![]()
IX. The formal cause of justification,
or the righteousness on the
account whereof believers are justified
before God--Objections answered
Principal controversies about justification:--1.
Concerning the nature of
justification, stated--2. Of the formal
cause of it--3. Of the way
whereby we are made partakers of the
benefits of the mediation of Christ-
-What intended by the formal cause of
justification, declared--The
righteousness on the account whereof
believers are justified before God
alone, inquired after under these terms--This
the righteousness of
Christ, imputed unto them--Occasions
of exceptions and objections against
this doctrine--General objections examined--Imputation
of the
righteousness of Christ consistent with
the free pardon of sin, and with
the necessity of evangelical repentance--Method
of God's grace in our
justification --Necessity of faith unto
justification, on supposition of
the imputation of the righteousness of
Christ--Grounds of that necessity-
-Other objections, arising mostly from
mistakes of the truth, asserted,
discussed, and answered
To principal differences about the doctrine
of justification are
reducible unto three heads:--1. The nature
of it,--namely, whether it
consist in an internal change of the person
justified, by the imputation
of a habit of inherent grace or righteousness;
or whether it be a
forensic act, in the judging, esteeming,
declaring, and pronouncing such
a person to be righteous, thereon absolving
him from all his sins, giving
unto him right and title unto life. Herein
we have to do only with those
of the church of Rome, all others, both
Protestants and Socinians, being
agreed on the forensic sense of the word,
and the nature of the thing
signified thereby. And this I have already
spoken unto, so far as our
present design does require; and that, I
hope, with such evidence of
truth as cannot well be gainsaid. Nor may
it be supposed that we have too
long insisted thereon, as an opinion which
is obsolete, and long since
sufficiently confuted. I think much otherwise,
and that those who avoid
the Romanists in these controversies, will
give a greater appearance of
fear than of contempt; for when all is done,
if free justification
through the blood of Christ, and the imputation
of his righteousness, be
not able to preserve its station in the
minds of men, the Popish doctrine
of justification must and will return upon
the world, with all the
concomitants and consequences of it. Whilst
any knowledge of the law or
gospel is continued amongst us, the consciences
of men will at one time
or other, living or dying, be really affected
with a sense of sin, as
unto its guilt and danger. hence that trouble
and those disquietments of
mind will ensue, as will force men, be they
never so unwilling, to seek
after some relief and satisfaction. And
what will not men attempt who are
reduced to the condition expressed, Mic.6:6,7?
Wherefore, in this case,
if the true and only relief of distressed
consciences of sinners who are
weary and heavyladen be hid from their eyes,--if
they have no
apprehension of, nor trust in, that which
alone they may oppose unto the
sentence of the law, and interpose between
God's justice and their souls,
wherein they may take shelter from the storms
of that wrath which abides
on them that believe not,--they will betake
themselves unto any thing
which confidently tenders them present ease
and relief. Hence many
persons, living all their days in an ignorance
of the righteousness of
God, are oftentimes on their sickbeds, and
in their dying hours,
proselyted unto a confidence in the ways
of rest and peace which the
Romanists impose upon them; for such seasons
of advantage do they wait
for, unto the reputation, as they suppose,
of their own zeal,--in truth
unto the scandal of Christian religion.
But finding at any time the
consciences of men under disquietments,
and ignorant of or believing that
heavenly relief which is provided in the
gospel, they are ready with
their applications and medicines, having
on them pretended approbations
of the experience of many ages, and an innumerable
company of devout
souls in them. Such is their doctrine of
justification, with the addition
of those other ingredients of confession,
absolution, penances, or
commutations, aids from saints and angels,
especially the blessed Virgin;
all warmed by the fire of purgatory, and
confidently administered unto
persons sick of ignorance, darkness, and
sin. And let none please
themselves in the contempt of these things.
If the truth concerning
evangelical justification be once disbelieved
among us, or obliterated by
any artifices out of the minds of men, unto
these things, at one time or
other, they must and will betake themselves.
As for the new schemes and
projections of justification, which some
at present would supply us
withal, they are no way suited nor able
to give relief or satisfaction
unto conscience really troubled for sin,
and seriously inquiring how it
may have rest and peace with God. I shall
take the boldness, therefore,
to say, whoever be offended at it, that
if we lose the ancient doctrine
of justification through faith in the blood
of Christ, and the imputation
of his righteousness unto us, public confession
of religion will quickly
issue in Popery or Atheism, or at least
in what is the next door unto
it,--"kai taute men de tauta".
2. The second principal controversy
is about the formal cause of
justification, as it is expressed and stated
by those of the Roman
church; and under these terms some Protestant
divines have consented to
debate the matter in difference. I shall
not interpose into a strife of
words;--so the Romanists will call that
which we inquire after. Some of
ours say the righteousness of Christ imputed,
some, the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ, is the formal cause
of our justification; some,
that there is no formal cause of justification,
but this is that which
supplies the place and use of a formal cause,
which is the righteousness
of Christ. In none of these things will
I concern myself, though I judge
what was mentioned in the last place to
be most proper and significant.
The substance of the inquiry
wherein alone we are concerned, is, What
is that righteousness whereby and wherewith
a believing sinner is
justified before God; or whereon he is accepted
with God, has his sins
pardoned, is received into grace and favour,
and has a title given him
unto the heavenly inheritance? I shall no
otherwise propose this inquiry,
as knowing that it contains the substance
of what convinced sinners do
look after in and by the gospel.
