Martin Luther's Commentary on Galatians - Chapter 2
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter
3 Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6 Click for printer friendly page
Bible Commentary Index
Verse 1. Then fourteen years after I went up again
to Jerusalem.
Paul taught justification by faith in Christ Jesus, without the deeds of the
Law. He reported this to the disciples at Antioch. Among the disciples were
some that had been brought up in the ancient customs of the Jews. These rose
against Paul in quick indignation, accusing him of propagating a gospel of
lawlessness.
Great dissension followed. Paul and Barnabas stood up for
the truth. They testified: "Wherever we preached to the Gentiles, the Holy
Ghost came upon those who received the Word. This happened everywhere. We
preached not circumcision, we did not require observance of the Law. We
preached faith in Jesus Christ. At our preaching of faith, God gave to the
hearers the Holy Ghost." From this fact Paul and Barnabas inferred that the
Holy Ghost approved the faith of the Gentiles without the Law and
circumcision. If the faith of the Gentiles had not pleased the Holy Ghost,
He would not have manifested His presence in the uncircumcised hearers of
the Word.
Unconvinced, the Jews fiercely opposed Paul, asserting
that the Law ought to be kept and that the Gentiles ought to be circumcised,
or else they could not be saved.
When we consider the obstinacy with which Romanists cling
to their traditions, we can very well understand the zealous devotion of the
Jews for the Law. After all, they had received the Law from God. We can
understand how impossible it was for recent converts from Judaism suddenly
to break with the Law. For that matter, God did bear with them, as He bore
with the infirmity of Israel when the people halted between two religions.
Was not God patient with us also while we were blindfolded by the papacy?
God is longsuffering and full of mercy. But we dare not abuse the patience
of the Lord. We dare no longer continue in error now that the truth has been
revealed in the Gospel.
The opponents of Paul had his own example to prefer
against him. Paul had circumcised Timothy. Paul defended his action on the
ground that he had circumcised Timothy, not from compulsion, but from
Christian love, lest the weak in faith should be offended. His opponents
would not accept Paul's explanation.
When Paul saw that the quarrel was getting out of hand he
obeyed the direction of God and left for Jerusalem, there to confer with the
other apostles. He did this not for his own sake, but for the sake of the
people.
With Barnabas, and took Titus with me also.
Paul chose two witnesses, Barnabas and Titus. Barnabas had been Paul's
preaching companion to the Gentiles. Barnabas was an eye-witness of the fact
that the Holy Ghost had come upon the Gentiles in response to the simple
preaching of faith in Jesus Christ. Barnabas stuck to Paul on this point,
that it was necessary for the Gentiles to be bothered with the Law as long
as they believed in Christ.
Titus was superintendent of the churches in Crete, having
been placed in charge of the churches by Paul. Titus was a former Gentile.
Verse 2. And I went up by revelation.
If God had not ordered Paul to Jerusalem, Paul would never have gone there.
And communicated unto them that gospel.
After an absence of fourteen years, respectively eighteen years, Paul
returned to Jerusalem to confer with the other apostles.
Which I preach among the Gentiles.
Among the Jews Paul allowed Law and circumcision to stand for the time
being. So did all the apostles. Nevertheless Paul held fast to the liberty
of the Gospel. On one occasion he said to the Jews: "Through this man
(Christ) is preached unto you 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 13:39.) Always remembering the weak, Paul did
not insist that they break at once with the Law.
Paul admits that he conferred with the apostles concerning
his Gospel. But he denies that the conference benefited or taught him
anything. The fact is he resisted those who wanted to force the practice of
the Law upon the Gentiles. They did not overcome him, he overcame them.
"Your false apostles lie, when they say that I circumcised Timothy, shaved
my head in Cenchrea, and went up to Jerusalem, at the request of the
apostles. I went to Jerusalem at the request of God. What is more, I won the
indorsement of the apostles. My opponents lost out."
The matter upon which the apostles deliberated in
conference was this: Is the observance of the Law requisite unto
justification? Paul answered: "I have preached faith in Christ to the
Gentiles, and not the Law. If the Jews want to keep the Law and be
circumcised, very well, as long as they do so from a right motive."
But privately to them which were of reputation.
This is to say, "I conferred not only with the brethren, but with the
leaders among them."
Lest by any means I should run, or had run, in vain.
Not that Paul himself ever thought he had run in vain. However, many did
think that Paul had preached the Gospel in vain, because he kept the
Gentiles free from the yoke of the Law. The opinion that obedience to the
Law was mandatory unto salvation was gaining ground. Paul meant to remedy
this evil. By this conference he hoped to establish the identity of his
Gospel with that of the other apostles, to stop the talk of his opponents
that he had been running around in vain.
Verse 3. But neither Titus, who was with me, being a
Greek, was compelled to be circumcised.
The word "compelled" acquaints us with the outcome of the conference. It was
resolved that the Gentiles should not be compelled to be circumcised.
Paul did not condemn circumcision in itself. Neither by
word nor deed did he ever inveigh against circumcision. But he did protest
against circumcision being made a condition for salvation. He cited the case
of the Fathers. "The fathers were not justified by circumcision. It was to
them a sign and seal of righteousness. They looked upon circumcision as a
confession of their faith."
The believing Jews, however, could not get it through
their heads that circumcision was not necessary for salvation. They were
encouraged in their wrong attitude by the false apostles. The result was
that the people were up in arms against Paul and his doctrine.
Paul did not condemn circumcision as if it were a sin to
receive it. But he insisted, and the conference upheld him, that
circumcision had no bearing upon salvation and was therefore not to be
forced upon the Gentiles. The conference agreed that the Jews should be
permitted to keep their ancient customs for the time being, so long as they
did not regard those customs as conveying God's justification of the sinner.
The false apostles were dissatisfied with the verdict of
the conference. They did not want to rest circumcision and the practice of
the Law in Christian liberty. They insisted that circumcision was obligatory
unto salvation.
As the opponents of Paul, so our own adversaries
[Luther's, the enemies of the Reformation] contend that the traditions of
the Fathers dare not be neglected without loss of salvation. Our opponents
will not agree with us on anything. They defend their blasphemies. They go
as far to enforce them with the sword.
Paul's victory was complete. Titus, who was with Paul, was
not compelled to be circumcised, although he stood in the midst of the
apostles when this question of circumcision was debated. This was a blow to
the false apostles. With the living fact that Titus was not compelled to be
circumcised Paul was able to squelch his adversaries.
Verses 4, 5. And that because of false brethren
unawares brought in, who came in privily to spy out our liberty which we
have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring us into bondage:
To whom we gave place by subjection, no, not for an hour; that the truth of
the gospel might continue with you.
Paul here explains his motive for going up to Jerusalem.
He did not go to Jerusalem to be instructed or confirmed in his Gospel by
the other apostles. He went to Jerusalem in order to preserve the true
Gospel for the Galatian churches and for all the churches of the Gentiles.
When Paul speaks of the truth of the Gospel he implies by
contrast a false gospel. The false apostles also had a gospel, but it was an
untrue gospel. "In holding out against them," says Paul, "I conserved the
truth of the pure Gospel."
Now the true Gospel has it that we are justified by faith
alone, without the deeds of the Law. The false gospel has it that we are
justified by faith, but not without the deeds of the Law. The false apostles
preached a conditional gospel.
So do the papists. They admit that faith is the foundation
of salvation. But they add the conditional clause that faith can save only
when it is furnished with good works. This is wrong. The true Gospel
declares that good works are the embellishment of faith, but that faith
itself is the gift and work of God in our hearts. Faith is able to justify,
because it apprehends Christ, the Redeemer.
Human reason can think only in terms of the Law. It
mumbles: "This I have done, this I have not done." But faith looks to Jesus
Christ, the Son of God, given into death for the sins of the whole world. To
turn one's eyes away from Jesus means to turn them to the Law.
True faith lays hold of Christ and leans on Him alone. Our
opponents cannot understand this. In their blindness they cast away the
precious pearl, Christ, and hang onto their stubborn works. They have no
idea what faith is. How can they teach faith to others?
Not satisfied with teaching an untrue gospel, the false
apostles tried to entangle Paul. "They went about," says Paul, "to spy out
our liberty which we have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring us into
bondage."
