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The
Dangers of |
The Danger of Teaching the Erroneous Doctrine of "Vicarious Law-Keeping"
Vicarious Law-Keeping
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"For as by one
man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many
be made righteous" The contrast in this verse is between Adam's one act of disobedience which plunged the entire race into sin and Christ's one act of obedience which provided salvation for all. Romans 5:19 is often misinterpreted by Reformed men who say that the obedience of Christ mentioned in this verse refers to His obedience throughout His life in keeping the law perfectly. And while the Lord Jesus Christ did keep every jot and tittle of the law perfectly, the obedience spoken of in Romans 5:19 is the same obedience referred to in Philippians 2:8, namely Christ's obedience to the Father's will by going to the cross. It refers to His one act of redemption. Reformed theologians hold to a theory which is sometimes referred to as "vicarious law-keeping." This theory says that Christ not only died for us as our Substitute (a truth which we fully agree with), but that Christ also lived for us (during His pre-cross days) and kept God's commandments for us as our Substitute. They teach that the debt man owed to God was paid and fully satisfied not only by Christ’s substitutionary death but also by the obedience of His life (which they call Christ's "active righteousness"). They teach that justification is grounded not only in Christ’s death on the cross where He bore the penalty of God’s judgment against us, but it also "is grounded in Christ’s lifelong obedience in which He fulfilled the precepts of God’s law for us" [Reformation Study Bible, see note under Romans 3:24]. Concerning this "obediential righteousness of Christ," they assert and maintain that Christ atoned by His life as well as by His death, and that this was absolutely necessary and essential in procuring our righteousness. They say that when we get saved, God imputes to us the law-keeping righteousness of Christ. The 1999 document entitled, The Gospel of Jesus Christ: An Evangelical Celebration (signed by many leading Evangelicals including Hybels, Hayford, MacArthur, Robertson, McCartney, Swindoll, Lucado, Stott, Ankerberg, Neff, Stowell, Stanley, etc.) expressly states:
It later adds:
Clearly, this statement perpetuates the erroneous idea that our justification is based upon Christ's legal obedience in life as well as His death and resurrection. In answering this theory, we must first strongly affirm that the Lord Jesus Christ lived a perfect, sinless life and that He perfectly obeyed God's commandments, always doing those things that please the Father. He was the spotless, sinless Lamb of God. No Bible believer could deny the flawless, sinless life of our Saviour. These facts are indisputable. However, the righteousness by which we are justified does not flow from the earthly Jesus, but it becomes ours because of the risen and glorified Son of God and our union with Him. Please notice that Romans 4:25 does not say this: "Who was delivered for our offenses, and who obeyed the law for our justification." Reformed theology, in this case, looks for righteousness on the wrong side of the cross. We do not find our righteousness in the law or even in Christ's keeping of the law, but we find our righteousness only IN HIM, the risen Christ (2 Cor. 5:21). Our righteous standing in Christ is due to the fact that we have been UNITED to the risen Christ, and He has become our righteousness (1 Cor. 1:30). The righteousness of God, which we receive by faith, is "without [apart from] the law" (Rom. 3:22), and has no legal basis whatsoever. In Romans 3:24 we learn that the basis of our justification is found at Calvary: "Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus." The verse says nothing of His law-keeping as being the basis for our justification. For an excellent discussion as to why "vicarious law-keeping" is an erroneous doctrine, see the discussion of this point in William Newel's commentary on Romans Verse By Verse (see pages 190-193, his discussion under Romans 5:19). This material is also reproduced below, along with other very helpful articles on this subject. |
The Righteousness of Christ
(by David Dunlap, used with his permission)
In the late 18th century a group of
intrepid British Dispensational leaders began to raise their voices in
uncompromising opposition to, what seemed to many, an established doctrine of
the church. This doctrine was called the “Imputation of the Active Obedience of
Christ.” This doctrine was so accepted at the time that few imagined that it
could be challenged. It was a doctrine that grew out of the Reformation period
and was first articulated in the writings of Reformers John Calvin and Martin
Luther. But when British Dispensationalists such as John N. Darby and William
Kelly opposed this doctrine on Biblical grounds, they were bitterly denounced as
unorthodox and even heretical. At that time, a book by William Reid called
Heresies of the Plymouth Brethren was issued as an attack on these
Dispensationalists; and Dr. Robert Dabney set forth a similar attack in a work
called Theology of the Plymouth Brethren in 1891. However, in the years
to follow and up to the present day, leading evangelicals have concluded that
this Reformed doctrine of imputation was not based upon the bedrock of the Word
of God, but rather on the shifting sand of human reason. Today, this doctrine is
not generally accepted among evangelicals; in fact, there are few serious-minded
Christians who would even be familiar with it. Reformed writer Dr. R. C. Sproul
laments that among present-day evangelicalism this doctrine is largely unknown
and overlooked [R. C. Sproul, Faith Alone,
(Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1997), p. 103]. However, in
recent years there has been a growing interest in this doctrine due to the
popularity of Reformed theology.