And herein it is agreed by
all, the Socinians only excepted, that the
procatarctical or procuring cause of the
pardon of our sins and
acceptance with God, is the satisfaction
and merit of Christ. Howbeit, it
cannot be denied but that some, retaining
the names of them, do seem to
renounce or disbelieve the things themselves;
but we need not to take any
notice thereof, until they are free more
plainly to express their minds.
But as concerning the righteousness itself
inquired after, there seems to
be a difference among them who yet all deny
it to be the righteousness of
Christ imputed unto us. For those of the
Roman church plainly say, that
upon the infusion of a habit of grace, with
the expulsion of sin, and the
renovation of our natures thereby, which
they call the first
justification, we are actually justified
before God by our own works of
righteousness Hereon they dispute about
the merit and satisfactoriness of
those works, with their condignity of the
reward of eternal life. Others,
as the Socinians, openly disclaim all merit
in our works; only some, out
of reverence, as I suppose, unto the antiquity
of the word, and under the
shelter of the ambiguity of its signification,
have faintly attempted an
accommodation with it. But in the substance
of what they assert unto this
purpose, to the best of my understanding,
they are all agreed: for what
the Papists call "justitia operum,"
the righteousness of works,--they
call a personal, inherent, evangelical righteousness;
whereof we have
spoken before. And whereas the Papists say
that this righteousness of
works is not absolutely perfect, nor in
itself able to justify us in the
sight of God, but owes all its worth and
dignity unto this purpose unto
the merit of Christ, they affirm that this
evangelical righteousness is
the condition whereon we enjoy the benefits
of the righteousness of
Christ, in the pardon of our sins, and the
acceptance of our persons
before God. But as unto those who will acknowledge
no other righteousness
wherewith we are justified before God, the
meaning is the same, whether
we say that on the condition of this righteousness
we are made partakers
of the benefits of the righteousness of
Christ, or that it is the
righteousness of Christ which makes this
righteousness of ours accepted
with God. But these things must afterwards
more particularly be inquired
into.
3. The third inquiry wherein
there is not an agreement in this matter
is,--upon a supposition of a necessity that
he who is to be justified
should, one way or other, be interested
in the righteousness of Christ,
what it is that on our part is required
thereunto. This some say to be
faith alone; others, faith and works also,
and that in the same kind of
necessity and use. That whose consideration
we at present undertake is
the second thing proposed; and, indeed,
herein lies the substance of the
whole controversy about our justification
before God, upon the
determination and stating whereof the determination
of all other incident
questions does depend.
This, therefore, is that which
herein I affirm:--The righteousness of
Christ (in his obedience and suffering for
us) imputed unto believers, as
they are united unto him by his Spirit,
is that righteousness whereon
they are justified before God, on the account
whereof their sins are
pardoned, and a right is granted them unto
the heavenly inheritance.
This position is such as wherein
the substance of that doctrine, in
this important article of evangelical truth
which we plead for, is
plainly and fully expressed. And I have
chosen the rather thus to express
it, because it is that thesis wherein the
learned Davenant laid down that
common doctrine of the Reformed churches
whose defense he undertook. This
is the shield of truth in the whole cause
of justification; which, whilst
it is preserved safe, we need not trouble
ourselves about the differences
that are among learned men about the most
proper stating and declaration
of some lesser concernments of it. This
is the refuge, the only refuge,
of distressed consciences, wherein they
may find rest and peace.
For the confirmation of this
assertion, I shall do these three
things:--I. Reflect on what is needful unto
the explanation of it. II.
Answer the most important general objections
against it. III. Prove the
truth of it by arguments and testimonies
of the holy Scripture.
I. As to the first of these,
or what is necessary unto the explanation
of this assertion, it has been sufficiently
spoken unto in our foregoing
discourses. The heads of some things only
shall at present be called
over.
1. The foundation of the imputation
asserted is union. Hereof there
are many grounds and causes, as has been
declared; but that which we have
immediate respect unto, as the foundation
of this imputation, is that
whereby the Lord Christ and believers do
actually coalesce into one
mystical person. This is by the Holy Spirit
inhabiting in him as the head
of the church in all fulness, and in all
believers according to their
measure, whereby they become members of
his mystical body. That there is
such a union between Christ and believers
is the faith of the catholic
church, and has been so in all ages. Those
who seem in our days to deny
it, or question it, either know not what
they say, or their minds are
influenced by their doctrine who deny the
divine persons of the Son and
of the Spirit. Upon supposition of this
union, reason will grant the
imputation pleaded for to be reasonable;
at least, that there is such a
peculiar ground for it as is not to be exemplified
in any things natural
or political among men.
2. The nature of imputation
has been fully spoken unto before, and
whereunto I refer the reader for the understanding
of what is intended
thereby.
3. That which is imputed is
the righteousness of Christ; and, briefly,
I understand hereby his whole obedience
unto God, in all that he did and
suffered for the church. This, I say, is
imputed unto believers, so as to
become their only righteousness before God
unto the justification of
life.
If beyond these things any
expressions have been made use of, in the
explanation of this truth, which have given
occasion unto any differences
or contests, although they may be true and
defensible against objections,
yet shall not I concern myself in them.