When Paul saw through their scheme, he attacked the false
apostles. He says, "We did not let go of the liberty which we have in Christ
Jesus. We routed them by the judgment of the apostles, and we would not give
in to them, no, not an inch."
We too were willing to make all kinds of concessions to
the papists. Yes, we are willing to offer them more than we should. But we
will not give up the liberty of conscience which we have in Christ Jesus. We
refuse to have our conscience bound by any work or law, so that by doing
this or that we should be righteous, or leaving this or that undone we
should be damned.
Since our opponents will not let it stand that only faith
in Christ justifies, we will not yield to them. On the question of
justification we must remain adamant, or else we shall lose the truth of the
Gospel. It is a matter of life and death. It involves the death of the Son
of God, who died for the sins of the world. If we surrender faith in Christ,
as the only thing that can justify us, the death and resurrection of Jesus
are without meaning; that Christ is the Savior of the world would be a myth.
God would be a liar, because He would not have fulfilled His promises. Our
stubbornness is right, because we want to preserve the liberty which we have
in Christ. Only by preserving our liberty shall we be able to retain the
truth of the Gospel inviolate.
Some will object that the Law is divine and holy. Let it
be divine and holy. The Law has no right to tell me that I must be justified
by it. The Law has the right to tell me that I should love God and my
neighbor, that I should live in chastity, temperance, patience, etc. The Law
has no right to tell me how I may be delivered from sin, death, and hell. It
is the Gospel's business to tell me that. I must listen to the Gospel. It
tells me, not what I must do, but what Jesus Christ, the Son of God, has
done for me.
To conclude, Paul refused to circumcise Titus for the
reason that the false apostles wanted to compel him to circumcise Titus.
Paul refused to accede to their demands. If they had asked it on the plea of
brotherly love, Paul would not have denied them. But because they demanded
it on the ground that it was necessary for salvation, Paul defied them, and
prevailed. Titus was not circumcised.
Verse 6. But of those who seemed to be somewhat,
whatsoever they were, it maketh no matter to me.
This is a good point in Paul's refutation. Paul disparages the authority and
dignity of the true apostles. He says of them, "Which seemed to be
somewhat." The authority of the apostles was indeed great in all the
churches. Paul did not want to detract from their authority, but he had to
speak disparagingly of their authority in order to conserve the truth of the
Gospel, and the liberty of conscience.
The false apostles used this argument against Paul: "The
apostles lived with Christ for three years. They heard His sermons. They
witnessed His miracles. They themselves preached and performed miracles
while Christ was on earth. Paul never saw Jesus in the flesh. Now, whom
ought you to believe: Paul, who stands alone, a mere disciple of the
apostles, one of the last and least; or will you believe those grand
apostles who were sent and confirmed by Christ Himself long before Paul?"
What could Paul say to that? He answered: "What they say
has no bearing on the argument. If the apostles were angels from heaven,
that would not impress me. We are not now discussing the excellency of the
apostles. We are talking about the Word of God now, and the truth of the
Gospel. That Gospel is more excellent than all apostles.
God accepteth no man's person.
Paul is quoting Moses: "Thou shalt not respect the person of the poor, nor
honor the person of the mighty." (Lev. 19:15) This quotation from Moses
ought to shut the mouths of the false apostles. "Don't you know that God is
no respecter of persons?" cries Paul. The dignity or authority of men means
nothing to God. The fact is that God often rejects just such who stand in
the odor of sanctity and in the aura of importance. In doing so God seems
unjust and harsh. But men need deterring examples. For it is a vice with us
to esteem personality more highly than the Word of God. God wants us to
exalt His Word and not men.
There must be people in high office, of course. But we are
not to deify them. The governor, the mayor, the preacher, the teacher, the
scholar, father, mother, are persons whom we are to love and revere, but not
to the extent that we forget God. Least we attach too much importance to the
person, God leaves with important persons offenses and sins, sometimes
astounding shortcomings, to show us that there is a lot of difference
between any person and God. David was a good king. But when the people began
to think too well of him, down he fell into horrible sins, adultery and
murder. Peter, excellent apostle that he was, denied Christ. Such examples
of which the Scriptures are full, ought to warn us not to repose our trust
in men. In the papacy appearance counts for everything. Indeed, the whole
papacy amounts to nothing more than a mere kowtowing of persons and outward
mummery. But God alone is to be feared and honored.
I would honor the Pope, I would love his person, if he
would leave my conscience alone, and not compel me to sin against God. But
the Pope wants to be adored himself, and that cannot be done without
offending God. Since we must choose between one or the other, let us choose
God. The truth is we are commissioned by God to resist the Pope, for it is
written, "We ought to obey God rather than men." (Acts 5:29)
We have seen how Paul refutes the argument of the false
apostles concerning the authority of the apostles. In order that the truth
of the Gospel may continue; in order that the Word of God and the
righteousness of faith may be kept pure and undefiled, let the apostles, let
an angel from heaven, let Peter, let Paul, let them all perish.
For they who seemed to be somewhat in conference
added nothing to me.
The Apostle repeats: "I did not so confer with the apostles that they taught
me anything. What could they possibly teach me since Christ by His
revelation had taught me all things? It was but a conference, and no
disputation. I learned nothing, neither did I defend my cause. I only stated
what I had done, that I had preached to the Gentiles faith in Christ,
without the Law, and that in response to my preaching the Holy Ghost came
down upon the Gentiles. When the apostles heard this, they were glad that I
had taught the truth."
If Paul would not give in to the false apostles, much less
ought we to give in to our opponents. I know that a Christian should be
humble, but against the Pope I am going to be proud and say to him: "You,
Pope, I will not have you for my boss, for I am sure that my doctrine is
divine." Such pride against the Pope is imperative, for if we are not stout
and proud we shall never succeed in defending the article of the
righteousness of faith.
If the Pope would concede that God alone by His grace
through Christ justifies sinners, we would carry him in our arms, we would
kiss his feet. But since we cannot obtain this concession, we will give in
to nobody, not to all the angels in heaven, not to Peter, not to Paul, not
to a hundred emperors, not to a thousand popes, not to the whole world. If
in this matter we were to humble ourselves, they would take from us the God
who created us, and Jesus Christ who has redeemed us by His blood. Let this
be our resolution, that we will suffer the loss of all things, the loss of
our good name, of life itself, but the Gospel and our faith in Jesus
Christ--we will not stand for it that anybody take them from us.
Verses 7, 8. But contrariwise, when they saw that
the gospel of the uncircumcision was committed unto me, as the gospel of the
circumcision was unto Peter;
[For he that wrought effectually in Peter to the apostleship of the
circumcision, the same was mighty in me toward the Gentiles.]
Here the Apostle claims for himself the same authority
which the false apostles attributed to the true apostles. Paul simply
inverts their argument. "to bolster their evil cause," says he, "the false
apostles quote the authority of the great apostles against me. I can quote
the same authority against them, for the apostles are on my side. They gave
me the right hand of fellowship. They approved my ministry. O my Galatians,
do not believe the counterfeit apostles!"
What does Paul mean by saying that the gospel of the
uncircumcision was committed unto him, and that of the circumcision to
Peter? Did not Paul preach to the Jews, while Peter preached to the Gentiles
also? Peter converted the Centurion. Paul's custom was to enter into the
synagogues of the Jews, there to preach the Gospel. Why then should he call
himself the apostle of the Gentiles, while he calls Peter the apostle of the
circumcision?
Paul refers to the fact that the other apostles remained
in Jerusalem until the destruction of the city became imminent. But Paul was
especially called the apostle of the Gentiles. Even before the destruction
of Jerusalem Jews dwelt here and there in the cities of the Gentiles. Coming
to a city, Paul customarily entered the synagogues of the Jews and first
brought to them as the children of the kingdom, the glad tidings that the
promises made unto the fathers were fulfilled in Jesus Christ. When the Jews
refused to hear these glad tidings, Paul turned to the Gentiles. He was the
apostle of the Gentiles in a special sense, as Peter was the apostle of the
Jews.
Paul reiterates that Peter, James, and John, the accepted
pillars of the Church, taught him nothing, nor did they commit unto him the
office of preaching the Gospel unto the Gentiles. Both the knowledge of the
Gospel and the commandment to preach it to the Gentiles, Paul received
directly from God. His case was parallel to that of Peter's, who was
particularly commissioned to preach the Gospel to the Jews.