What is Salvation by the
“Obedience” of Christ?
Reformed theology, since the time of
the Reformers, has taught that Christ provided a two-fold foundation for
justification. It has been asserted that our Lord's sufferings from His birth
until His death were His “active obedience” and His sufferings and death on the
cross set forth Christ's “passive obedience.” These two aspects combine to form
the basis for the believer's justification. All evangelical Christians affirm
that Christ's death on the cross is the Biblical foundation for justification.
However, Reformed theology insists that the obedience and sufferings of Christ
prior to the cross are essential for our salvation. Calvinism affirms that the
death of Christ, His “passive obedience,” dealt with our guilt, while the merits
in the life of Christ, his “active obedience” provides for our justification.
Reformer John Calvin, in his most important theological work, The Institutes
of Christian Religion, sets forth this view,
. . . when it is asked how Christ, by abolishing sin, removed the enmity between God and us, and purchased a righteousness which made him favourable and kind to us, it may be answered generally, that he accomplished this by the whole course of his obedience. This is proved by the testimony of the Paul, “As by one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous” (Rom. 5:19). And indeed he elsewhere extends the ground of pardon which exempts from the curse of the law to the whole life of Christ, “When the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his son, made of a woman, made unto the law, to redeem them that were under the law” (Gal. 4:4-5). Thus even at his baptism he declared that a part of righteousness was fulfilled by his yielding obedience to the command of the Father. In short, from the moment when he assumed the form of a servant, he began, in order to redeem us, to pay the price of deliverance . . . (Italics mine) [John Calvin, Calvin's Institutes, vol.2, (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1962), p. 437].
The implication of what Calvin is saying must not be lost on us. It is not the death of Christ alone that redeems and justifies; it is also the sufferings and obedience that Christ endured during His life prior to the cross. Every act of obedience, as a child, was redeeming, every drop of blood shed, in early manhood, was atoning, in every act of obedience from the time He assumed the form of a servant, from the time of His birth, he was “paying the price of deliverance.” At times, so much weight is given to the redemptive work in the life of Christ by Reformed authors that one wonders why the death of Christ was necessary at all. Some Reformed writers press this issue so much so that they attribute a redemptive quality to specific events in the life of Christ. The hymnwriter and Reformed theologian Horatius Bonar details events in Christ's life which he considers to be redemptive sufferings prior to the cross. He writes,
Christ's vicarious life began in the manger . . . there his sin-bearing had begun . . . when He was circumcised and baptised it was as a substitute . . . and He was always the sinless One bearing our sins... [Horatius Bonar, The Everlasting Righteousness, (London: J. Nisbet & Co., 1879), pp. 26, 27, 29, 32].
As alarming as this may seem to many serious Bible students, this Reformed position of justification persists to our present day. The popular Reformed theologian R. C. Sproul has set forth this view in the most extreme terms. He asserts that the cross alone was insufficient, for the death and the life of Christ are on equal footing in the work of justification and redemption. Therefore, without the redemptive work in the life of Christ, the death of Christ could not justify the believer. He writes,
The cross alone, however, does not justify us . . . We are justified not only by the death of Christ, but also by the life of Christ. Christ's mission of redemption was not limited to the cross. To save us He had to live a life of perfect righteousness. His perfect, active obedience was necessary for His and our salvation . . . We are constituted as righteous by the obedience of Christ which is imputed to us by faith [R. C. Sproul, Faith Alone, (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1995), p. 104].