The substance of the truth as
laid down, is that whose defense I have
undertaken; and where that is
granted or consented unto, I will not contend
with any about their way
and methods of its declaration, nor defend
the terms and expressions that
have by any been made use of therein. For
instance, some have said that
"what Christ did and suffered is so
imputed unto us, as that we are
judged and esteemed in the sight of God
to have done or suffered
ourselves in him." This I shall not
concern myself in; for although it
may have a sound sense given unto it, and
is used by some of the
ancients, yet because offense is taken at
it, and the substance of the
truth we plead for is better otherwise expressed,
it ought not to be
contended about. For we do not say that
God judges or esteems that we did
and suffered in our own persons what Christ
did and suffered; but only
that he did it and suffered it in our stead.
Hereon God makes a grant and
donation of it unto believers upon their
believing, unto their
justification before him. And the like may
be said of many other
expressions of the like nature.
II. These things being premised,
I proceed unto the consideration of
the general objections that are urged against
the imputation we plead
for: and I shall insist only on some of
the principal of them, and
whereinto all others may be resolved; for
it were endless to go over all
that any man's invention can suggest unto
him of this kind. And some
general considerations we must take along
with us herein; as,--
1. The doctrine of justification
is a part, yea, an eminent part, of
the mystery of the gospel. It is no marvel,
therefore, if it be not so
exposed unto the common notions of reason
as some would have it to be.
There is more required unto the true spiritual
understanding of such
mysteries; yea, unless we intend to renounce
the gospel, it must be
asserted that reason as it is corrupted,
and the mind of man as destitute
of divine, supernatural revelation, do dislike
every such truth, and rise
up in enmity against it. So the Scripture
directly affirms, Rom.8:7; 1
Cor.2:14.
2. Hence are the minds and
inventions of men wonderfully fertile in
coining objections against evangelical truths
and raising cavils against
them. Seldom to this purpose do they want
all endless number of
sophistical objections, which, because they
know no better, they
themselves judge insoluble; for carnal reason
being once set at liberty,
under the false notion of truth, to act
itself freely and boldly against
spiritual mysteries, is subtile in its arguing,
and pregnant in its
invention of them. How endless, for instance,
are the sophisms of the
Socinians against the doctrine of the Trinity!
and how do they triumph in
them as unanswerable! Under the shelter
of them they despise the force of
the most evident testimonies of the Scripture
and those multiplied on all
occasions. In like manner they deal with
the doctrine of the satisfaction
of Christ, as the Pelagians of old did with
that of his grace. Wherefore,
he that will be startled at the appearance
of subtile or plausible
objections against any gospel mysteries
that are plainly revealed, and
sufficiently attested in the Scripture,
is not likely to come unto much
stability in his profession of them.
3. The most of the objections
which are levied against the truth in
this cause do arise from the want of a due
comprehension of the order of
the work of God's grace, and of our compliance
wherewithal in a way of
duty, as was before observed; for they consist
in opposing those things
one to another as inconsistent, which, in
their proper place and order,
are not only consistent, but mutually subservient
unto one another, and
are found so in the experience of them that
truly believe. Instances
hereof have been given before, and others
will immediately occur. Taking
the consideration of these things with us,
we may see as the rise, so of
what force the objections are.
4. Let it be considered that
the objections which are made use of
against the truth we assert, are all of
them taken from certain
consequences which, as it is supposed, will
ensue on the admission of it.
And as this is the only expedient to perpetuate
controversies and make
them endless, so, to my best observation,
I never yet met with any one
but that, to give an appearance of force
unto the absurdity of the
consequences from whence he argues, he framed
his suppositions, or the
state of the question, unto the disadvantage
of them whom he opposed; a
course of proceeding which I wonder good
men are not either weary or
ashamed of.
1. It is objected, "That
the imputation of the righteousness of Christ
does overthrow all remission of sins on
the part of God". This is pleaded
for by Socinus, De Servatore, lib.4 cap.
2-4; and by others it is also
made use of. A confident charge this seems
to them who steadfastly
believe that without this imputation there
could be no remission of sin.
But they say, "That he who has a righteousness
imputed unto him that is
absolutely perfect, so as to be made his
own, needs no pardon, has no sin
that should be forgiven, nor can he ever
need forgiveness." But because
this objection will occur unto us again
in the vindication of one of our
ensuing arguments, I shall here speak briefly
unto it:--
(1.) Grotius shall answer this
objection. Says he, "Cum duo nobis
peperisse Christum dixerimus, impunitatem
et praemium, illud
satisfactioni, hoc merito Christi distincte
tribuit vetus ecclesia.
Satisfactio consistit in peccaturum translatione,
meritum in
perfectissimae obedientiae pro nobis praestitae
imputatione", Praefat. ad
lib. de Satisfact.;--" Whereas we have
said that Christ has procured or
brought forth two things for us,--freedom
from punishment, and a reward,-
-the ancient church attributes the one of
them distinctly unto his
satisfaction, the other unto his merit.
Satisfaction consists in the
translation of sins (from us unto him);
merit, in the imputation of his
most perfect obedience, performed for us,
unto us." In his judgment, the
remission of sins and the imputation of
righteousness were as consistent
as the satisfaction and merit of Christ;
as indeed they are.
(2.) Had we not been sinners,
we should have had no need of the
imputation of the righteousness of Christ
to render us righteous before
God. Being so, the first end for which it
is imputed is the pardon of
sin; without which we could not be righteous
by the imputation of the
most perfect righteousness. These things,
therefore, are consistent,--
namely, that the satisfaction of Christ
should be imputed unto us for the
pardon of sin, and the obedience of Christ
be imputed unto us to render
us righteous before God; and they are not
only consistent, but neither of
them singly were sufficient unto our justification.