The apostles had the same charge, the identical Gospel.
Peter did not proclaim a different Gospel, nor had he appointed his fellow
apostles. They were equals. They were all taught of God. None was greater
than the other, none could point to prerogatives above the other. To justify
his usurped primacy in the Church the Pope claims that Peter was the chief
of the apostles. This is an impudent falsehood.
Verse 8. For he that wrought effectually in Peter.
With these words Paul refutes another argument of the false apostles. "What
reason have the false apostles to boast that the Gospel of Peter was mighty,
that he converted many, that he wrought great miracles, and that his very
shadow healed the sick? These reports are true enough. But where did Peter
acquire this power? God gave him the power. I have the same power. I
received my power, not from Peter, but from the same God. The same Spirit
who was mighty in Peter was mighty in me also." Luke corroborates Paul's
statement in the words: "And God wrought special miracles by the hands of
Paul, so that from his body were brought unto the sick handkerchiefs or
aprons, and the diseases departed from them, and the evil spirits went out
of them." (Acts 19:11, 12.)
To conclude, Paul is not going to be inferior to the rest
of the apostles. Some secular writers put Paul's boasting down as carnal
pride. But Paul had no personal interest in his boasting. It was with him a
matter of faith and doctrine. The controversy was not about the glory of
Paul, but the glory of God, the Word of God, the true worship of God, true
religion, and the righteousness of faith.
Verse 9. And when James, Cephas and John, who seemed
to be pillars, perceived the grace that was given unto me, they gave to me
and Barnabas the right hands of fellowship; that we should go unto the
heathen, and they unto the circumcision.
"The fact is, when the apostles heard that I had received the charge to
preach the Gospel to the Gentiles from Christ; when they heard that God had
wrought many miracles through me; that great numbers of the Gentiles had
come to the knowledge of Christ through my ministry; when they heard that
the Gentiles had received the Holy Ghost without Law and circumcision, by
the simple preaching of faith; when they heard all this they glorified God
for His grace in me." Hence, Paul was justified in concluding that the
apostles were for him, and not against him.
The right hands of fellowship.
As if the apostles had said to him: "We, Paul, do agree with you in all
things. We are companions in doctrine. We have the same Gospel with this
difference, that to you is committed the Gospel for the uncircumcised, while
the Gospel for the circumcision is committed unto us. But this difference
ought not to hinder our friendship, since we preach one and the same
Gospel."
Verse 10. Only they would that we should remember
the poor; the same which I also was forward to do.
Next to the preaching of the Gospel, a true and faithful pastor will take
care of the poor. Where the Church is, there must be the poor, for the world
and the devil persecute the Church and impoverish many faithful Christians.
Speaking of money, nobody wants to contribute nowadays to
the maintenance of the ministry, and the erection of schools. When it comes
to establishing false worship and idolatry, no cost is spared. True religion
is ever in need of money, while false religions are backed by wealth.
Verse 11. But when Peter was come to Antioch, I
withstood him to the face, because he was to be blamed.
Paul goes on in his refutation of the false apostles by saying that in
Antioch he withstood Peter in the presence of the whole congregation. As he
stated before, Paul had no small matter in hand, but the chief article of
the Christian religion. When this article is endangered, we must not
hesitate to resist Peter, or an angel from heaven. Paul paid no regard to
the dignity and position of Peter, when he saw this article in danger. It is
written: "He that loveth father or mother or his own life, more than me, is
not worthy of me." (Matt. 10:37.)
For defending the truth in our day, we are called proud
and obstinate hypocrites. We are not ashamed of these titles. The cause we
are called to defend, is not Peter's cause, or the cause of our parents, or
that of the government, or that of the world, but the cause of God. In
defense of that cause we must be firm and unyielding.
When he says, "to his face," Paul accuses the false
apostles of slandering him behind his back. In his presence they dared not
to open their mouths. He tells them, "I did not speak evil of Peter behind
his back, but I withstood him frankly and openly."
Others may debate here whether an apostle might sin. I
claim that we ought not to make Peter out as faultless. Prophets have erred.
Nathan told David that he should go ahead and build the Temple of the Lord.
But his prophecy was afterwards corrected by the Lord. The apostles erred in
thinking of the Kingdom of Christ as a worldly state. Peter had heard the
command of Christ, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every
creature." But if it had not been for the heavenly vision and the special
command of Christ, Peter would never have gone to the home of Cornelius.
Peter also erred in this matter of circumcision. If Paul had not publicly
censured him, all the believing Gentiles would have been compelled to
receive circumcision and accept the Jewish law. We are not to attribute
perfection to any man.
Luke reports "that the contention between Paul and
Barnabas was so sharp that they departed asunder one from the other." The
cause of their disagreement could hardly have been small since it separated
these two, who had been joined together for years in a holy partnership.
Such incidents are recorded for our consolation. After all, it is a comfort
to know that even saints might and do sin.
Samson, David, and many other excellent men, fell into
grievous sins. Job and Jeremiah cursed the day of their birth. Elijah and
Jonah became weary of life and prayed for death. Such offenses on the part
of the saints, the Scriptures record for the comfort of those who are near
despair. No person has ever sunk so low that he cannot rise again. On the
other hand, no man's standing is so secure that he may not fall. If Peter
fell, I may fall. If he rose again, I may rise again. We have the same gifts
that they had, the same Christ, the same baptism and the same Gospel, the
same forgiveness of sins. They needed these saving ordinances just as much
as we do.
Verse 12. For before that certain came from James,
he did eat with the Gentiles.
The Gentiles who had been converted to faith in Christ, ate meats forbidden
by the Law. Peter, visiting some of these Gentiles, ate meat and drank wine
with them, although he knew that these things were forbidden in the Law.
Paul declared that he did likewise, that he became as a Jew to the Jews, and
to them that were without law, as without law. He ate and drank with the
Gentiles unconcerned about the Jewish Law. When he was with the Jews,
however, he abstained from all things forbidden in the Law, for he labored
to serve all men, that he "might by all means save some." Paul does not
reprove Peter for transgressing the Law, but for disguising his attitude to
the Law.
But when they were come, he withdrew and separated
himself, fearing them which were of the circumcision.
Paul does not accuse Peter of malice or ignorance, but of lack of principle,
in that he abstained from meats, because he feared the Jews that came from
James. Peter's weak attitude endangered the principle of Christian liberty.
It is the deduction rather than the fact which Paul reproves. To eat and to
drink, or not to eat and drink, is immaterial. But to make the deduction "If
you eat, you sin; if you abstain you are righteous"--this is wrong.
Meats may be refused for two reasons. First, they may be
refused for the sake of Christian love. There is no danger connected with a
refusal of meats for the sake of charity. To bear with the infirmity of a
brother is a good thing. Paul himself taught and exemplified such
thoughtfulness. Secondly, meats may be refused in the mistaken hope of
thereby obtaining righteousness. When this is the purpose of abstaining from
meats, we say, let charity go. To refrain from meats for this latter reason
amounts to a denial of Christ. If we must lose one or the other, let us lose
a friend and brother, rather than God, our Father.
Jerome, who understood not this passage, nor the whole
epistle for that matter, excuses Peter's action on the ground "that it was
done in ignorance." But Peter offended by giving the impression that he was
indorsing the Law. By his example he encouraged Gentiles and Jews to forsake
the truth of the Gospel. If Paul had not reproved him, there would have been
a sliding back of Christians into the Jewish religion, and a return to the
burdens of the Law.
It is surprising that Peter, excellent apostle that he
was, should have been guilty of such vacillation. In a former council at
Jerusalem he practically stood alone in defense of the truth that salvation
is by faith, without the Law. Peter at that time valiantly defended the
liberty of the Gospel. But now by abstaining from meats forbidden in the
Law, he went against his better judgment. You have no idea what danger there
is in customs and ceremonies. They so easily tend to error in works.
Verse 13. And the other Jews dissembled likewise
with him; insomuch that Barnabas also was carried away with their
dissimulation.
It is marvelous how God preserved the Church by one single person. Paul
alone stood up for the truth, for Barnabas, his companion, was lost to him,
and Peter was against him. Sometimes one lone person can do more in a
conference than the whole assembly.