Christ's holy and spotless life is
of great interest to those who are spiritually minded. Contemplation of His
perfections displayed prior to the cross evokes true worship, for worship does
not arise from our appreciation of His death alone but also from consideration
of all that He was in Himself and for the pleasure of God (Matthew 17:5). This
is not to say that His life contributes directly to our redemption. Rather His
Holy character was something essential to His own nature as well as qualifying
Him to become the sacrificial Lamb. For God made it clear in the establishment
of the Passover that “your lamb shall be without blemish and without spot”
(Exodus 12:15) and Peter confirms that He fulfilled this divine requirement (1
Peter 1:19). His holiness was, as we have said, essential to Him personally but
it is not vicarious or made over to us in some way. The Gospel is not that
Christ lived His life for our benefit but that He “died for our sins.. .was
buried and rose again” (1 Cor. 15:3, 4).
Reformed Arguments Examined
Reformed theologians struggle to find clear and unambiguous Biblical support for this view of justification. However, one verse that is consistently quoted by Reformed writers is Romans 5:18, “Therefore, 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.” Reformed writers understand the phrase “by the righteousness of one” to mean the righteous, obedient, and law-keeping acts in the life of Christ prior to the cross. This righteousness, it is theorized, becomes imputed to us by faith. However, is this what Romans 5:18 teaches? Does the phrase “righteousness of one” refer to His life or to His once for all death on the cross? William MacDonald provides needed clarity on this point when he writes:
The righteousness of Christ mentioned in Romans 5: 18 does not mean His righteousness as a Man on earth or His perfect keeping of the law. These are never said to be imputed to us. If they were, then it would not have been necessary for Christ to die. The New American Standard Bible is on target when it translates: “So then as through one transgression there resulted condemnation to all men, even so through one act of righteousness there resulted justification of life to all men.” The “one act of righteousness” was not the Savior's life or His keeping of the law, but rather His substitutionary death on Calvary's cross [William MacDonald, Justification by Faith (Romans), (Kansas City, KS: Walterick Publishers, 1981), p. 62].
A careful reading and study of
this verse shows that the word “righteousness” (Gr. “dikaioma”) should be
rightly rendered “act of righteousness.” It refers to that which was
accomplished at His death, and stands in contrast to righteousness as a quality.
The discussion in verses 8-10 of the same chapter casts further light on the
fact that it is a reference to the death of Christ. Moreover, the Word of God
never teaches that we are justified by the righteous life of Christ, but rather
by the righteous act of Christ on the cross, which permitted God to pour out His
wrath against sin.
What are the Biblical
Implications?
Every careful student of the Scriptures should be concerned about this teaching. At the very outset, this Reformed view of justification opposes the very tenor of New Testament teaching on justification. The New Testament repeatedly states that the basis of justification is found, not in the life of Christ, but in His death; and that justification was not through numerous events in the life of Christ, but by one event, namely, the death of Christ. The sheer weight of the Biblical record should make us pause. We read, “For Christ once suffered for sins, the Just for the unjust, that He might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh . . .” (1 Peter 3:18); “. . . being justified by His blood we shall be saved from wrath through Him” (Rom.5:9); “So Christ was once offered to bear the sin of many . . .”(Heb. 9:28). Moreover, the gospel writers make it very clear that up to the time of the suffering of Christ on the cross, our Lord did not “drink the cup” of God's wrath and become the sin-bearer. The righteous God did not forsake the Son prior to the cross. The Son, prior to the cross, never uttered the awful lament, “My God, my God why hast thou forsaken Me . . .” (Mk. 15:34). The cross of Christ was the only place where the holy God poured out His unreserved and righteous judgment against sin. There the holy God poured out His unmitigated wrath without mercy, that we might receive the infinite mercy of God without wrath. In this regard our Lord states, “Now is my soul troubled; and what shall I say? Father save Me from this hour. But for this cause came I unto this hour” (John 12:27). Is not Scripture exceedingly clear that it was upon the cross that our Lord suffered for our sins and bore the wrath of God against sin?
