Does God's Grace Blot Out the Law
The devil, through sin, has just about wrecked this
world of ours. We live in an age of rebellion against all restraint
and law. Our nation stands aghast at the big-city, gang-defiance
of social order and property rights, including the right to live.
Murder, robbery, and personal assaults have become the trademark
of both urban and suburban 20th-century life.
Each day as we read the newspaper it seems that the
quality of life has edged downward a little bit further. At times
we are tempted to believe that things can get no worse, and that
conditions have hit rock bottom. Yet, the next day, even more
violent, bizarre crimes are reported, and we simply shake our
heads in disbelief. It is difficult to comprehend how a nation
like America with its rich Christian heritage could ever depart
so far from its founding principles. Even the non-Christian countries
are not plagued with as much crime and overall violence as this
so-called Christian nation. More crime is reported in Washington,
D.C., in 24 hours than Moscow reports in a full year. No doubt
the reporting methods are not the same, but it still presents
an alarming picture.
The problem becomes more serious when we realize
that lawlessness also reaches into the area of religion and affects
millions who would never think of killing or raping. It is probable
that the great majority of church members in America today carry
few convictions against breaking at least one of the Ten Commandments.
A very insidious doctrine has been developed in both Catholic
and Protestant theology which has tended to minimize the authority
of God's great moral law. It has led many to look lightly upon
transgression and has made sin to appear unobjectionable. In
fact, sin has lost its horror for multitudes and has become an
acceptable mode of life for both youth and adults. Witness the
current trends in lifestyle which support this view.
How many young men and women are living together
without benefit of marriage! Yet they do not believe such living
arrangements should be designated as sin. A large portion of
shoplifters are professing Christians, and most of those who belong
to churches believe that there is no sin whatsoever involved in
violating the seventh-day Sabbath of the fourth commandment.
How can we explain this paradoxical situation among
those who profess such high regard for the Bible, and such love
for Christ? This question becomes more significant when we consider
the historical position of Christianity toward the Ten-Commandment
law. Almost all of the great denominations have officially placed
themselves on record as supporting the authority of that law.
Yet very subtle errors of interpretation have crept into the
modern church, leading to the present state of confused loyalty
toward the Ten Commandments. How earnestly we need to look at
that law and study its relation to God's grace and to salvation
itself. It is so easy to accept the popular clichˇs concerning
law and grace without searching out the biblical facts by which
we will finally be judged. We must find authoritative scriptural
answers to questions like these: In what sense are Christians
free from the law? What does it mean to be under the law? Does
God's grace nullify the Ten Commandments? Is a Christian justified
in breaking any of the Ten Commandments because he is under grace?
These are the questions we shall address ourselves to in this
important study.
Condemned to Die
Let us push aside the rubbish of confusion which
has obscured the truth about how men are saved. Multitudes have
heard emotional discourses on sin and salvation, but they still
do not understand the logic and reason which require a blood sacrifice.
Can you imagine the horror of standing before a judge
and hearing the sentence of death pronounced against you? Probably
not. But you have felt the driving guilt and fear when God's
Word stabs you with this sentence: "The wages of sin is death."
Romans 6:23. Why fear and guilt? Because "all have sinned,
and come short of the glory of God." Romans 3:23.
The words are there and the meaning cannot be mistaken.
The word "all" might just as well be spelled John Smith
or Mary Jones or whatever your name happens to be. The shocking
fact is that you are under the sentence of death! You have been
found guilty before the law, and there is no court of appeal in
the world that can reverse the sentence and find you not guilty.
The fact is that you are guilty, just as guilty as sin. According
to 1 John 3:4, "sin is the transgression of the law,"
and you must plead guilty to breaking the law. Whose law did
you break? Paul answers quickly, "I had not known sin, but
by the law: for I had not known lust, except the law had said,
Thou shalt not covet." Romans 7:7. There it is! The great
Ten-Commandment law is the one which was broken, and it demands
death for the transgressor.
