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The doctrine of Justification
by Faith,
through the Imputation
of the Righteousness of Christ
– Explained, Confirmed,
and Vindicated
Dr. John Owen
(1616-1683)
X. Arguments for justification
by the imputation of the righteousness of
Christ. The first argument
from the nature and use of our own personal
righteousness
Arguments for justification by the
imputation of the righteousness of
Christ--Our own personal righteousness
not that on the account whereof we
are justified in the sight of God--Disclaimed
in the Scriptures, as to
any such end--The truth and reality
of it granted--Manifold imperfection
accompanying it, rendering it unmeet
to be a righteousness unto the
justification of life
III. There is a justification of convinced
sinners on their believing.
Hereon are their sins pardoned, their
persons accepted with God, and a
right is given unto them unto the heavenly
inheritance. This state they
are immediately taken into upon their
faith, or believing in Jesus
Christ. And a state it is of actual
peace with God These things at
present take for granted; and they
are the foundation of all that I shall
plead in the present argument. And
I do take notice of them, because some
seem, to the best of my understanding,
to deny any real actual
justification of sinners on their believing
in this life. For they make
justification to be only a general
conditional sentence declared in the
gospel; which, as unto its execution,
is delayed unto the day of
judgment. For whilst men are in this
world, the whole condition of it
being not fulfilled, they cannot be
partakers of it, or be actually and
absolutely justified. Hereon it follows,
that indeed there is no real
state of assured rest and peace with
God by Jesus Christ, for any persons
in this life. This at present I shall
not dispute about, because it seems
to me to overthrow the whole gospel,--
the grace of our Lord Jesus
Christ, and all the comfort of believers;
about which I hope we are not
as yet called to contend.
Our inquiry is, how convinced
sinners do, on their believing, obtain
the remission of sins, acceptance with
God, and a right unto eternal
life? And if this can no other way
be done but by the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ unto them,
then thereby alone are they justified
in the sight of God. And this assertion
proceeds on a supposition that
there is a righteousness required unto
the justification of any person
whatever: for whereas God, in the justification
of any person, does
declare him to be acquitted from all
crimes laid unto his charges, and to
stand as righteous in his sight, it
must be on the consideration of a
righteousness whereon any man is so
acquitted and declared; for the
judgment of God is according unto truth.
This we have sufficiently
evidenced before, in that juridical
procedure wherein the Scripture
represents unto us the justification
of a believing sinner. And if there
be not other righteousness whereby
we may be thus justified but only that
of Christ imputed unto us, then thereby
must we be justified, or not at
all; and if there be any such other
righteousness, it must be our own,
inherent in us, and wrought out by
us; for these two kinds, inherent and
imputed righteousness, our own and
Christ's, divide the whole nature of
righteousness, as to the end inquired
after. And that there is no such
inherent righteousness, no such righteousness
of our own, whereby we may
be justified before God, I shall prove
in the first place. And I shall do
it, first, from express testimonies
of Scripture, and then from the
consideration of the thing itself;
and two things I shall premise
hereunto:--
1. That I shall not consider
this righteousness of our own absolutely
in itself, but as it may be conceived
to be improved and advanced by its
relation unto the satisfaction and
merit of Christ: for many will grant
that our inherent righteousness is
not of itself sufficient to justify us
in the sight of God; but take it as
it has value and worth communicated
unto it from the merit of Christ, and
so it is accepted unto that end,
and judged worthy of eternal life.
We could not merit life and salvation
had not Christ merited that grace for
us whereby we may do so, and
merited also that our works should
be of such a dignity with respect unto
reward. We shall, therefore, allow
what worth can be reasonably thought
to be communicated unto this righteousness
from its respect unto the
merit of Christ.
2. Whereas persons of all
sorts and parties do take various ways in
the assignation of an interest in our
justification unto our own
righteousness, so as that no parties
are agreed about it, nor many of the
same mind among themselves,--as might
easily be manifested in the
Papists, Socinians, and others, I shall,
so far as it is possible in the
ensuing arguments, have respect unto
them all; for my design is to prove
that it has no such interest in our
justification before God, as that the
righteousness of Christ should not
be esteemed the only righteousness
whereon we are justified.
And, First, we shall produce
some of those many testimonies which may
be pleaded unto this purpose, Ps.130:3,4,
"If thou, LORD, shouldest mark
iniquities, 0 Lord, who shall stand?
But there is forgiveness with thee,
that thou mayest be feared." There
is an inquiry included in these words,
how a man, how any man, may be justified
before God; how he may stand,
that is, in the presence of God, and
be accepted with him,--how he shall
stand in judgment, as it is explained,
Ps.1:5, "The wicked shall not
stand in the judgment," shall not be
acquitted on their trial. That which
first offers itself unto this end is
his own obedience; for this the law
requires of him in the first place,
and this his own conscience calls
upon him for. But the psalmist plainly
declares that no man can thence
manage a plea for his justification
with any success; and the reason is,
because, notwithstanding the best of
the obedience of the best of men,
there are iniquities found with them
against the Lord their God; and if
men come to their trial before God,
whether they shall be justified or
condemned, these also must be heard
and taken into the account. But then
no man can "stand," no man can be "justified,"
as it is elsewhere
expressed. Wherefore, the wisest and
safest course is, as unto our
justification before God, utterly to
forego this plea and not to insist
on our own obedience, lest our sins
should appear also, and be heard. No
reason can any man give on his own
account why they should not be so; and
if they be so, the best of men will
be cast in their trial as the
psalmist declares.