There is yet another serious consequence of this Reformed doctrine of justification. This doctrinal perspective turns the salvation through the grace of God into a works-salvation through a focus on the keeping of the Mosaic law. The Scripture is very clear on this point; no one shall ever be saved by keeping the law. Paul unequivocally proclaims, “ . . . to him that worketh not, but believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly” (Rom. 4:5); “...no man is justified by the law in the sight of God” (Gal. 3:11); “knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ...”(Gal. 2:16). Nevertheless, in the Reformed view of justification, we are instructed that we are reckoned righteous by the keeping of the law. However, there is an unusual twist; it is not our individual law-keeping that justifies, us but that of Christ who kept the law representatively for us, so His merits of keeping the law are imputed to us. Notice the words of respected author and Reformed theologian Dr. J. I. Packer:
In classical (Reformed) Protestant theology the phrase “the imputation of Christ's righteousness,” means, namely, that believers are righteous and have righteousness before God for no other reason than that Christ, their head, was righteous before God, and they are one with Him, sharers of His status and acceptance. God justifies them by passing on them, for Christ's sake, the verdict which Christ's obedience merited. God declares them to be righteous because He reckons them to be righteous; and He reckons righteousness to them, not because He accounts them to have kept His law personally, but because He accounts them to be united to the one who kept it representatively [J. I. Packer, Justification, in Wycliffe Dictionary of Theology, (Ed.) Harrison, Bromiley, Henry, (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 1999), p.306.]
Christian righteousness begins with the death and resurrection of Christ. The risen Christ Himself is our righteousness, not Christ fulfilling the law in our place. The Christian's connection to the law is broken through the death and resurrection of Christ. The apostle Paul in Romans chapter seven expands upon this important theme. The law's power is only in force as long as a person is alive, or in the words of the apostle, "Law has dominion over a man as long as he liveth” (Rom. 7:1). Paul then sets forth our complete deliverance from under the law when he says that those who were under the law were made dead to the law by the death of Christ, that they might be joined to another, to Him that was raised from the dead (Rom. 7:1-6). A dead man is not subject to civil or religious law; in like manner, the believer is not subject to the law of Moses because he is dead and risen in Christ. Therefore, to those who believe on Christ, the law has lost its authority to bring either condemnation or righteousness through the obedience of Christ. Paul finally concludes this argument in Romans by writing, “For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believes” (Rom. 10:4). If the law is powerless to make righteous, what then is the true character of justification? Justification is the declaration by God unto us of a high and measureless righteousness, in that the whole value of the death of Christ was credited to the believer by faith, irrespective of the law, according to grace. Through the resurrection of Christ the believer now has a new standing in the risen Christ in glory (Rom. 4:25). Dispensational scholar William Kelly beautifully describes the basis and character of the righteousness of God through Christ when he writes:
Had Christ only kept the law, neither your soul nor mine could have been saved much less be blessed as we are. Whoever kept the law, it would have been a righteousness of the law, and not God's righteousness, which has not the smallest connection with obeying the law. Because Christ obeyed unto death, God brought in a new kind of righteousness —not ours, but His own favor. Christ has been made a curse upon the tree; God has made Him sin for us that we might be the righteousness of God in Him [William Kelly, Lectures on the Epistle to the Ephesians, (Addison, IL: Bible Truth Publishers, 1979), pp. 104-105].
John Nelson Darby sets forth the important connection between the resurrection of Christ and our new standing in Him. He writes,
What I deny is the doctrine that, while the death of Christ cleanses us from sin, His keeping the law is our positive righteousness; and that His keeping the law is imputed to us as ourselves under it, and that law-keeping is positive righteousness. I believe that Christ perfectly glorified God by obedience even unto death, and that it is to our profit, in that, while His death has canceled all our sins, we are accepted according to His present acceptance in God's sight,...being held to be risen with Him, our position before God is not legal righteousness, or measured by Christ's keeping the law, but His present acceptance, as risen..., and we accounted righteous according to the value of His resurrection [J. N. Darby, Collected Writings, vol.14, (Kingston-on-Thames, GB: Stow Hill Bible and Tract Depot, ND), p. 250].