2. It is pleaded by the same
author, and others, "That the imputation
of the righteousness of Christ overthrows
all necessity of repentance for
sin, in order unto the remission or pardon
thereof, yea, renders it
altogether needless; for what need has he
of repentance for sin, who, by
the imputation of the righteousness of Christ,
is esteemed completely
just and righteous in the sight of God?
If Christ satisfied for all sins
in the person of the elect, if as our surety
he paid all our debts, and
if his righteousness be made ours before
we repent, then is all
repentance needless." And these things
are much enlarged on by the same
author in the place before mentioned.
Ans. (1.) It must be remembered
that we require evangelical faith, in
order of nature, antecedently unto our justification
by the imputation of
the righteousness of Christ unto us; which
also is the condition of its
continuation. Wherefore, whatever is necessary
thereunto is in like
manner required of us in order unto believing.
Amongst these, there is a
sorrow for sin, and a repentance of it;
for whosoever is convinced of sin
in a due manner, so as in be sensible of
its evil and guilt,--both as in
its own nature it is contrary unto the receptive
part of the holy law,
and in the necessary consequences of it,
in the wrath and curse of God,--
cannot but be perplexed in his mind that
he has involved himself therein;
and that posture of mind will be accompanied
with shame, fear, sorrow,
and other afflictive passions. Hereon a
resolution does ensue utterly to
abstain from it for the future, with sincere
endeavours unto that
purpose; issuing, if there be time and space
for it, in reformation of
life. And in a sense of sin, sorrow for
it, fear concerning it,
abstinence from it, and reformation of life,
a repentance true in its
kind does consist. This repentance is usually
called legal, because its
motives are principally taken from the law;
but yet there is, moreover,
required unto it that temporary faith of
the gospel which we have before
described; and as it does usually produce
great effects, in the
confession of sin, humiliation for it, and
change of life (as in Ahab and
the Ninevites), so ordinarily it precedes
true saving faith, and
justification thereby. Wherefore, the necessity
hereof is no way weakened
by the doctrine of the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ, yea, it
is strengthened and made effectual thereby;
for without it, in the order
of the gospel, an interest therein is not
to be attained. And this is
that which, in the Old Testament, is so
often proposed as the means and
condition of turning away the judgments
and punishments threatened unto
sin; for it is true and sincere in its kind.
Neither do the Socinians
require any other repentance unto justification;
for as they deny true
evangelical repentance in all the especial
causes of it, so that which
may and does precede faith in order of nature
is all that they require.
This objection, therefore, as managed by
them, is a causeless, vain
pretence.
(2.) Justifying faith includes
in its nature the entire principle of
evangelical repentance, so as that it is
utterly impossible that a man
should be a true believer, and not, at the
same instant of time, be truly
penitent; and therefore are they so frequently
conjoined in the Scripture
as one simultaneous duty. Yea, the call
of the gospel unto repentance is
a call to faith acting itself by repentance:
So the sole reason of that
call unto repentance which the forgiveness
of sins is annexed unto, Acts
2:38, is the proposal of the promise which
is the object of faith, verse
39. And those conceptions and affections
which a man has about sin, with
a sorrow for it and repentance of it, upon
a legal conviction, being
enlivened and made evangelical by the introduction
of faith as a new
principle of them, and giving new motives
unto them, do become
evangelical; so impossible is it that faith
should be without repentance.
Wherefore, although the first act of faith,
and its only proper exercise
unto justification, does respect the grace
of God in Christ, and the way
of salvation by him, as proposed in the
promise of the gospel, yet is not
this conceived in order of time to precede
its acting in
self-displicency, godly sorrow, and universal
conversion from sin unto
God; nor can it be so, seeing it virtually
and radically contains all of
them in itself. However, therefore, evangelical
repentance is not the
condition of our justification, so as to
have any direct influence
thereinto; nor are we said anywhere to be
justified by repentance; nor is
conversant about the proper object which
alone the soul respects therein;
nor is a direct and immediate giving glory
unto God on the account of the
way and work of his wisdom and grace in
Christ Jesus, but a consequent
thereof; nor is that reception of Christ
which is expressly required unto
our justification, and which alone is required
thereunto;--yet is it, in
the root, principle, and promptitude of
mind for its exercise, in every
one that is justified, then when he is justified.
And it is peculiarly
proposed with respect unto the forgiveness
of sins, as that without which
it is impossible we should have any true
sense or comfort of it in our
souls; but it is not so as any part of that
righteousness on the
consideration whereof our sins are pardoned,
nor as that whereby we have
an interest therein. These things are plain
in the divine method of our
justification, and the order of our duty
prescribed in the gospel; as
also in the experience of them that do believe.
Wherefore, considering
the necessity of legal repentance unto believing;
with the sanctification
of the affections exercised therein by faith,
whereby they are made
evangelical; and the nature of faith, as
including in it a principle of
universal conversion unto God; and in especial,
of that repentance which
has for its principal motive the love of
God and of Jesus Christ, with
the grace from thence communicated,--all
which are supposed in the
doctrine pleaded for; the necessity of true
repentance is immovably fixed
on its proper foundation.
(3.) As unto what was said
in the objection concerning Christ's
suffering in the person of the elect, I
know not whether any have used it
or no, nor will I contend about it. He suffered
in their stead; which all
sorts of writers, ancient and modern, so
express,--in his suffering he
bare the person of the church. The meaning
is what was before declared.