I mention this to urge all to learn how properly to
differentiate between the Law and the Gospel, in order to avoid dissembling.
When it come to the article of justification we must not yield, if we want
to retain the truth of the Gospel.
When the conscience is disturbed, do not seek advice from
reason or from the Law, but rest your conscience in the grace of God and in
His Word, and proceed as if you had never heard of the Law. The Law has its
place and its own good time. While Moses was in the mountain where he talked
with God face to face, he had no law, he made no law, he administered no
law. But when he came down from the mountain, he was a lawgiver. The
conscience must be kept above the Law, the body under the Law.
Paul reproved Peter for no trifle, but for the chief
article of Christian doctrine, which Peter's hypocrisy had endangered. For
Barnabas and other Jews followed Peter's example. It is surprising that such
good men as Peter, Barnabas, and others should fall into unexpected error,
especially in a matter which they knew so well. To trust in our own
strength, our own goodness, our own wisdom, is a perilous thing. Let us
search the Scriptures with humility, praying that we may never lose the
light of the Gospel. "Lord, increase our faith."
Verse 14. But when I saw that they walked not
uprightly according to the truth of the gospel.
No one except Paul had his eyes open. Consequently it was his duty to
reprove Peter and his followers for swerving from the truth of the Gospel.
It was no easy task for Paul to reprimand Peter. To the honor of Peter it
must be said that he took the correction. No doubt, he freely acknowledged
his fault.
The person who can rightly divide Law and Gospel has
reason to thank God. He is a true theologian. I must confess that in times
of temptation I do not always know how to do it. To divide Law and Gospel
means to place the Gospel in heaven, and to keep the Law on earth; to call
the righteousness of the Gospel heavenly, and the righteousness of the Law
earthly; to put as much difference between the righteousness of the Gospel
and that of the Law, as there is difference between day and night. If it is
a question of faith or conscience, ignore the Law entirely. If it is a
question of works, then lift high the lantern of works and the righteousness
of the Law. If your conscience is oppressed with a sense of sin, talk to
your conscience. Say: "You are now groveling in the dirt. You are now a
laboring ass. Go ahead, and carry your burden. But why don't you mount up to
heaven? There the Law cannot follow you!" Leave the ass burdened with laws
behind in the valley. But your conscience, let it ascend with Isaac into the
mountain.
In civil life obedience to the law is severely required.
In civil life Gospel, conscience, grace, remission of sins, Christ Himself,
do not count, but only Moses with the lawbooks. If we bear in mind this
distinction, neither Gospel nor Law shall trespass upon each other. The
moment Law and sin cross into heaven, i.e., your conscience, kick them out.
On the other hand, when grace wanders unto the earth, i.e., into the body,
tell grace: "You have no business to be around the dreg and dung of this
bodily life. You belong in heaven."
By his compromising attitude Peter confused the separation
of Law and Gospel. Paul had to do something about it. He reproved Peter, not
to embarrass him, but to conserve the difference between the Gospel which
justifies in heaven, and the Law which justifies on earth.
The right separation between Law and Gospel is very
important to know. Christian doctrine is impossible without it. Let all who
love and fear God, diligently learn the difference, not only in theory but
also in practice.
When your conscience gets into trouble, say to yourself:
"There is a time to die, and a time to live; a time to learn the Law, and a
time to unlearn the Law; a time to hear the Gospel, and a time to ignore the
Gospel. Let the Law now depart, and let the Gospel enter, for now is the
right time to hear the Gospel, and not the Law." However, when the conflict
of conscience is over and external duties must be performed, close your ears
to the Gospel, and open them wide to the Law.
I said unto Peter before them all, If thou being a
Jew, livest after the manner of Gentiles, and not as do the Jews, why
compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews.
To live as a Jew is nothing bad. To eat or not to eat pork, what difference
does it make? But to play the Jew, and for conscience' sake to abstain from
certain meats, is a denial of Christ. When Paul saw that Peter's attitude
tended to this, he withstood Peter and said to him: "You know that the
observance of the law is not needed unto righteousness. You know that we are
justified by faith in Christ. You know that we may eat all kinds of meats.
Yet by your example you obligate the Gentiles to forsake Christ, and to
return to the Law. You give them reason to think that faith is not
sufficient unto salvation."
Peter did not say so, but his example said quite plainly
that the observance of the Law must be added to faith in Christ, if men are
to be saved. From Peter's example the Gentiles could not help but draw the
conclusion that the Law was necessary unto salvation. If this error had been
permitted to pass unchallenged, Christ would have lost out altogether.
The controversy involved the preservation of pure
doctrine. In such a controversy Paul did not mind if anybody took offense.
Verse 15. We who are Jews by nature, and not sinners
of the Gentiles.
"When we Jews compare ourselves with the Gentiles, we look pretty good. We
have the Law, we have good works. Our rectitude dates from our birth,
because the Jewish religion is natural to us. But all this does not make us
righteous before God."
Peter and the others lived up to the requirements of the
Law. They had circumcision, the covenant, the promises, the apostleship. But
because of these advantages they were not to think themselves righteous
before God. None of these prerogatives spell faith in Christ, which alone
can justify a person. We do not mean to imply that the Law is bad. We do not
condemn the Law, circumcision, etc., for their failure to justify us. Paul
spoke disparagingly of these ordinances, because the false apostles asserted
that mankind is saved by them without faith. Paul could not let this
assertion stand, for without faith all things are deadly.
Verse 16. Knowing that a man is not justified by the
works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ.
For the sake of argument let us suppose that you could fulfill the Law in
the spirit of the first commandment of God: "Thou shalt love the Lord, thy
God, with all thy heart." It would do you no good. A person simply is not
justified by the works of the Law.
The works of the Law, according to Paul, include the whole
Law, judicial, ceremonial, moral. Now, if the performance of the moral law
cannot justify, how can circumcision justify, when circumcision is part of
the ceremonial law?
The demands of the Law may be fulfilled before and after
justification. There were many excellent men among the pagans of old, men
who never heard of justification. They lived moral lives. But that fact did
not justify them. Peter, Paul, all Christians, live up to the Law. But that
fact does not justify them. For I know nothing by myself," says Paul, "yet
am I not hereby justified." (I Cor. 4:4.)
The nefarious opinion of the papists, which attributes the
merit of grace and the remission of sins to works, must here be emphatically
rejected. The papists say*[1]1 that a good work performed before grace has
been obtained, is able to secure grace for a person, because it is no more
than right that God should reward a good deed. When grace has already been
obtained, any good work deserves everlasting life as a due payment and
reward for merit. For the first, God is no debtor, they say; but because God
is good and just, it is no more than right (they say) that He should reward
a good work by granting grace for the service. But when grace has already
been obtained, they continue, God is in the position of a debtor, and is in
duty bound to reward a good work with the gift of eternal life. This is the
wicked teaching of the papacy.
Now, if I could perform any work acceptable to God and
deserving of grace, and once having obtained grace my good works would
continue to earn for me the right and reward of eternal life, why should I
stand in need of the grace of God and the suffering and death of Christ?
Christ would be of no benefit to me. Christ's mercy would be of no use to
me.
This shows how little insight the pope and the whole of
his religious coterie have into spiritual matters, and how little they
concern themselves with the spiritual health of their forlorn flocks. They
cannot believe that the flesh is unable to think, speak, or do anything
except against God. If they could see evil rooted in the nature of man, they
would never entertain such silly dreams about man's merit or worthiness.
With Paul we absolutely deny the possibility of self
merit. God never yet gave to any person grace and everlasting life as a
reward for merit. The opinions of the papists are the intellectual
pipe-dreams of idle pates, that serve no other purpose but to draw men away
from the true worship of God. The papacy is founded upon hallucinations.
The true way of salvation is this. First, a person must
realize that he is a sinner, the kind of a sinner who is congenitally unable
to do any good thing. "Whatsoever is not of faith, is sin." Those who seek
to earn the grace of God by their own efforts are trying to please God with
sins. They mock God, and provoke His anger. The first step on the way to
salvation is to repent.
The second part is this. God sent His only-begotten Son
into the world that we may live through His merit. He was crucified and
killed for us. By sacrificing His Son for us God revealed Himself to us as a
merciful Father who donates remission of sins, righteousness, and life
everlasting for Christ's sake. God hands out His gifts freely unto all men.