The Importance of the Cross
of Christ
Moreover, the death of Christ must
never be trivialized. If Christ's keeping the law could justify, if it was truly
vicarious, then why did Christ die? Understandably, the Reformed Christian would
raise his vigorous objection. He would strongly argue that the death of Christ
was truly needful and essential for our salvation. This sincere objection is
noted and respected. However, the most serious question still remains unanswered.
If, as the Reformed view suggests, justification comes through the law, since
Christ was fully obedient to the law in every respect, and if the merits of
Christ's righteous life were as truly redemptive as the death of Christ, then why
did Christ die? Reformed theology strongly asserts that the obedience and
righteous merits of the life of Christ are as truly redemptive as the death of
Christ. The respected Reformed theologian Archibald Alexander Hodge explains:
The Scriptures teach us plainly that Christ's obedience was as truly vicarious as was his suffering, and that he reconciled us to the Father by the one as well as by the other [Archibald Alexander Hodge, The Atonement, (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Publishing, 1953), pp. 248, 249].
If this is all true, why did Christ have to die? Why do Old Testament prophetic passages such as Isaiah 53 and Psalm 22 speak of the necessity of the death of the Messiah? Reformed theology has never given a satisfying answer to this important question. Reformed writers, due to the influence of Covenant theology, do not see a distinction between righteousness through the law in the Old Testament and righteousness through Christ's death alone in the New Testament. Covenant theology fails to see significant distinctions between earthly Israel under the law and the New Testament church. Therefore, it suggests a doctrine of righteousness through the co-mingling of both law and grace. This will never do. God has set aside righteousness according to the law and has brought in something altogether new. The law came by Moses, but grace and truth through our Lord Jesus Christ. The cross of Christ must stand at the forefront and alone in any theology of righteousness. Therefore, it must be stated with great earnestness that the death of Christ, without dispute, was necessary. Any attempt to minimize or lessen its importance and its efficacy must be vigorously resisted. Respected Bible commentator John Ritchie has well summarized the Reformed view of justification and the phrase “the righteousness of Christ.” He writes:
The theological phrase, “The righteousness of Christ,” so much used, is not a scriptural term. The meaning usually read into it is, that the sinner having failed to keep the law, Christ has kept it for him, that His obedience is counted mans' righteousness, and put on all that believe as a “robe.” But this would not be “righteousness apart from law” (Rom. 3:21). If God reckons the sinner to have kept the law because Christ kept the law for him, then righteousness surely comes by law, and the death of Christ was “in vain” (Gal. 2:21). In all this, justification by grace through redemption, has no place. The gospel is not that a sinner is made righteous by the imputation of Christ's legal obedience on earth, and saved by His death, but rather that “being now justified by His blood, we shall be saved from wrath through Him” [John Ritchie, Romans, (Charlotte, NC : The Serious Christian, 1987), p. 161].
We must reject the conclusions of otherwise biblically sound believers that the law-keeping of Christ justifies, redeems, and reconciles. We must set aside the recent statements of Reformed theologian R. C. Sproul who states that "the cross alone, however, does not justify us . . ." (Faith Alone, p. 103) and that of Dr. D. James Kennedy who commented, “We are clothed in His righteousness alone . . . his perfect obedience provides our righteousness. This is all that is needed, and nothing less will suffice” (Is Jesus the Only Way to God?, Coral Ridge Ministries, pp. 8-9 undated). The Scriptures are clear and definitive on this point that no one is partially redeemed or justified in any degree by keeping the law.