Christ and believers are one mystical person,
one spiritually animated
body, head and members. This, I suppose,
will not be denied; to do so, is
to overthrow the church and the faith of
it. Hence, what he did and
suffered is imputed unto them. And it is
granted that, as the surety of
the covenant, he paid all our debts, or
answered for all our faults; and
that his righteousness is really communicated
unto us. "Why, then," say
some, "there is no need of repentance;
all is done for us already." But
why so? Why must we assent to one part of
the gospel unto the exclusion
of another? Was it not free unto God to
appoint what way, method, and
order he would, whereby these things should
be communicated unto us? Nay,
upon the supposition of the design of his
wisdom and grace, these two
things were necessary:--
[1.] That this righteousness
of Christ should be communicated unto us,
and be made ours, in such a way and manner
as that he himself might be
glorified therein, seeing he has disposed
all things, in this whole
economy, unto "the praise of the glory
of his grace," Eph.1:6. This was
to be done by faith, on our part. It is
so; it could be no otherwise: for
that faith whereby we are justified is our
giving unto God the glory of
his wisdom, grace, and love; and whatever
does so is faith, and nothing
else is so.
[2.] That whereas our nature
was so corrupted and depraved as that,
continuing in that state, it was not capable
of a participation of the
righteousness of Christ, or any benefit
of it, unto the glory of God and
our own good, it was in like manner necessary
that it should be renewed
and changed. And unless it were so, the
design of God in the mediation of
Christ,--which was the entire recovery of
us unto himself,--could not be
attained. And therefore, as faith, under
the formal consideration of it,
was necessary unto the first end,--namely,
that of giving glory unto
God,--so unto this latter end it was necessary
that this faith should be
accompanied with, yea, and contain in itself,
the seeds of all those
other graces wherein the divine nature does
consist, whereof we are to be
made partners. Not only, therefore, the
thing itself, or the
communication of the righteousness of Christ
unto us, but the way, and
manner, and means of it, do depend on God's
sovereign order and disposal.
Wherefore, although Christ did make satisfaction
to the justice of God
for all the sins of the church, and that
as a common person (for no man
in his wits can deny but that he who is
a mediator and a surety is, in
some sense, a common person); and although
he did pay all our debts; yet
does the particular interest of this or
that man in what he did and
suffered depend on the way, means, and order
designed of God unto that
end. This, and this alone, gives the true
necessity of all the duties
which are required of us, with their order
and their ends.
3. It is objected, "That
the imputation of the righteousness of
Christ, which we defend, overthrows the
necessity of faith itself." This
is home indeed. "Aliquid adhaerebit"
is the design of all these
objections; but they have reason to plead
for themselves who make it.
"For on this supposition," they
say, "the righteousness of Christ is ours
before we do believe; for Christ satisfied
for all our sins, as if we had
satisfied in our own persons. And he who
is esteemed to have satisfied
for all his sins in his own person is acquitted
from them all and
accounted just, whether he believe or no;
nor is there any ground or
reason why he should be required to believe.
If, therefore, the
righteousness of Christ be really ours,
because, in the judgment of God,
we are esteemed to have wrought it in him,
then it is ours before we do
believe. If it be otherwise, then it is
plain that that righteousness
itself can never be made ours by believing;
only the fruits and effects
of it may be suspended on our believing,
whereby we may be made partakers
of them. Yea, if Christ made any such satisfaction
for us as is
pretended, it is really ours, without any
farther imputation; for, being
performed for us and in our stead, it is
the highest injustice not to
have us accounted pardoned and acquitted,
without any farther, either
imputation on the part of God or faith on
ours." These things I have
transcribed out of Socinus, De Servatore,
lib.4 cap.2-5; which I would
not have done but that I find others to
have gone before me herein,
though to another purpose. And he concludes
with a confidence which
others also seem, in some measure, to have
learned of him; for he says
unto his adversary, "Haec tua, tuorumque
sententia, adeo foeda et
execrabilis est, ut pestilentiorem errorem
post homines natos in populo.
Dei extitisse non credam",--speaking
of the satisfaction of Christ, and
the imputation of it unto believers. And,
indeed, his serpentine wit was
fertile in the invention of cavils against
all the mysteries of the
gospel. Nor was he obliged by any one of
them, so as to contradict
himself in what he opposed concerning any
other of them; for, denying the
deity of Christ, his satisfaction, sacrifice,
merit, righteousness, and
overthrowing the whole nature of his mediation,
nothing stood in his way
which he had a mind to oppose. But I somewhat
wonder how others can make
use of his inventions in this kind; who,
if they considered aright their
proper tendency, they will find them to
be absolutely destructive of what
they seem to own. So it is in this present
objection against the
imputation of the righteousness of Christ.
If it has any force in it, as
indeed it has not, it is to prove that the
satisfaction of Christ was
impossible; and so he intended it. But it
will be easily removed.
I answer, first, in general,
that the whole fallacy of this objection
lies in the opposing once part of the design
and method of God's grace in
this mystery of our justification unto another;
or the taking of one part
of it to be the whole, which, as to its
efficacy and perfection, depends
on somewhat else. Hereof we warned the reader
in our previous discourses.