That is the praise and glory of His mercy.
The scholastics explain the way of salvation in this
manner. When a person happens to perform a good deed, God accepts it and as
a reward for the good deed God pours charity into that person. They call it
"charity infused." This charity is supposed to remain in the heart. They get
wild when they are told that this quality of the heart cannot justify a
person.
They also claim that we are able to love God by our own
natural strength, to love God above all things, at least to the extent that
we deserve grace. And, say the scholastics, because God is not satisfied
with a literal performance of the Law, but expects us to fulfill the Law
according to the mind of the Lawgiver, therefore we must obtain from above a
quality above nature, a quality which they call "formal righteousness."
We say, faith apprehends Jesus Christ. Christian faith is
not an inactive quality in the heart. If it is true faith it will surely
take Christ for its object. Christ, apprehended by faith and dwelling in the
heart, constitutes Christian righteousness, for which God gives eternal
life.
In contrast to the doting dreams of the scholastics, we
teach this: First a person must learn to know himself from the Law. With the
prophet he will then confess: "All have sinned, and come short of the glory
of God." And, "there is none that doeth good, no, not one." And, "against
thee, thee only, have I sinned."
Having been humbled by the Law, and having been brought to
a right estimate of himself, a man will repent. He finds out that he is so
depraved, that no strength, no works, no merits of his own will ever deliver
him from his guilt. He will then understand the meaning of Paul's words: "I
am sold under sin"; and "they are all under sin."
At this state a person begins to lament: "Who is going to
help me?" In due time comes the Word of the Gospel, and says: "Son, thy sins
are forgiven thee. Believe in Jesus Christ who was crucified for your sins.
Remember, your sins have been imposed upon Christ."
In this way are we delivered from sin. In this way are we
justified and made heirs of everlasting life.
In order to have faith you must paint a true portrait of
Christ. The scholastics caricature Christ into a judge and tormentor. But
Christ is no law giver. He is the Lifegiver. He is the Forgiver of sins. You
must believe that Christ might have atoned for the sins of the world with
one single drop of His blood. Instead, He shed His blood abundantly in order
that He might give abundant satisfaction for our sins.
Here let me say, that these three things, faith, Christ,
and imputation of righteousness, are to be joined together. Faith takes hold
of Christ. God accounts this faith for righteousness.
This imputation of righteousness we need very much,
because we are far from perfect. As long as we have this body, sin will
dwell in our flesh. Then, too, we sometimes drive away the Holy Spirit; we
fall into sin, like Peter, David, and other holy men. Nevertheless we may
always take recourse to this fact, "that our sins are covered," and that
"God will not lay them to our charge." Sin is not held against us for
Christ's sake. Where Christ and faith are lacking, there is no remission or
covering of sins, but only condemnation.
After we have taught faith in Christ, we teach good works.
"Since you have found Christ by faith," we say, "begin now to work and do
well. Love God and your neighbor. Call upon God, give thanks unto Him,
praise Him, confess Him. These are good works. Let them flow from a cheerful
heart, because you have remission of sin in Christ."
When crosses and afflictions come our way, we bear them
patiently. "For Christ's yoke is easy, and His burden is light." When sin
has been pardoned, and the conscience has been eased of its dreadful load, a
Christian can endure all things in Christ.
To give a short definition of a Christian: A Christian is
not somebody who has no sin, but somebody against whom God no longer chalks
sin, because of his faith in Christ. This doctrine brings comfort to
consciences in serious trouble. When a person is a Christian he is above law
and sin. When the Law accuses him, and sin wants to drive the wits out of
him, a Christian looks to Christ. A Christian is free. He has no master
except Christ. A Christian is greater than the whole world.
Even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might
be justified.
The true way of becoming a Christian is to be justified by faith in Jesus
Christ, and not by the works of the Law.
We know that we must also teach good works, but they must
be taught in their proper turn, when the discussion is concerning works and
not the article of justification.
Here the question arises by what means are we justified?
We answer with Paul, "By faith only in Christ are we pronounced righteous,
and not by works." Not that we reject good works. Far from it. But we will
not allow ourselves to be removed from the anchorage of our salvation.
The Law is a good thing. But when the discussion is about
justification, then is no time to drag in the Law. When we discuss
justification we ought to speak of Christ and the benefits He has brought
us.
Christ is no sheriff. He is "the Lamb of God, which taketh
away the sin of the world." (John 1:29.)
That we might be justified by the faith of Christ,
and not by the works of the Law.
We do not mean to say that the Law is bad. Only it is not able to justify
us. To be at peace with God, we have need of a far better mediator than
Moses or the Law. We must know that we are nothing. We must understand that
we are merely beneficiaries and recipients of the treasures of Christ.
So far, the words of Paul were addressed to Peter. Now
Paul turns to the Galatians and makes this summary statement:
For by the works of the law shall no flesh be
justified.
By the term "flesh" Paul does not understand manifest vices. Such sins he
usually calls by their proper names, as adultery, fornication, etc. By
"flesh" Paul understands what Jesus meant in the third chapter of John,
"That which is born of the flesh is flesh". (John 3:6.) "Flesh" here means
the whole nature of man, inclusive of reason and instincts. "This flesh,"
says Paul, "is not justified by the works of the law."
The papists do not believe this. They say, "A person who
performs this good deed or that, deserves the forgiveness of his sins. A
person who joins this or that holy order, has the promise of everlasting
life."
To me it is a miracle that the Church, so long surrounded
by vicious sects, has been able to survive at all. God must have been able
to call a few who in their failure to discover any good in themselves to
cite against the wrath and judgment of God, simply took to the suffering and
death of Christ, and were saved by this simple faith.
Nevertheless God has punished the contempt of the Gospel
and of Christ on the part of the papists, by turning them over to a
reprobate state of mind in which they reject the Gospel, and receive with
gusto the abominable rules, ordinances, and traditions of men in preference
to the Word of God, until they went so far as to forbid marriage. God
punished them justly, because they blasphemed the only Son of God.
This is, then, our general conclusion: "By the works of
the law shall no flesh be justified."
Verse 17. But if, while we seek to be justified by
Christ, we ourselves also are found sinners, is therefore Christ the
minister of sin? God forbid.
Either we are not justified by Christ, or we are not justified by the Law.
The fact is, we are justified by Christ. Hence, we are not justified by the
Law. If we observe the Law in order to be justified, or after having been
justified by Christ, we think we must further be justified by the Law, we
convert Christ into a legislator and a minister of sin.
"What are these false apostles doing?" Paul cries. "They
are turning Law into grace, and grace into Law. They are changing Moses into
Christ, and Christ into Moses. By teaching that besides Christ and His
righteousness the performance of the Law is necessary unto salvation, they
put the Law in the place of Christ, they attribute to the Law the power to
save, a power that belongs to Christ only."
The papists quote the words of Christ: "If thou wilt enter
into life, keep the commandments." (Matt. 19:17.) With His own words they
deny Christ and abolish faith in Him. Christ is made to lose His good name,
His office, and His glory, and is demoted to the status of a law enforcer,
reproving, terrifying, and chasing poor sinners around.
The proper office of Christ is to raise the sinner, and
extricate him from his sins.
Papists and Anabaptists deride us because we so earnestly
require faith. "Faith," they say, "makes men reckless." What do these
law-workers know about faith, when they are so busy calling people back from
baptism, from faith, from the promises of Christ to the Law?
With their doctrine these lying sects of perdition deface
the benefits of Christ to this day. They rob Christ of His glory as the
Justifier of mankind and cast Him into the role of a minister of sin. They
are like the false apostles. There is not a single one among them who knows
the difference between law and grace.
We can tell the difference. We do not here and now argue
whether we ought to do good works, or whether the Law is any good, or
whether the Law ought to be kept at all. We will discuss these questions
some other time. We are now concerned with justification. Our opponents
refuse to make this distinction. All they can do is to bellow that good
works ought to be done. We know that. We know that good works ought to be
done, but we will talk about that when the proper time comes. Now we are
dealing with justification, and here good works should not be so much as
mentioned.