In desperation the sinner searches for a way to be
justified in the sight of that broken law. How can the sentence
of death be turned aside? Can man atone for his sins by obeying
the commandments of God for the rest of his life? Back comes
the answer in language that no one can misinterpret: "Therefore
by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his
sight." Romans 3:20.
Listen, there is a reason why works will not justify
a soul. If a man is found guilty of stealing and is sentenced
to ten years in jail, he may indeed justify himself by works.
By serving the time of his sentence, the man may satisfy the
claims of the law. He is considered perfectly justified and innocent
because he has worked out his deliverance by fulfilling the sentence.
In the same manner, a murderer may be justified by works if he
serves the fifty years of his sentence. But suppose the sentence
is death instead of fifty years? Can the prisoner then justify
himself by works? Never! Even if he should work for one hundred
years at hard labor, the law would still demand death. The truth
is that "without shedding of blood is no remission. ... So
Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many." Hebrews
9:22-28.
This is why the sinner can never be saved by works.
The penalty for sin is not ten years in prison or fifty years
at hard labor. The sentence is death, and the law cannot be satisfied
except by the shedding of blood. That unchangeable law with its
unrelenting death sentence could no more be removed than the throne
of God could be toppled. The guilt of the past cannot be erased
by resolutions of good behavior in the future. The sinner finally
is forced to confess that he owes something that he cannot pay.
The law demands death and he cannot satisfy it without forfeiting
his own life for eternity.
The Law Still Binding
Now we are brought to the question which has created
confusion for multitudes of Christians: If the works of the law
cannot save a person, is it therefore necessary to keep the law?
Apparently this was a burning issue in the early church, because
Paul asked the same question in Romans 6:1. "Shall we continue
in sin, that grace may abound?" In other words, does grace
give us a license to disobey the law of God? His answer is:
"God forbid. How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any
longer therein?" Verse 2.
How interesting it is that Christians in this age
of relativism can invent their own definitions which condone lawbreaking.
The Bible says sin is violating the Ten Commandments - the law
which has been described as irrelevant and old-fashioned by many
modern theologians. Don't be deceived. Every one of those great
moral precepts is just as timely and needful today as they were
when God wrote them on the imperishable tables of stone. And
nothing has ever happened to make them less binding than they
were when God gave them. In fact, we are going to discover that
Jesus came to magnify the law and to open up its spiritual application,
making it more comprehensive than the legalistic Pharisees ever
imagined. Under the distilling influence of Christ's perfect
life of obedience, we can see the spiritual details of law-keeping
which are neither recognized nor made possible apart from Him.
God's Law - A Mirror
At this point we must be very careful to designate
also what the law cannot do. Even though it points out sin, it
has no power to save from sin. There is no justifying, cleansing
grace in it. All the works of all the laws would not be sufficient
to save a single soul. Why? For the simple reason that we are
saved by grace through faith, as a free gift. "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." Romans
3:20.
Do not stumble over this crucial point. We cannot
earn forgiveness by working hard to obey. No sinner can gain
favor and acceptance with God because he keeps the law. The law
was not made for the purpose of saving or justifying. It was
made to show us our need of cleansing and to point us to the great
source of cleansing, Jesus Christ, our Lord. The Bible speaks
of the law as a mirror to show us what kind of persons we really
are. "For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer,
he is like unto a man beholding his natural face in a glass:
For he beholdeth himself, and goeth his way, and straightway forgetteth
what manner of man he was. But whoso looketh into the perfect
law of liberty, and continueth therein, he being not a forgetful
hearer, but a doer of the work, this man shall be blessed in his
deed." James 1:23-25.
It is obvious to all that a mirror cannot remove
a spot from the face. Looking into the mirror all day, and even
rubbing it over the face, will not provide any cleansing. Its
work is to reveal the spot and to point the dirty one to the sink
for actual cleansing. The law, in like manner, can only condemn
the sinner by giving him a knowledge of his condition and then
pointing him to the cross for true cleansing. "For by grace
are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is
the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast."