However, this is not to say that the New Testament is silent concerning the glories and perfections of the life of Christ. Without question, our beloved Lord fully and completely satisfied the demands of God's holy law during His earthy life. His obedient life was necessary to manifest the glories of God in Christ to the world and to His disciples. The Lord Jesus Christ lived a life of obedience as none other had ever lived, or will ever live. He always did that which pleased His Father (Rom. 15:3). No word that He ever spoke ever needed to be withdrawn, for He never spoke rashly or in exaggeration. No action of our Lord ever required apology, for our Lord never wronged another man. No thought or deed of our Lord ever needed confession, for He never sinned or transgressed the law of God. Our Lord never asked advice of another during His earthly ministry, for He was ever the all-wise and omniscient God. However, none of these perfections and glories of our Lord ever justified or redeemed man from a single sin. For it was only the matchless and infinite work of our Lord upon the cross of Christ that can redeem. New Testament scholar W. E. Vine summarizes the relationship of the earthly life of our Lord and His death upon the cross when he writes:
Neither the incarnation of the Son of God, nor His keeping of the law in the days of His flesh availed, in whole or in part, for the redemption of men.... His redemptive work proper began and ended on the cross; ...Hence it is nowhere said in the New Testament that Christ kept the law for us. Only His death is vicarious, or substitutionary. He is not said to have borne sin during any part of His life; it was at the cross that He became the sin-bearer [C. F. Hogg , W. E. Vine , The Epistle of the Galatians, (London; GB: Pickering and Inglis, LTD.), 1959, p.186].
The Error of Vicarious Law Keeping
(by William R. Newell, in his Romans commentary under Romans 5:19)

Even so through the obedience of the One (Romans 5:19)—This was our Lord's death, as an act of obedience: “He became obedient unto death, yea, the death of the cross.” He was of course always obedient to His Father, but it cannot be too strongly emphasized that His life before the cross,—His “active obedience,” as it is called, is not in any sense counted to us for righteousness. “I delivered to you,” says Paul, “first of all, that Christ died for our sins.” Before His death He was “holy, guileless, undefiled, separated from sinners.” He Himself said: “Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone; but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit.” Do you not see that those who claim that our Lord's righteous life under Moses' Law is reckoned to us for our “active” righteousness; while His death in which He put away our sins, is, as they claim, the “passive” side, are really leaving you, and the Lord too, under the authority of the Law?
“Justified in (the value or power of)
His blood,” and of that alone, gives the direct lie to the claim that man must
have “an active righteousness” as well as “a passive righteousness.” The
specious assertion is, that “inasmuch as we have all broken the Law (although
God says that Gentiles were 'without law'—and those in Christ are not under it!)
and inasmuch as man cannot by his works himself recover his righteous standing,
Christ, forsooth, came and kept The Law in man's place (!) ; and then went to
the cross and suffered the penalty of death for man's guilt so that the result
is an 'active righteousness' reckoned to man:—that is, Christ's keeping The Law
in man's place; and, second, a 'passive righteousness,' which consists in the
putting away of all guilt by the blood of Christ.”
Now, the awful thing here is the
unbelief concerning man's irrecoverable state before God. For not only must
Christ's blood be shed in expiation of our guilt; but we had to die with
Christ. We were connected with the old Adam; and the old man—all we had and
were in Adam, must be crucified—if we were to be “joined to Another, even to Him
that was raised from the dead.” Theological teaching since the Reformation has
never set forth clearly our utter end in death with Christ, at the cross.
The fatal result of this terrible
error is to leave The Law as claimant over those in Christ: for, “Law has
dominion over a man as long as he liveth” (7.1). Unless you are able to believe
in your very heart that you died with Christ, that your old man was crucified
with Him, and that you were buried, and that your history before God in Adam the
first came to an utter end at Calvary, you will never get free from the claims
of Law upon your conscience. [Footnote:
"Both Calvinists and Arminians think that the flesh is not so bad that it cannot
be acted on for God by Christ using the Law of God and giving it power through
the Spirit"---This is William Kelly's shrewd and correct comment]
I say again, that the Law was
given to neither Adam. The first Adam had life: God did not give him law
whereby to get life! Not until Moses did the Law come in, and then only as an
incidental thing to reveal to man his condition. The Law was not given to the
first Adam, nor to the human race; but to Israel only (Deut. 4:5-8;
33:1-5; Ps. 147:19,20). Again, the Law was not given to the Last Adam! “The Last
Man Adam became a life-giving spirit”: this is Christ, Risen from the dead, at
God's right hand, communicating spiritual life. Is He under law? It is
only the desperate legality of man's heart, his self-confidence, that makes him
drag in the Law, and cling to the Law,—even though Christ must fulfill it for
him! “Vicarious law-keeping" is Galatian heresy!