Paul's argument has often comforted me. He argues: "If we
who have been justified by Christ are counted unrighteous, why seek
justification in Christ at all? If we are justified by the Law, tell me,
what has Christ achieved by His death, by His preaching, by His victory over
sin and death? Either we are justified by Christ, or we are made worse
sinners by Him."
The Sacred Scriptures, particularly those of the New
Testament, make frequent mention of faith in Christ. "Whosoever believeth in
him is saved, shall not perish, shall have everlasting life, is not judged,"
etc. In open contradiction to the Scriptures, our opponents misquote, "He
that believeth in Christ is condemned, because he has faith without works."
Our opponents turn everything topsy-turvy. They make Christ over into a
murderer, and Moses into a savior. Is not this horrible blasphemy?
Is therefore Christ the minister of sin?
This is Hebrew phraseology, also used by Paul in II Corinthians, chapter 3.
There Paul speaks of two ministers: The minister of the letter, and the
minister of the spirit; the minister of the Law, and the minister of grace;
the minister of death, and the minister of life. "Moses," says Paul, "is the
minister of the Law, of sin, wrath, death, and condemnation."
Whoever teaches that good works are indispensable unto
salvation, that to gain heaven a person must suffer afflictions and follow
the example of Christ and of the saints, is a minister of the Law, of sin,
wrath, and of death, for the conscience knows how impossible it is for a
person to fulfill the Law. Why, the Law makes trouble even for those who
have the Holy Spirit. What will not the Law do in the case of the wicked who
do not even have the Holy Spirit?
The Law requires perfect obedience. It condemns all do not
accomplish the will of God. But show me a person who is able to render
perfect obedience. The Law cannot justify. It can only condemn according to
the passage: "Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which
are written in the book of the law to do them."
Paul has good reason for calling the minister of the Law
the minister of sin, for the Law reveals our sinfulness. The realization of
sin in turn frightens the heart and drives it to despair. Therefore all
exponents of the Law and of works deserve to be called tyrants and
oppressors.
The purpose of the Law is to reveal sin. That this is the
purpose of the Law can be seen from the account of the giving of the Law as
reported in the nineteenth and twentieth chapters of Exodus. Moses brought
the people out of their tents to have God speak to them personally from a
cloud. But the people trembled with fear, fled, and standing aloof they
begged Moses: "Speak thou with us, and we will hear: but let not God speak
with us, lest we die." The proper office of the Law is to lead us out of our
tents, in other words, out of the security of our self-trust, into the
presence of God, that we may perceive His anger at our sinfulness.
All who say that faith alone in Christ does not justify a
person, convert Christ into a minister of sin, a teacher of the Law, and a
cruel tyrant who requires the impossible. All merit-seekers take Christ for
a new lawgiver.
In conclusion, if the Law is the minister of sin, it is at
the same time the minister of wrath and death. As the Law reveals sin it
fills a person with the fear of death and condemnation. Eventually the
conscience wakes up to the fact that God is angry. If God is angry with you,
He will destroy and condemn you forever. Unable to stand the thought of the
wrath and judgment of God, many a person commits suicide.
God forbid.
Christ is not the minister of sin, but the Dispenser of righteousness and
the Giver of life. Christ is Lord over law, sin and death. All who believe
in Him are delivered from law, sin and death.
The Law drives us away from God, but Christ reconciles God
unto us, for "He is the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sins of the
world." Now if the sin of the world is taken away, it is taken away from me.
If sin is taken away, the wrath of God and His condemnation are also taken
away. Let us practice this blessed conviction.
Verse 18. For if I build again the things which I
destroyed, I make myself a transgressor.
"I have not preached to the end that I build again the things which I
destroyed. If I should do so, I would not only be laboring in vain, but I
would make myself guilty of a great wrong. By the ministry of the Gospel I
have destroyed sin, heaviness of heart, wrath, and death. I have abolished
the Law, so that it should not bother your conscience any more. Should I now
once again establish the Law, and set up the rule of Moses? This is exactly
what I should be doing, if I would urge circumcision and the performance of
the Law as necessary unto salvation. Instead of righteousness and life, I
would restore sin and death."
By the grace of God we know that we are justified through
faith in Christ alone. We do not mingle law and grace, faith and works. We
keep them far apart. Let every true Christian mark the distinction between
law and grace, and mark it well.
We must not drag good works into the article of
justification as the monks do who maintain that not only good works, but
also the punishment which evildoers suffer for their wicked deeds, deserve
everlasting life. When a criminal is brought to the place of execution, the
monks try to comfort him in this manner: "You want to die willingly and
patiently, and then you will merit remission of your sins and eternal life."
What cruelty is this, that a wretched thief, murderer, robber should be so
miserably misguided in his extreme distress, that at the very point of death
he should be denied the sweet promises of Christ, and directed to hope for
pardon of his sins in the willingness and patience with which he is about to
suffer death for his crimes? The monks are showing him the paved way to
hell.
These hypocrites do not know the first thing about grace,
the Gospel, or Christ. They retain the appearance and the name of the Gospel
and of Christ for a decoy only. In their confessional writings faith or the
merit of Christ are never mentioned. In their writings they play up the
merits of man, as can readily be seen from the following form of absolution
used among the monks.
scripRefTrue, the merit of Christ is mentioned in this
formula of absolution. But if you look closer you will notice that Christ's
merit is belittled, while monkish merits are aggrandized. They confess
Christ with their lips, and at the same time deny His power to save. I
myself was at one time entangled in this error. I thought Christ was a judge
and had to be pacified by a strict adherence to the rules of my order. But
now I give thanks unto God, the Father of all mercies, who has called me out
of darkness into the light of His glorious Gospel, and has granted unto me
the saving knowledge of Christ Jesus, my Lord.
We conclude with Paul, that we are justified by faith in
Christ, without the Law. Once a person has been justified by Christ, he will
not be unproductive of good, but as a good tree he will bring forth good
fruit. A believer has the Holy Spirit, and the Holy Spirit will not permit a
person to remain idle, but will put him to work and stir him up to the love
of God, to patient suffering in affliction, to prayer, thanksgiving, to the
habit of charity towards all men.
Verse 19. For I through the law am dead to the law,
that I might live unto God.
This cheering form of speech is frequently met with in the Scriptures,
particularly in the writings of St. Paul, when the Law is set against the
Law, and sin is made to oppose sin, and death is arrayed against death, and
hell is turned loose against hell, as in the following quotations: "Thou
hast led captivity captive," Psalm 68:18. "O death, I will be thy plagues; O
grave, I will be thy destruction," Hosea 13:14. "And for sin, condemned sin
in the flesh," Romans 8:3.
Here Paul plays the Law against the Law, as if to say:
"The Law of Moses condemns me; but I have another law, the law of grace and
liberty which condemns the accusing Law of Moses."
On first sight Paul seems to be advancing a strange and
ugly heresy. He says, "I am dead to the law, that I might live unto God."
The false apostles said the very opposite. They said, "If you do not live to
the law, you are dead unto God."
The doctrine of our opponents is similar to that of the
false apostles in Paul's day. Our opponents teach, "If you want to live unto
God, you must live after the Law, for it is written, Do this and thou shalt
live." Paul, on the other hand, teaches, "We cannot live unto God unless we
are dead unto the Law." If we are dead unto the Law, the Law can have no
power over us.
Paul does not only refer to the Ceremonial Law, but to the
whole Law. We are not to think that the Law is wiped out. It stays. It
continues to operate in the wicked. But a Christian is dead to the Law. For
example, Christ by His resurrection became free from the grave, and yet the
grave remains. Peter was delivered from prison, yet the prison remains. The
Law is abolished as far as I am concerned, when it has driven me into the
arms of Christ. Yet the Law continues to exist and to function. But it no
longer exists for me.
"I have nothing to do with the Law," cries Paul. He could
not have uttered anything more devastating to the prestige of the Law. He
declares that he does not care for the Law, that he does not intend ever to
be justified by the Law.
To be dead to the Law means to be free of the Law. What
right, then, has the Law to accuse me, or to hold anything against me? When
you see a person squirming in the clutches of the Law, say to him: "Brother,
get things straight. You let the Law talk to your conscience. Make it talk
to your flesh. Wake up, and believe in Jesus Christ, the Conqueror of Law
and sin. Faith in Christ will lift you high above the Law into the heaven of
grace. Though Law and sin remain, they no longer concern you, because you
are dead to the Law and dead to sin."