Ephesians 2:8, 9. Paul further emphasizes this point in Galatians
2:16: "Knowing that a man is not justified by the works
of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ ... for by the works
of the law shall no flesh be justified."
Right here we must consider one of the most fallacious
propositions ever set forth relating to the law. Countless sincere
Christians have accepted the idea that the Old Testament encompasses
the dispensation of works and that the New Testament provides
for a dispensation of grace. Under this garbled plan people were
saved by works in the Old Testament and by grace in the New Testament.
This is simply not true. The Bible holds forth only one beautiful,
perfect plan for anybody to be saved, and that is by grace through
faith. Heaven will not be divided between those who got there
by works and those who got there by faith. Every single soul
among the redeemed will be a sinner saved by grace.
Those who entered into salvation in the Old Testament
were those who trusted the merits of the blood of Jesus Christ,
and they demonstrated their faith by bringing a lamb and slaying
it. They looked forward in faith to the atoning death of Jesus.
We look back in faith to the same death and are saved in exactly
the same way. Be very certain that all the redeemed host throughout
eternity will be singing the same song of deliverance, exalting
the Lamb slain from the foundations of the world.
The "New" Law of Christ
Some try to dispose of the Ten Commandments on the
basis of the "new" commandments of love which Christ
introduced. It is certainly true that Jesus laid down two great
laws of love as a summary of all the law, but did He give the
idea that these were new in point of time? The fact is that He
was quoting directly from the Old Testament when He gave those
new commandments. "And thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy
might." Deuteronomy 6:5. "Thou shalt love thy neighbour
as thyself." Leviticus 19:18. Certainly, those penetrating
spiritual principles had been forgotten by the legalists of Christ's
day, and they were new to them in relation to their life and practice.
But they were not intended by Jesus to take the place of the
Ten Commandments.
When the lawyer asked Jesus which was the greatest
commandment in the law, he received the answer: "Thou shalt
love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul,
and with all thy mind. This is the first and great commandment.
And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour
as thyself. On these two commandments hang all the law and the
prophets." Matthew 22:37-40.
Notice that these two love commandments simply summed
up "all the law and the prophets." They all hang upon
these two principles of love. Christ was saying that love is
the fulfilling of the law just as Paul repeated it later in Romans
13:10. If one loves Christ supremely with heart, soul, and mind,
he will obey the first four commandments that have to do with
our duty to God. He will not take God's name in vain, worship
other gods, etc. If one loves his neighbor as himself, he will
obey the last six commandments which relate to our duty to our
fellow men. He will not be able to steal from his neighbor, lie
about him, etc. Love will lead to obeying or fulfilling all the
law.
Not Under the Law
Often we hear this argument in an effort to belittle
the law of God: "Well, since we are not under the law but
under grace, we do not need to keep the Ten Commandments any longer."
Is this a valid point? The Bible certainly does say that we
are not under the law, but does that imply that we are free from
the obligation to obey it? The text is found in Romans 6:14,
15. "For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are
not under the law, but under grace. What then? shall we sin,
because we are not under the law, but under grace? God forbid."
How easily we could prevent confusion if we accepted
exactly what the Bible says. Paul gives his own explanation of
his statement. After stating that we are not under the law but
under grace, he asks, "What then?" This simply means,
"How are we to understand this?" Then notice his answer.
In anticipation that some will construe his words to mean that
you can break the law because you are under grace, he says, "Shall
we sin (break the law) because we are not under the law but under
grace? God forbid." In the strongest possible language
Paul states that being under grace does not give a license to
break the law. Yet this is exactly what millions believe today,
and they totally ignore Paul's specific warning.
If being under grace does not exempt us from keeping
the law, then what does Paul mean by saying that Christians are
not under the law? He gives that answer in Romans 3:19. "Now
we know that what things soever the law saith, it saith to them
who are under the law: that every mouth may be stopped, and all
the world may become guilty before God." Here Paul equates
being under the law with "being guilty before God."