Our Lord said plainly that His work
in this world was to die: “The Son of Man came to give His life a
ransom” ; and indeed, “through the Eternal Spirit He offered Himself without
blemish unto God.” True, He must be a spotless Lamb. But for what? For
sacrifice! He did not touch our case, had no connection with us, until God
laid our sins upon Him and made Him to become sin for us at the cross. He was
the Son of Man, indeed, for God prepared for Him a body (Ps. 40; Heb. 10), by
the power of the Holy Spirit (Luke 1.35). But, though He moved among sinners, He
was “separated from sinners,” and had no connection with them until God made Him
their sin offering at the cross.
Christ Himself, Risen, is our
righteousness. His earthly life under the Law is not our righteousness. We have
no connection with a Christ on earth and under the Law. We are expressly told in
Romans 7:1-6, that even Jewish believers who have been under law were made dead
to the Law by the Body of Christ, that they might be joined to Another, even to
Him who was raised from the dead. One has beautifully said, "Christianity
begins with the resurrection."
Justification in the Risen Christ
(An extract from Charles Stanley, of Rotherham)

On what other principle can God justify the guilty? To the. . . sinner this is a
tremendous question, How can I be justified and have peace with God? It must be
evident that if man cannot justify that which is not positively righteous,
surely then God cannot justify anything short of righteousness. But in man there
is no righteousness. All are guilty. “So that death is passed upon all men, for
all have sinned.”
How does Scripture, then, deal with this amazing question — the justification of
the sinner, and God's righteousness in thus justifying him? I answer, Through
Jesus, the resurrection from among the dead — Jesus and the resurrection — Jesus
“bearing our sins in his own body on the tree” — the Just dying for the unjust.
Yes, Jesus crucified and Jesus risen was what the Holy Ghost did set before lost
sinners: His death for atonement — His resurrection for righteousness or
justification. “Who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our
justification” (Rom. 4:25).
Thus, while His precious blood clears from all sin, His resurrection brings me into a state of absolute righteousness in Him risen, and therefore complete justification. And it is on this positive righteousness for justification that ancient and modem teaching so widely differ — modem teachers...having left the Christian ground of a new life in resurrection, and gone back to the land of legalism and bondage, finding themselves, as they suppose, under law; say they, The law must be kept perfectly, and without this there is no justification. They thus go back to law for righteousness. But, then, finding that practically the believer thus put under it only breaks it, what must be done? Oh, say they, you are under it, and break it; but Christ kept the law for you in His life, and this is imputed to you for righteousness.
I would say, in answer to many enquiries on this solemn subject, I cannot find this doctrine in Scripture: it cannot be the ancient doctrine of God's Church. The basis is wrong . . . Justification is not on the principle of law at all. “The righteousness of God without law is manifested.” [Author's footnote: The “righteousness of God” means exactly that — God's righteousness. That is not Christ's righteous law-keeping.. . .If God meant to speak of God's righteousness how should he express it so that we will believe He means exactly that, if “the righteousness of God” does not mean God's righteousness?] “Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight; for by the law is the knowledge of sin.” (Read Rom. 3:19-26.)
Now every doctrine of God's word is clearly stated, not in one verse merely, but in many. Take the atonement: “So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many” — “Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree” — “For Christ also hath once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust:” and hundreds of other passages. But does Scripture ever say that Christ kept the law for us for justifying righteousness? I am not aware of a single text. And yet, if it were so, there are many places where it should say so. Take Rom. 8:33. “It is God that justifieth. Who is he that condemneth?" Does it say that it was Christ that kept the law? No; but, “Christ that died, yea, rather that is risen again, who is even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us.” Now is not this the full statement of Scripture as to God's justification of the elect? And yet, plainly, not one thought in it of Christ's keeping the law for the justified. And the most careful examination of every passage will be found in perfect harmony with this statement.