For the whole of it is a supposition that
the satisfaction of Christ, if
there be any such thing, must have its whole
effect without believing on
our part; which is contrary unto the whole
declaration of the will of God
in the gospel. But I shall principally respect
them who are pleased to
make use of this objection, and yet do not
deny the satisfaction of
Christ. And I say,--
(1.) When the Lord Christ died
for us, and offered himself as a
propitiatory sacrifice, "God laid all
our sins on him," Isa.53:6; and he
then "bare them all in his own body
on the tree," 1 Pet.2:24. Then he
suffered in our stead, and made full satisfaction
for all our sins; for
he "appeared to put away sin by the
sacrifice of himself," Heb.9:26; and
"by one offering he has perfected forever
them that are sanctified,"
chap.10:14. He whose sins were not actually
and absolutely satisfied for
in that one offering of Christ, shall never
have them expiated unto
eternity; for "henceforth he dies no
more," there is "no more sacrifice
for sin." The repetition of a sacrifice
for sin, which must be the
crucifying of Christ afresh, overthrows
the foundation of Christian
religion.
(2.) Notwithstanding this full,
plenary satisfaction once made for the
sins of the world that shall be saved, yet
all men continue equal to be
born by nature "children of wrath;"
and whilst they believe not, "the
wrath of God abides on them," John
3:36;--that is, they are obnoxious
unto and under the curse of the law. Wherefore,
on the only making of
that satisfaction, no one for whom it was
made in the design of God can
be said to have suffered in Christ, nor
to have an interest in his
satisfaction, nor by any way or means be
made partaker of it antecedently
unto another act of God in its imputation
unto him. For this is but one
part of the purpose of God's grace as unto
our justification by the blood
of Christ,--namely, that he by his death
should make satisfaction for our
sins; nor is it to be separated from what
also belongs unto it in the
same purpose of God. Wherefore, from the
position or grant of the
satisfaction of Christ, no argument can
be taken unto the negation of a
consequential act of its imputation unto
us; nor, therefore, of the
necessity of our faith in the believing
and receiving of it, which is no
less the appointment of God than it was
that Christ should make that
satisfaction. Wherefore,--
(3.) That which the Lord Christ
paid for us is as truly paid as if we
had paid it ourselves. So he speaks, Ps.69:5,
"'asher lo-gazolatti 'az
'ashiv". He made no spoil of the glory
of God; what was done of that
nature by us, he returned it unto him. And
what he underwent and
suffered, he underwent and suffered in our
stead. But yet the act of God
in laying our sins on Christ conveyed no
actual right and title to us
unto what he did and suffered. They are
not immediately thereon, nor by
virtue thereof, ours, or esteemed ours;
because God has appointed
somewhat else, not only antecedent thereunto,
but as the means of it,
unto his own glory. These things, both as
unto their being and order,
depend on the free ordination of God.
But yet,--
(4.) It cannot be said that
this satisfaction was made for us on such
a condition as should absolutely suspend
the event, and render it
uncertain whether it should ever be for
us or no. Such a institution may
be righteous in pecuniary solutions. A man
may lay down a great sum of
money for the discharge of another, on such
a condition as may never be
fulfilled; for, on the absolute failure
of the condition, his money may
and ought to be restored unto him, whereon
he has received no injury or
damage. But in penal suffering for crimes
and sins, there can be no
righteous constitution that shall make the
event and efficacy of it to
depend on a condition absolutely uncertain,
and which may not come to
pass or be fulfilled; for if the condition
fail, no recompense can be
made unto him that has suffered. Wherefore,
the way of the application of
the satisfaction of Christ unto them for
whom it was made, is sure and
steadfast in the purpose of God.
(5.) God has appointed that
there shall be an immediate foundation of
the imputation of the satisfaction and righteousness
of Christ unto us;
whereon we may be said to have done and
suffered in him what he did and
suffered in our stead, by that grant, donation,
and imputation of it unto
us; or that we may be interested in it,
that it may be made ours: which
is all we contend for. And this is our actual
coalescence into one
mystical person with him by faith. Hereon
does the necessity of faith
originally depend. And if we shall add hereunto
the necessity of it
likewise unto that especial glory of God
which he designs to exalt in our
justification by Christ, as also unto all
the ends of our obedience unto
God, and the renovation of our natures into
his image, its station is
sufficiently secured against all objections.
Our actual interest in the
satisfaction of Christ depends on our actual
insertion into his mystical
body by faith, according to the appointment
of God.
4. It is yet objected, "That
if the righteousness of Christ be made
ours, we may be said to be saviours of the
world, as he was, or to save
others, as he did; for he was so and did
so by his righteousness, and no
otherwise." This objection also is
of the same nature with those
foregoing,--a mere sophistical cavil. For,--
(1.) The righteousness of Christ
is not transfused into us, so as to
be made inherently and subjectively ours,
as it was in him, and which is
necessarily required unto that effect of
saving others thereby. Whatever
we may do, or be said to do, with respect
unto others, by virtue of any
power or quality inherent in ourselves,
we can be said to do nothing unto
others, or for them, by virtue of that which
is imputed unto us only for
our own benefit. That any righteousness
of ours should benefit another,
it is absolutely necessary that it should
be wrought by ourselves.