In other words, those who are under the law are guilty of breaking
it and are under the condemnation of it. This is why Christians
are not under it. They are not breaking it - not guilty and condemned
by it. Therefore, they are not under it, but are under the power
of grace instead. Later in his argument, Paul points out that
the power of grace is greater than the power of sin. This is
why he states so emphatically, "For sin shall not have dominion
over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace."
Grace overrules the authority of sin, giving power to obey God's
law. This is the effective reason that we are not under the law's
guilt and condemnation and also why Paul states that we will not
continue to sin.
Suppose a murderer has been sentenced to death in
the electric chair. Waiting for the execution the man would truly
be under the law in every sense of the word - under the guilt,
under the condemnation, under the sentence of death, etc. Just
before the execution date the governor reviews the condemned man's
case and decides to pardon him. In the light of extenuating circumstances
the governor exercises his prerogative and sends a full pardon
to the prisoner. Now he is no longer under the law but under
grace. The law no longer condemns him. He is considered totally
justified as far as the charges of the law are concerned. He
is free to walk out of the prison and not a policeman can lay
hands upon him. But now that he is under grace and no longer
under the law, can we say that he is free to break the law? Indeed
not! In fact, that pardoned man will be doubly obligated to obey
the law because he has found grace from the governor.
In gratitude and love he will be very careful to honor the law
of that state which granted him grace. Is that what the Bible
says about pardoned sinners? "Do we then make void the law
through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the law."
Romans 3:31. Here is the most explicit answer to the entire
problem. Paul asks if the law is nullified for us just because
we have had faith in Christ's saving grace. His answer is that
the law is established and reenforced in the life of a grace-saved
Christian.
The truth of this is so simple and obvious that it
should require no repetition, but the devious reasoning of those
who try to avoid obedience makes it necessary to press this point
a bit further. Have you ever been stopped by a policeman for
exceeding the speed limit? It is an embarrassing experience,
especially if you know you are guilty. But suppose you really
were hurrying to meet a valid emergency, and you pour out your
convincing explanation to the policeman as he writes your ticket.
Slowly he folds the ticket and tears it up. Then he says, "All
right, I'm going to pardon you this time, but ..." Now what
do you think he means by that word "but"? Surely he
means, "but I don't want to ever catch you speeding again."
Does this pardon (grace) open the way for you to disobey the
law? On the contrary, it adds compelling urgency to your decision
not to disobey the law again. Why, then, should any true Christian
try to rationalize his way out of obeying the law of God? "If
ye love me," Jesus said, "keep my commandments."
John 14:15.
Obedience - The Test of Love
Someone may bring up the objection that after the
law has accomplished its purpose of pointing the sinner to Christ
for cleansing, it will no longer be needed in the experience of
the believer. Is that true? No, indeed. The Christian will
always need the watchdog of the law to reveal any deviation from
the true path and to point him back to the cleansing cross of
Jesus. There will never be a time when that mirror of correction
will not be needed in the progressive growth experience of the
Christian.
Law and grace do not work in competition with each
other but in perfect cooperation. The law points out sin, and
grace saves from sin. The law is the will of God, and grace is
the power to do the will of God. We do not obey the law in
order to be saved but because we are saved. A beautiful
text which combines the two in their true relationship is Revelation
14:12. "Here is the patience of the saints: here are they
that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus."
What a perfect description of faith and works! And the combination
is found in those who are "saints."
The works of obedience are the real test of love.
This is why they are so necessary in the experience of a true
believer. "Faith without works is dead." James 2:20.
No man ever won a fair maiden's heart by words alone. Had there
been no flowers, no acts of devotion, no gifts of love, most men
would still be searching for a companion. Jesus said, "Not
every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the
kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which
is in heaven." Matthew 7:21.
Words and profession are not enough. The true evidence
is obedience. Today's bumper stickers reflect a shallow concept
of love. They say, "Smile if you love Jesus," "Honk
if you love Jesus"; but what did the Master Himself say?
He said, "If ye love me, keep my commandments." John
14:15. And that is exactly what most people don't want to do.