Blessed is the person who knows how to use this truth in
times of distress. He can talk. He can say: "Mr. Law, go ahead and accuse me
as much as you like. I know I have committed many sins, and I continue to
sin daily. But that does not bother me. You have got to shout louder, Mr.
Law. I am deaf, you know. Talk as much as you like, I am dead to you. If you
want to talk to me about my sins, go and talk to my flesh. Belabor that, but
don't talk to my conscience. My conscience is a lady and a queen, and has
nothing to do with the likes of you, because my conscience lives to Christ
under another law, a new and better law, the law of grace."
We have two propositions: To live unto the Law, is to die
unto God. To die unto the Law, is to live unto God. These two propositions
go against reason. No law-worker can ever understand them. But see to it
that you understand them. The Law can never justify and save a sinner. The
Law can only accuse, terrify, and kill him. Therefore to live unto the Law
is to die unto God. Vice versa, to die unto the Law is to live unto God. If
you want to live unto God, bury the Law, and find life through faith in
Christ Jesus.
We have enough arguments right here to conclude that
justification is by faith alone. How can the Law effect our justification,
when Paul so plainly states that we must be dead to the Law if we want to
live unto God? If we are dead to the Law and the Law is dead to us, how can
it possibly contribute anything to our justification? There is nothing left
for us but to be justified by faith alone.
This nineteenth verse is loaded with consolation. It
fortifies a person against every danger. It allows you to argue like this:
"I confess I have sinned." "Then God will punish you."
"No, He will not do that." "Why not? Does not the Law say so?" "I have
nothing to do with the Law." "How so?" "I have another law, the law of
liberty." "What do you mean--'liberty'?"
"The liberty of Christ, for Christ has made me free from
the Law that held me down. That Law is now in prison itself, held captive by
grace and liberty."
By faith in Christ a person may gain such sure and sound
comfort, that he need not fear the devil, sin, death, or any evil. "Sir
Devil," he may say, "I am not afraid of you. I have a Friend whose name is
Jesus Christ, in whom I believe. He has abolished the Law, condemned sin,
vanquished death, and destroyed hell for me. He is bigger than you, Satan.
He has licked you, and holds you down. You cannot hurt me." This is the
faith that overcomes the devil.
Paul manhandles the Law. He treats the Law as if it were a
thief and a robber He treats the Law as contemptible to the conscience, in
order that those who believe in Christ may take courage to defy the Law, and
say: "Mr. Law, I am a sinner. What are you going to do about it?"
Or take death. Christ is risen from death. Why should we
now fear the grave? Against my death I set another death, or rather life, my
life in Christ.
Oh, the sweet names of Jesus! He is called my law against
the Law, my sin against sin, my death against death. Translated, it means
that He is my righteousness, my life, my everlasting salvation. For this
reason was He made the law of the Law, the sin of sin, the death of death,
that He might redeem me from the curse of the Law. He permitted the Law to
accuse Him, sin to condemn Him, and death to take Him, to abolish the Law,
to condemn sin, and to destroy death for me.
This peculiar form of speech sounds much sweeter than if
Paul had said: "I through liberty am dead to the law." By putting it in this
way, "I through the law am dead to the law," he opposes one law with another
law, and has them fight it out.
In this masterly fashion Paul draws our attention away
from the Law, sin, death, and every evil, and centers it upon Christ.
Verse 20. I am crucified with Christ.
Christ is Lord over the Law, because He was crucified unto the Law. I also
am lord over the Law, because by faith I am crucified with Christ.
Paul does not here speak of crucifying the flesh, but he
speaks of that higher crucifying wherein sin, devil, and death are crucified
in Christ and in me. By my faith in Christ I am crucified with Christ. Hence
these evils are crucified and dead unto me.
Nevertheless I live.
"I do not mean to create the impression as though I did not live before
this. But in reality I first live now, now that I have been delivered from
the Law, from sin, and death. Being crucified with Christ and dead unto the
Law, I may now rise unto a new and better life."
We must pay close attention to Paul's way of speaking. He
says that we are crucified and dead unto the Law. The fact is, the Law is
crucified and dead unto us. Paul purposely speaks that way in order to
increase the portion of our comfort.
Yet not I.
Paul explains what constitutes true Christian righteousness. True Christian
righteousness is the righteousness of Christ who lives in us. We must look
away from our own person. Christ and my conscience must become one, so that
I can see nothing else but Christ crucified and raised from the dead for me.
If I keep on looking at myself, I am gone.
If we lose sight of Christ and begin to consider our past,
we simply go to pieces. We must turn our eyes to the brazen serpent, Christ
crucified, and believe with all our heart that He is our righteousness and
our life. For Christ, on whom our eyes are fixed, in whom we live, who lives
in us, is Lord over Law, sin, death, and all evil.
But Christ liveth in me.
"Thus I live," the Apostle starts out. But presently he corrects himself,
saying, "Yet not I, but Christ liveth in me." He is the form of my
perfection. He embellishes my faith.
Since Christ is now living in me, He abolishes the Law,
condemns sin, and destroys death in me. These foes vanish in His presence.
Christ abiding in me drives out every evil. This union with Christ delivers
me from the demands of the Law, and separates me from my sinful self. As
long as I abide in Christ, nothing can hurt me.
Christ domiciling in me, the old Adam has to stay outside
and remain subject to the Law. Think what grace, righteousness, life, peace,
and salvation there is in me, thanks to that inseparable conjunction between
Christ and me through faith!
Paul has a peculiar style, a celestial way of speaking. "I
live," he says, "I live not; I am dead, I am not dead; I am a sinner, I am
not a sinner; I have the Law, I have no Law." When we look at ourselves we
find plenty of sin. But when we look at Christ, we have no sin. Whenever we
separate the person of Christ from our own person, we live under the Law and
not in Christ; we are condemned by the Law, dead before God.
Faith connects you so intimately with Christ, that He and
you become as it were one person. As such you may boldly say: "I am now one
with Christ. Therefore Christ's righteousness, victory, and life are mine."
On the other hand, Christ may say: "I am that big sinner. His sins and his
death are mine, because he is joined to me, and I to him."
Whenever remission of sins is freely proclaimed, people
misinterpret it according to Romans 3:8, "Let us do evil, that good may
come." As soon as people hear that we are not justified by the Law, they
reason maliciously: "Why, then let us reject the Law. If grace abounds,
where sin abounds, let us abound in sin, that grace may all the more
abound." People who reason thus are reckless. They make sport of the
Scriptures and slander the sayings of the Holy Ghost.
However, there are others who are not malicious, only
weak, who may take offense when told that Law and good works are unnecessary
for salvation. These must be instructed as to why good works do not justify,
and from what motives good works must be done. Good works are not the cause,
but the fruit of righteousness. When we have become righteous, then first
are we able and willing to do good. The tree makes the apple; the apple does
not make the tree.
And the life which I now live in the flesh I live by
the faith of the Son of God.
Paul does not deny the fact that he is living in the flesh. He performs the
natural functions of the flesh. But he says that this is not his real life.
His life in the flesh is not a life after the flesh.
"I live by the faith of the Son of God," he says. "My
speech is no longer directed by the flesh, but by the Holy Ghost. My sight
is no longer governed by the flesh, but by the Holy Ghost. My hearing is no
longer determined by the flesh, but by the Holy Ghost. I cannot teach,
write, pray, or give thanks without the instrumentality of the flesh; yet
these activities do not proceed from the flesh, but from God."
A Christian uses earthly means like any unbeliever.
Outwardly they look alike. Nevertheless there is a great difference between
them. I may live in the flesh, but I do not live after the flesh. I do my
living now "by the faith of the Son of God." Paul had the same voice, the
same tongue, before and after his conversion. Before his conversion his
tongue uttered blasphemies. But after his conversion his tongue spoke a
spiritual, heavenly language.
We may now understand how spiritual life originates. It
enters the heart by faith. Christ reigns in the heart with His Holy Spirit,
who sees, hears, speaks, works, suffers, and does all things in and through
us over the protest and the resistance of the flesh.
Who loved me, and gave himself for me.
The sophistical papists assert that a person is able by natural strength to
love God long before grace has entered his heart, and to perform works of
real merit. They believe they are able to fulfill the commandments of God.