Look through the Acts. Not once does the apostle preach, Christ kept the law for us, but “Christ died for our sins,” &c. 2 Cor. 5 is a notable proof of this. The apostle does not say, We thus judge that all men are under the law, and that Christ kept it for them; no; but, We thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all dead.” There is not a thought of keeping the law for them, but “died for them and rose again. Wherefore henceforth know we no man after the flesh; yea, though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now henceforth know we him no more.” Does not this prove that the apostle did not go back to Christ under law for righteousness, but onwards to resurrection.
“Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away, behold all things are become new, and all things of God”...Thus the old things of the law, its righteousness and its condemnation, passed away. I am not taken back to Christ under it for righteousness, but taken forward to Christ in resurrection; and there I am made the positive righteousness of God in Him, as surely as He was made sin for me. “For he hath made him sin for us who knew no sin,” (surely that was on the cross,) “that we might be made the righteousness of God in him.” What deep, solid peace this gives! It is thus risen in Him, one with Him, we are made “the righteousness of God in him.”
Thus, as our fall in the first Adam not only brought condemnation, but the actual death-state of sin, much more resurrection in Christ not only brings acquittal from condemnation, but an everlasting state of life and actual righteousness — absolutely perfect and sinless, the righteousness of God IN CHRIST. Thus, for the believer, Christ, by His obedience unto death, has become the end of the law for righteousness. The end of the law was the curse, and our adorable Jesus became a curse. In Him, our dying Substitute, the life once forfeited by us has been given up, the condemnation due to us fully executed. And when God raised him from the dead, He raised Him as our justified Surety. So the Holy Ghost applies Isa. 50:6-9 in Rom. 8:34...
With the apostle, if there were no resurrection gospel, then there were no gospel at all; “for if Christ be not risen, ye are yet in your sins.” But Christ is risen, and the believer is risen with Him, and therefore not in his sins, but righteous in the risen Christ, the beginning of the new creation. I have no doubt, that ignorance of the new creation in Christ risen, is the cause why men defend legal righteousness. No wonder that to one ignorant of {the full meaning of) resurrection, the gospel of the righteousness of God, in justifying the believer through the death and resurrection of Christ, is a new gospel. Jesus and the resurrection is as new a doctrine as it was at Athens 1800 years ago. Indeed it is one of the sad wonders of these last days, that the ancient doctrine of “through Jesus the resurrection” should have been so lost. The modern doctrine is, through Jesus the justification of the old man under law. The ancient doctrine was, death and burial to the old man, (see Rom. 6) and perfect justification, not of the old man, but of the new man, in the risen Christ Jesus.
Oh! my reader, if you are dead with Christ, are you not justified from all sin? If you are risen with Him, are you not righteous in Him? He is your righteousness: not was, but is (1 Cor. 1:30). You are God's righteousness in Him (1 Cor. 5:21). Thus clothed in the risen Christ, is not this the righteousness which is of God by faith? (See Phil. 3:9,10.) Thus is your need met, fellow believer — so met, that there is now no condemnation. Dead with Christ, risen with Christ, “there is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ” (Rom.8).
| — An extract from Justification in the Risen Christ, by Charles Stanley of Rotherham, of the Plymouth Brethren (taken from a work entitled From New Birth to New Creation, complied by R.A. Huebner, pp.37-38) |
Did the
Saviour
Pay the Penalty for our Sins
Prior to the Cross?
"Who His own self bore our sins in His own body ON THE TREE" (1 Peter 2:24).
A common teaching of Reformed men is that the Lord's death on the cross was not the only place where sin's penalty was paid, but that the payment of this penalty was also involved in our Lord's sufferings apart from Calvary's cross. They often point to the Lord's sufferings in the Garden of Gethsemane as being a time when the Lord Jesus was suffering as the Divine Substitute for man's sins.
In light of the Reformed doctrine of "vicarious law-keeping," it is not surprising that they should hold to such a view. If Christ's righteous acts were substitutionary, and if His law-keeping righteousness was imputed to the believer's account, then it would follow that our Lord's non-cross sufferings should also be substitutionary and expiatory. They teach that His sufferings throughout life were expiatory, but the Bible teaches no such thing.
For a full discussion of this doctrinal error, see Did the Saviour Pay the Penalty for our Sins Prior to the Cross?
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