If love makes no demands beyond a smile or wave, then it is welcome;
but if the lifestyle must be disturbed, the majority will reject
it. Unfortunately, most people today are not looking for truth.
They are looking for a smooth, easy, comfortable religion which
will allow them to live the way they please and still give assurance
of salvation. There is indeed no true religion which can do that
for them.
One of the strongest texts in the Bible on this subject
is found in 1 John 2:4. "He that saith, I know him, and
keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not
in him." John could write that with such assurance because
it is one of the most deeply established truths in the Bible.
Jesus spoke of those who said, "Lord, Lord," but did
not do the will of the Father. Then He described many who would
seek entrance to the kingdom claiming to be workers of miracles
in the name of Christ. But He would sorrowfully have to say,
"I never knew you: depart from me." Matthew 7:21-23.
You see, to know Christ is to love Him, and to love Him is to
obey Him. The valid assumption of the Bible writers is very clear
and simple: If one is not obeying Christ, he does not love Christ.
And if he doesn't love the Master, then he doesn't know Him.
John assured us, "And this is life eternal, that they might
know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast
sent." John 17:3. Thus, we can see how knowing and loving
and obeying are all tied closely together and are absolutely inseparable
in the life of God's faithful people. The beloved John summed
it up in these words: "For this is the love of God, that
we keep his commandments: and his commandments are not grievous."
1 John 5:3.
Is It Possible To Obey the Law?
Countless Christians have been taught that since
the law is spiritual and we are carnal, no human being will ever
be able in this life to meet the requirements of the perfect law.
Is this true? Has it been given by God as a great idealistic,
impossible goal toward which converted souls should struggle but
never expect to attain? Is there some hidden reservation or secret
meaning in the many commands to obey the ten great rules God wrote
on stone? Did God mean what He said and say what He meant?
Many believe that only Christ could have obeyed that
law and only because He had special powers that have not been
made available to us. Certainly it is true that Jesus is the
only One who lived without committing a single act of disobedience.
His reason for living that perfect, victorious life is laid out
in Romans 8:3, 4. "For what the law could not do, in that
it was weak through the flesh, God sending his own Son in the
likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh,
That the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us, who
walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit."
Do not miss the point that Jesus came to condemn
sin by His perfect life in the flesh in order that "the righteousness
of the law" might be fulfilled in us. What is that righteousness?
The Greek word "dikaima" is used here which means,
literally, "the just requirement" of the law. This
can only mean that Christ won His perfect victory in order to
make the same victory available to us. Having conquered the devil,
showing that in the flesh the law can be obeyed, Christ now offers
to come into our hearts and share the victory with us. Only by
His strength and indwelling power can the requirements of the
law be fulfilled by anyone. Paul said, "I can do all things
through Christ which strengtheneth me." Philippians 4:13.
Not one soul can ever keep one of those Ten Commandments
in human power alone, but all of them may be kept through the
enabling strength of Jesus. He imputes His righteousness for
cleansing and imparts His righteousness for victorious living.
Christ came in a body of flesh like our own and depended wholly
upon His Father in living His life to demonstrate the kind of
victory which is possible for every soul who will likewise draw
upon the Father's grace.
Judged By the Law
Now, a final question about the subject of the law:
How many of the Ten Commandments does one have to break in order
to be guilty of sin? James says, "For whosoever shall keep
the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all.
For he that said, Do not commit adultery, said also, Do not kill.
Now if thou commit no adultery, yet if thou kill, thou art become
a transgressor of the law. So speak ye, and so do, as they that
shall be judged by the law of liberty." James 2:10-12.
Every individual will be judged at last by the mighty
moral code of God's law. To break one is to be guilty of sin.
The Bible indicates that the Ten Commandments are like a chain
with ten links. When one link is broken, the chain is broken.
So it is with the law. Those who stand in the judgment will
have to meet the acid test of the Ten Commandments. If a practicing
thief should seek entrance into the kingdom, he would be rejected.
This is why Paul says thieves will not inherit the heavenly city.
