"These [in Berea] were more fair-minded than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness, and searched the Scriptures daily to find out whether these things were so." - Acts 17:11

(17) Now if in seeking to be justified in Christ we also have been found sinners, then [is] Christ minister of sin? Far be the thought. (18) For if the things I have thrown down, these I build again, I constitute myself a transgressor. (19) For *I*, through law, have died to law, that I may live to God. (20) I am crucified with Christ, and no longer live, *I*, but Christ lives in me; but [in] that I now live in flesh, I live by faith, the [faith] of the Son of God, who has loved me and given himself for me. (21) I do not set aside the grace of God; for if righteousness [is] by law, then Christ has died for nothing.


Justification is clearly an act of God's grace, because what we deserve from what we have earned—from what we have done, the conduct of our lives—is death. There is none righteous, no not one (Romans 3:10; Psalm 14:1). Since justification, then, cannot be claimed as a right because we have sinned, it must be received as a gift. That fact that it is given makes it an act of grace.

It is not our hanging on to Christ (that is, the keeping of the law) that saves us, but rather Christ hanging on to us. That is, it is not what we do, but it is what He does continuously as acts of grace that saves us, because we deserve death. If we can earn salvation through law-keeping, Paul is saying in verse 21, "then Christ died in vain." If we can earn salvation through law-keeping, then Christ's sinless life and agonizing death were not necessary, because we can do it ourselves.

Justification is not vindication or exoneration. Both of those words connote that a person was right all along, but the true facts were hidden from those who were doing the judging. In some cases with men, vindication is possible because people are judged unrighteously. Their judges are not using righteous judgment.

But God never judges unrighteously! He knows all the facts. He knows our heart. He knows everything about us in every situation that we have ever been in, so He cannot vindicate us because we are not clear of guilt. He cannot exonerate us because we are not innocent. Justification is more than that. It is setting us right or calling us righteous though righteousness does not exist in us.

— John W. Ritenbaugh

To learn more, see:
Grace Upon Grace



 

Topics:

Grace

Grace, Cheap

Grace, Costliness of

Grace,"Free"

Justification

Justification by Faith

Justification by Grace through Faith

Justification by Works

Justification through Christ's Sacrifice

Justification, Sanctification, and Glorification

Righteous Judgment

Salvation

Salvation by Grace through Faith

Salvation Process

Salvation through Christ's Life




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