(2.) If the righteousness of
Christ could be transfused into us, and
be made inherently ours, yet could we not
be, nor be said to be, the
saviours of others thereby; for our nature
in our individual persons is
not "subjectum capax", or capable
to receive and retain a righteousness
useful and effectual unto that end. This
capacity was given unto it in
Christ by virtue of the hypostatical union,
and no otherwise. The
righteousness of Christ himself, as performed
in the human nature, would
not have been sufficient for the justification
and salvation of the
church, had it not been the righteousness
of his person who is, both God
and man; for "God redeemed his church
with his own blood."
(3.) This imputation of the
righteousness of Christ unto us, as unto
its ends and use, has its measure from the
will of God, and his purpose
in that imputation; and this is, that it
should be the righteousness of
them unto whom it is imputed, and nothing
else.
(4.) We do not say that the
righteousness of Christ, as made
absolutely for the whole church, is imputed
unto every believer; but his
satisfaction for every one of them in particular,
according unto the will
of God, is imputed unto them,--not with
respect unto its general ends,
but according unto every one's particular
interest. Every believer has
his own homer of this bread of life; and
all are justified by the same
righteousness.
(5.) The apostle declares,
as we shall prove afterwards, that as
Adam's actual sin is imputed unto
us unto condemnation, so is the
obedience of Christ imputed unto us to the
justification of life. But
Adam's sin is not so imputed unto any person
as that he should then and
thereby be the cause of sin and condemnation
unto all other persons in
the world, but only that he himself should
become guilty before God
thereon. And so is it on the other side.
And as we are made guilty by
Adam's actual sin, which is not inherent
in us but only imputed unto us;
so are we made righteous by the righteousness
of Christ, which is not
inherent in us, but only imputed unto us.
And imputed unto us it is,
because himself was righteous with it, not
for himself, but for us.
5. It is yet said, "That
if we insist on personal imputation unto
every believer of what Christ did, or if
any believer be personal1y
righteous in the very individual acts of
Christ's righteousness, many
absurdities will follow." But it was
observed before, that when any
design to oppose an opinion from the absurdities
which they suppose would
follow upon it, they are much inclined so
to state it as, that at least
they may seem so to do. And this oft times
the most worthy and candid
persons are not free from, in the heat of
disputation. So I fear it is
here fallen out; for as unto personal imputation,
I do not well
understand it. All imputation is unto a
person, and is the act of a
person, be it of what, and what sort it
will; but from neither of them
can be denominated a personal imputation.
And if an imputation be allowed
that is not unto the persons of men,--namely,
in this case unto all
believers,--the nature of it has not yet
been declared, as I know of.
That any have so expressed
the imputation pleaded for, "that every
believer should be personally righteous
in the very individual acts of
Christ's righteousness," I know not;
I have neither read nor heard any of
them who have so expressed their mind. It
may be some have done so: but I
shall not undertake the defense of what
they have done; for it seems not
only to suppose that Christ did every individual
act which in any
instance is required of us, but also that
those acts are made our own
inherently,--both which are false and impossible.
That which indeed is
pleaded for in this imputation is only this,
that what the Lord Christ
did and suffered as the mediator and surety
of the covenant, in answer
unto the law, for them, and in their stead,
is imputed unto every one of
them unto the justification of life. And
sufficient this is unto that
end, without any such supposals. (1.) From
the dignity of the person who
yielded this obedience, which rendered it
both satisfactory and
meritorious, and imputable unto many. (2.)
From the nature of the
obedience itself, which was a perfect compliance
with, a fulfilling of,
and satisfaction unto the whole law in all
its demands. This, on the
supposition of that act of God's sovereign
authority, whereby a
representative of the whole church was introduced
to answer the law, is
the ground of his righteousness being made
theirs, and being every way
sufficient unto their justification. (3.)
From the constitution of God,
that what was done and suffered by Christ
as a public person, and our
surety, should be reckoned unto us, as if
done by ourselves. So the sin
of Adam, whilst he was a public person,
and represented his whole
posterity, is imputed unto us all, as if
we had committed that actual
sin. This Bellarmine himself frequently
acknowledges: "Peccavimus in
promo homine quando ille peccavit, et illa
ejus praevaricatio nostra
etiam praevaricatio fuit. Non enim vere
per Adami inobedientiam
constitueremur peccatores, nisi inobedientia
illius nostra etiam
inobedientia esset", De Amiss. Grat.
et Stat. Peccat., lib.5 cap.18. And
elsewhere, that the actual sin of Adam is
imputed unto us, as if we all
had committed that actual sin; that is,
broken the whole law of God. And
this is that whereby the apostle illustrates
the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ unto believers;
and it may on as good grounds be
charged with absurdities as the other. It
is not, therefore, said that
God judges that we have in our own persons
done those very acts, and
endured that penalty of the law, which the
Lord Christ did and endured;
for this would overthrow all imputation;--
but what Christ did and
suffered, that God imputes unto believers
unto the justification of life,
as if it had been done by themselves; and
his righteousness as a public
person is made theirs by imputation, even
as the sin of Adam, whilst a
public person, is made the sin of all his
posterity by imputation.
Hereon none of the absurdities
pretended, which are really such, do at
all follow. It does not so, that Christ
in his own person performed every
individual act that we in our circumstances
are obliged unto in a way of
duty; nor was there any need that so he
should do. This imputation, as I
have showed, stands on other foundations.