Furthermore, the Bible specifically declares that liars, adulterers,
idolaters, and covetous men will not be in the kingdom. Why?
Because the Ten Commandments forbid those things, and men will
be judged finally by that law. Not one person will be admitted
into heaven who is willfully violating any one of the Ten Commandments,
because breaking one is breaking all.
Someone might object that this is making works the
basis of entering the kingdom. No. It is really making love
the qualifying factor. Jesus said that the greatest commandment
of all is to love God supremely. He also said, "If ye love
me, keep my commandments." John 14:15. Those who practice
any known sin are really confessing that they do not love God
with all their heart, soul, and mind. So it is the lack of love
which shuts them out; not the act of disobedience which exposes
that lack. Only when love is motivating the obedience does it
become acceptable to God. Any other work is man's vain attempt
to earn salvation and to deny the efficacy of Christ's atoning
sacrifice.
Ransomed for What?
A dramatic illustration of the law-grace doctrine
is seen in the story of the slave auctions in old New Orleans
long ago. Two planters were bidding for an old Negro slave who
kept shouting his rebellion from the auction block. Finally,
one of the planters won the bid and took the slave in his wagon
back to the farm. Throughout the journey the defiant black man
declared that he would not work for the new owner. When they
arrived at the plantation, the planter dropped the shackles from
the newly bought slave and said, "You are free to go. You
are no longer a slave. I bought you in order to give you your
liberty."
According to the story, the old man fell at the feet
of the planter and said, "Master, I'll serve you forever."
In like manner, we were all held in the bondage of
sin, condemnation, and death. Christ then paid the price to secure
our freedom from that hopeless slavery. Lovingly He tells us
that the reason He made the sacrifice was to set us free. What
should our response be? Every ransomed child of God should fall
at His feet and say, "Master, I love you for what you did
for me. I'll serve you the rest of my life."
Think it through for a moment. Jesus had to die
because the law had been broken. Sin demanded death. If the
law could have been abrogated, the penalty of sin would have been
set aside also. "For where no law is, there is no transgression."
Romans 4:15. So strong was the authority of that unchangeable
law that God Himself could not abolish it - not even to save His
own Son from death.
The old, old story of the two brothers is almost
a perfect illustration of both law and grace in operation. The
older brother was a judge. His younger brother was brought before
him as a transgressor of the law. From all the evidence it was
clear to all that he was guilty. The court was tense. Would
the judge mete out justice in such a case? The judge looked
at his brother and sternly declared him guilty. Then he stunned
the court by imposing the maximum fine. But immediately he left
the bench and threw his arms around his brother and said, "I
had to do it because you are guilty. I know you cannot pay the
fine, but I will pay it for you."
The point of the story is dramatic in its impact.
The brother was forgiven, but the penalty was not. It had to
be paid. But by paying the maximum penalty, the judge not only
did not abolish the law, but he greatly magnified it. He demonstrated
that its binding claims could never be voided. In the same sense,
God would not and could not abolish the law to save His beloved
Son. It cost something to uphold the law and pay the maximum
penalty. No one will ever know how much it cost the Son of God.
But how thankful we should be that His love was as perfect as
His justice. In His own body He bore the penalty, satisfied the
law, and justified the transgressor.
Can't you see that no greater demonstration could
have been made to prove the permanence of the Ten Commandments?
In all the universe God could not have displayed a more convincing
and irrefutable argument in favor of His law. Yet, in the face
of this tremendous exhibition, misguided millions of poor, feeble
men belittle the government of God by belittling His law. They
seem not to understand that the law is only a reflection of His
holiness and righteousness. To speak of its abolition is to border
on treason against the divine government of heaven.
Look into that holy law right now for a divine revelation
of what God wants your life to be. Confess that you have no strength
to live up to that perfect standard. Then turn your eyes to the
only One who has kept that law perfectly and who desires this
very moment to enter your life with enabling power. He will fulfill
the righteousness of the law - the just requirements of the law
- in you, so that you can say with Paul, "Christ liveth in
me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the
faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me."
Galatians 2:20.
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