation of all things to us is
changed.” And that is the answer! Judicially we are declared
righteous, we are justified, and the just shall live by
faith. None but the justified who walk by faith can rejoice
in the midst of tribulation, for rejoicing in tribulation is
not natural to the unregenerate heart.
If
this message should find its way into the hands of an
unsaved person, I would say in closing that God can do
nothing more to save you. Heaven was bankrupt to make you
righteous. He did all that He could do. Reject the Savior
no longer, but, like Abraham of old, believe God, and it
shall be counted unto you for righteousness.