They believe they are able to do more than God expects of them, so that they
are in a position to sell their superfluous merits to laymen, thereby saving
themselves and others. They are saving nobody. On the contrary, they abolish
the Gospel, they deride, deny, and blaspheme Christ, and call upon
themselves the wrath of God. This is what they get for living in their own
righteousness, and not in the faith of the Son of God.
The papists will tell you to do the best you can, and God
will give you His grace. They have a rhyme for it:
This may hold true in ordinary civic life. But the papists
apply it to the spiritual realm where a person can perform nothing but sin,
because he is sold under sin.
Our opponents go even further than that. They say, nature
is depraved, but the qualities of nature are untainted. Again we say: This
may hold true in everyday life, but not in the spiritual life. In spiritual
matters a person is by nature full of darkness, error, ignorance, malice,
and perverseness in will and in mind.
In view of this, Paul declares that Christ began and not
we. "He loved me, and gave Himself for me. He found in me no right mind and
no good will. But the good Lord had mercy upon me. Out of pure kindness He
loved me, loved me so that He gave Himself for me, that I should be free
from the Law, from sin, devil, and death."
The words, "The Son of God who loved me, and gave Himself
for me," are so many thunderclaps and lightning bolts of protest from heaven
against the righteousness of the Law. The wickedness, error, darkness,
ignorance in my mind and my will were so great, that it was quite impossible
for me to be saved by any other means than by the inestimable price of
Christ's death.
Let us count the price. When you hear that such an
enormous price was paid for you, will you still come along with your cowl,
your shaven pate, your chastity, your obedience, your poverty, your works,
your merits? What do you want with all these trappings? What good are the
works of all men, and all the pains of the martyrs, in comparison with the
pains of the Son of God dying on the Cross, so that there was not a drop of
His precious blood, but it was all shed for your sins. If you could properly
evaluate this incomparable price, you would throw all your ceremonies, vows,
works, and merits into the ash can. What awful presumption to imagine that
there is any work good enough to pacify God, when to pacify God required the
invaluable price of the death and blood of His own and only Son?
For me.
Who is this "me"? I, wretched and damnable sinner, dearly beloved of the Son
of God. If I could by work or merit love the Son of God and come to Him, why
should He have sacrificed Himself for me ? This shows how the papists ignore
the Scriptures, particularly the doctrine of faith. If they had paid any
attention at all to these words, that it was absolutely necessary for the
Son of God to be given into death for me, they would never have invented so
many hideous heresies.
I always say, there is no remedy against the sects, no
power to resist them, except this article of Christian righteousness. If we
lose this article we shall never be able to combat errors or sects. What
business have they to make such a fuss about works or merits? If I, a
condemned sinner, could have been purchased and redeemed by any other price,
why should the Son of God have given Himself for me? Just because there was
no other price in heaven and on earth big and good enough, was it necessary
for the Son of God to be delivered for me. This He did out of His great love
for me, for the Apostle says, "Who loved me."
Did the Law ever love me? Did the Law ever sacrifice
itself for me? Did the Law ever die for me? On the contrary, it accuses me,
it frightens me, it drives me crazy. Somebody else saved me from the Law,
from sin and death unto eternal life. That Somebody is the Son of God, to
whom be praise and glory forever.
Hence, Christ is no Moses, no tyrant, no lawgiver, but the
Giver of grace, the Savior, full of mercy. In short, He is no less than
infinite mercy and ineffable goodness, bountifully giving Himself for us.
Visualize Christ in these His true colors. I do not say that it is easy.
Even in the present diffusion of the Gospel light, I have much trouble to
see Christ as Paul portrays Him. So deeply has the diseased opinion that
Christ is a lawgiver sunk into my bones. You younger men are a good deal
better off than we who are old. You have never become infected with the
nefarious errors on which I suckled all my youth, until at the mention of
the name of Christ I shivered with fear. You, I say, who are young may learn
to know Christ in all His sweetness.
For Christ is Joy and Sweetness to a broken heart. Christ
is a Lover of poor sinners, and such a Lover that He gave Himself for us.
Now if this is true, and it is true, then are we never justified by our own
righteousness.
Read the words "me" and "for me" with great emphasis.
Print this "me" with capital letters in your heart, and do not ever doubt
that you belong to the number of those who are meant by this "me." Christ
did not only love Peter and Paul. The same love He felt for them He feels
for us. If we cannot deny that we are sinners, we cannot deny that Christ
died for our sins.
Verse 21. I do not frustrate the grace of God.
Paul is now getting ready for the second argument of his Epistle, to the
effect that to seek justification by works of the Law, is to reject the
grace of God. I ask you, what sin can be more horrible than to reject the
grace of God, and to refuse the righteousness of Christ? It is bad enough
that we are wicked sinners and transgressors of all the commandments of God;
on top of that to refuse the grace of God and the remission of sins offered
unto us by Christ, is the worst sin of all, the sin of sins. That is the
limit. There is no sin which Paul and the other apostles detested more than
when a person despises the grace of God in Christ Jesus. Still there is no
sin more common. That is why Paul can get so angry at the Antichrist,
because he snubs Christ, rebuffs the grace of God, and refuses the merit of
Christ. What else would you call it but spitting in Christ's face, pushing
Christ to the side, usurping Christ's throne, and to say: "I am going to
justify you people; I am going to save you." By what means? By masses,
pilgrimages, pardons, merits, etc. For this is Antichrist's doctrine: Faith
is no good, unless it is reinforced by works. By this abominable doctrine
Antichrist has spoiled, darkened, and buried the benefit of Christ, and in
place of the grace of Christ and His Kingdom, he has established the
doctrine of works and the kingdom of ceremonies.
We despise the grace of God when we observe the Law for
the purpose of being justified. The Law is good, holy, and profitable, but
it does not justify. To keep the Law in order to be justified means to
reject grace, to deny Christ, to despise His sacrifice, and to be lost.
For if righteousness come by the law, then Christ is
dead in vain.
Did Christ die, or did He not die? Was His death worth while, or was it not?
If His death was worth while, it follows that righteousness does not come by
the Law. Why was Christ born anyway? Why was He crucified? Why did He
suffer? Why did He love me and give Himself for me? It was all done to no
purpose if righteousness is to be had by the Law.
Or do you think that God spared not His Son, but delivered
Him for us all, for the fun of it? Before I would admit anything like that,
I would consign the holiness of the saints and of the angels to hell.
To reject the grace of God is a common sin, of which
everybody is guilty who sees any righteousness in himself or in his deeds.
And the Pope is the sole author of this iniquity. Not content to spoil the
Gospel of Christ, he has filled the world with his cursed traditions, e.g.,
his bulls and indulgences.
We will always affirm with Paul that either Christ died in
vain, or else the Law cannot justify us. But Christ did not suffer and die
in vain. Hence, the Law does not justify.
If my salvation was so difficult to accomplish that it
necessitated the death of Christ, then all my works, all the righteousness
of the Law, are good for nothing. How can I buy for a penny what cost a
million dollars? The Law is a penny's worth when you compare it with Christ.
Should I be so stupid as to reject the righteousness of Christ which cost me
nothing, and slave like a fool to achieve the righteousness of the Law which
God disdains?
Man's own righteousness is in the last analysis a
despising and rejecting of the grace of God. No combination of words can do
justice to such an outrage. It is an insult to say that any man died in
vain. But to say that Christ died in vain is a deadly insult. To say that
Christ died in vain is to make His resurrection, His victory, His glory, His
kingdom, heaven, earth, God Himself, of no purpose and benefit whatever.
That is enough to set any person against the righteousness
of the Law and all the trimmings of men's own righteousness, the orders of
monks and friars, and their superstitions.
Who would not detest his own vows, his cowls, his shaven
crown, his bearded traditions, yes, the very Law of Moses, when he hears
that for such things he rejected the grace of God and the death of Christ.
It seems that such a horrible wickedness could not enter a man's heart, that
he should reject the grace of God, and despise the death of Christ. And yet
this atrocity is all too common. Let us be warned. Everyone who seeks
righteousness without Christ, either by works, merits, satisfactions,
actions, or by the Law, rejects the grace of God, and despises the death of
Christ.
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter
3 Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6 Click for printer friendly page
Bible Commentary Index |