Nor does it follow, that every
saved person's righteousness before God
is the same identically and
numerically with Christ's in his public
capacity as mediator; for this
objection destroys itself, by affirming
that as it was his, it was the
righteousness of God-man, and so it has
an especial nature as it respects
or relates unto his person. It is the same
that Christ in his public
capacity did work or effect. But there is
a wide difference in the
consideration of it as his absolutely, and
as made ours. It was formally
inherent in him,--is only materially imputed
unto us; was actively his,--
is passively ours; was wrought in the person
of God-man for the whole
church,--is imputed unto each single believer,
as unto his own
concernment only. Adam's sin, as imputed
unto us, is not the sin of a
representative, though it be of him that
was so, but is the particular
sin of every one of us; but this objection
must be farther spoken unto,
where it occurs afterwards. Nor will it
follow, that on this supposition
we should be accounted to have done that
which was done long before we
were in a capacity of doing any thing; for
what is done for us and in our
stead, before we are in any such capacity,
may be imputed unto us, as is
the sin of Adam. And yet there is a manifold
sense wherein men may be
said to have done what was done for them
and in their name, before their
actual existence; so that therein is no
absurdity. As unto what is added
by the way, that Christ did not do nor suffer
the "idem" that we were
obliged unto; whereas he did what the law
required, and suffered what the
law threatened unto the disobedient, which
is the whole of what we are
obliged unto, it will not be so easily proved,
nor the arguments very
suddenly answered, whereby the contrary
has been confirmed. That Christ
did sustain the place of a surety, or was
the surety of the new covenant,
the Scripture does so expressly affirm that
it cannot be denied. And that
there may be sureties in cases criminal
as well as civil and pecuniary,
has been proved before. What else occurs
about the singularity of
Christ's obedience, as he was mediator,
proves only that his
righteousness, as formally and inherently
his, was peculiar unto himself;
and that the adjuncts of it, which arise
from its relation unto his
person, as it was inherent in him, are not
communicable unto them to whom
it is imputed.
6. It is, moreover, urged,
"That upon the supposed imputation of the
righteousness of Christ, it will follow
that every believer is justified
by the works of the law; for the obedience
of Christ was a legal
righteousness, and if that be imputed unto
us, then are we justified by
the law; which is contrary unto express
testimonies of Scripture in many
places." Answer. (1.) I know nothing
more frequent in the writings of
some learned men than that the righteousness
of Christ is our legal
righteousness; who yet, I presume, are able
to free themselves of this
objection. (2.) If this do follow in the
true sense of being justified by
the law, or the works of it, so denied in
the Scripture, their weakness
is much to be pitied who can see no other
way whereby we may be freed
from an obligation to be justified by the
law, but by this imputation of
the righteousness of Christ. (3.) The Scripture
which affirms that "by
the deeds of the law no man can be justified,"
affirms in like manner
that by "faith we do not make void
the law, but establish it;" that "the
righteousness of the law is fulfilled in
us"; that Christ "came not to
destroy the law, but to fulfill it,"
and is the "end of the law for
righteousness unto them that do believe."
And that the law must be
fulfilled, or we cannot be justified, we
shall prove afterwards. (4.) We
are not hereon justified by the law, or
the works of it, in the only
sense of that proposition in the Scripture;
and to coin new senses or
significations of it is not safe. The meaning
of it in the Scripture is,
that only "the doers of the law shall
be justified," Rom.2:13; and that
"he that does the things of it shall
live by them," chap.10:5,--namely,
in his own person, by the way of personal
duty, which alone the law
requires. But if we, who have not fulfilled
the law in the way of
inherent, personal obedience, are justified
by the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ unto us, then are
we justified by Christ, and not
by the law.
But it is said that this will
not relieve; for if his obedience be so
imputed unto us, as that we are accounted
by God in judgment to have done
what Christ did, it is all one upon the
matter, and we are as much
justified by the law as if we had in our
own proper persons performed an
unsinning obedience unto it. This I confess
I cannot understand. The
nature of this imputation is here represented,
as formerly, in such a way
as we cannot acknowledge; from thence alone
this inference is made, which
yet, in my judgment, does not follow thereon.
For grant an imputation of
the righteousness of another unto us, be
it of what nature it will, all
justification by the law and works of it,
in the sense of the Scripture,
is gone for ever. The admission of imputation
takes off all power from
the law to justify; for it can justify none
but upon a righteousness that
is originally and inherently his own: "The
man that does them shall live
in them." If the righteousness that
is imputed be the ground and
foundation of our justification, and made
ours by that imputation, state
it how you will, that justification is of
grace, and not of the law.
However, I know not of any that say we are
accounted of God in judgment
personally to have done what Christ did;
and it may have a sense that is
false,--namely, that God should judge us
in our own persons to have done
those acts which we never did. But what
Christ did for us, and in our
stead, is imputed and communicated unto
us, as we coalesce into one
mystical person with him by faith; and thereon
are we justified. And this
absolutely overthrows all justification
by the law or the works of it;
though the law be established, fulfilled,
and accomplished, that we may
be justified.
Neither can any, on the supposition
of the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ truly stated, be
said to merit their own
salvation. Satisfaction and merit are adjuncts
of the righteousness of
Christ, as formally inherent in his own
person; and as such it cannot be
transfused into another. Wherefore, as it
is imputed unto individual
believers, it has not those properties accompanying
of it, which belong
only unto its existence in the person of
the Son of God. But this was
spoken unto before, as also much of what
was necessary to be here
repeated.
These objections I have in
this place taken notice of because the
answers given unto them do tend to the farther
explanation of that truth,
whose confirmation, by arguments and testimonies
of Scripture, I shall
now proceed unto.