Two things are required
in this trial, that a sinner may stand:--
1. That his iniquities
be not observed, for if they be so, he is lost
for ever. 2. That a righteousness be
produced and pleaded that will
endure the trial; for justification
is upon a justifying righteousness.
For the first of these, the psalmist
tells us it must be through pardon
or forgiveness. "But there is forgiveness
with thee," wherein lies our
only relief against the condemnatory
sentence of the law with respect
unto our iniquities,--that is, through
the blood of Christ, for in him
"we have redemption through his blood,
even the forgiveness of sins,"
Eph.1:7. The other cannot be our own
obedience, because of our
iniquities. Wherefore this the same
psalmist directs us unto, Ps.71:16,
"I will go in the strength of the Lord
God: I will make mention of thy
righteousness, of thine only." The
righteousness of God, and not his own,
yea, in opposition unto his own, is
the only plea that in this case he
would insist upon.
If no man can stand a trial
before God upon his own obedience, so as
to be justified before him, because
of his own personal iniquities; and
if our only plea in that case be the
righteousness of God, the
righteousness of God only, and not
our own; then is there no personal,
inherent righteousness in any believers
whereon they may be justified;--
which is that which is to be proved.
The same is again asserted
by the same person, and that more plainly
and directly, Ps.143:2, "Enter not
into judgment with thy servant; for in
thy sight shall no man living be justified."
This testimony is the more
to he considered, because as it is
derived from the law, Exod.34:7, so it
is transferred into the gospel, and
twice urged by the apostle unto the
same purpose, Rom.3:20; Gal.2:16.
The person who insists
on this plea with God professes himself to be
his servant: "Enter not into judgment
with thy servant;" that is, one
that loved him, feared him, yielded
all sincere obedience. He was not a
hypocrite, not an unbeliever, not an
unregenerate person, who had
performed no works but such as were
legal, such as the law required, and
such as were done in the strength of
the law only; such works as all will
acknowledge to be excluded from our
justification, and which, as many
judge, are only those which are so
excluded. David it was, who was not
only converted, a true believer, had
the Spirit of God, and the aids of
special grace in his obedience, but
had this testimony unto his
sincerity, that he was "a man after
God's own heart." And this witness
had he in his own conscience of his
integrity, uprightness, and personal
righteousness, so as that he frequently
avows them, appeals unto God
concerning the truth of them, and pleads
them as a ground of judgment
between him and his adversaries. We
have, therefore, a case stated in the
instance of a sincere and eminent believer,
who excelled most in
inherent, personal righteousness.
This person, under these
circumstances, thus testified unto both by
God and in his own conscience, as unto
the sincerity, yea, as unto the
eminency, of his obedience, considers
how he may "stand before God," and
"be justified in his sight." Why does
he not now plead his own merits;
and that, if not "ex condigno," yet
at least "ex congruo," he deserved to
be acquitted and justified? But he
left this plea for that generation of
men that were to come after, who would
justify themselves and despise
others. But suppose he had no such
confidence in the merit of his works
as some have now attained unto, yet
why does he not freely enter into
judgment with God, put it unto the
trial whether he should be justified
or no, by pleading that he had fulfilled
the condition of the new
covenant, that everlasting covenant
which God made with him, ordered in
all things, and sure? For upon a supposition
of the procurement of that
covenant and the terms of it by Christ
(for I suppose the virtue of that
purchase he made of it is allowed to
extend unto the Old Testament), this
was all that was required of him. Is
it not to be feared that he was one
of them who see no necessity, or leave
none, of personal holiness and
righteousness, seeing he makes no mention
of it, now it should stand him
in the greatest stead? At least he
might plead his faith, as his own duty
and work, to be imputed unto him for
righteousness. But whatever the
reason be, he waives them all, and
absolutely deprecates a trial upon
them. "Come not," says he, "O LORD,
into judgment with thy servant;" as
it is promised that he who believes
should "not come into judgment," John
5:24.
And if this holy person
renounce the whole consideration of all his
personal, inherent righteousness, in
every kind, and will not insist upon
it under any pretence, in any place,
as unto any use in his justification
before God, we may safely conclude
there is no such righteousness in any,
whereby they may be justified. And
if men would but leave those shades
and coverts under which they hide themselves
in their disputations,--if
they would forego those pretences and
distinctions wherewith they delude
themselves and others, and tell us
plainly what plea they dare make in
the presence of God from their own
righteousness and obedience, that they
may be justified before him,--we should
better understand their minds
than now we do. There is one, I confess,
who speaks with some confidence
unto this purpose, and that is Vasquez
the Jesuit, in 1, 2, disp. 204,
cap. 4, "Inhaerens justitia ita reddit
animam justam et sanctam ac
proinde iliam Dei, ut hoc ipso reddat
eam heredem, et dignam aeterna
gloria; imo ipse Deus efficere non
potest ut hujusmodi justis dignus non
sit aeterna beatitudine". Is it not
sad, that David should discover so
much ignorance of the worth of his
inherent righteousness, and discover
so much pusillanimity with respect
unto his trial before God, whereas God
himself could not otherwise order it,
but that he was, and must be,
"worthy of eternal blessedness?"
The reason the psalmist
gives why he will not put it unto the trial,
whether he should be acquitted or justified
upon his own obedience, is
this general axiom: "For in thy sight,"
or before thee, "shall no man
living be justified." This must be
spoken absolutely, or with respect
unto some one way or cause of justification.
If it be spoken absolutely,
then this work ceases forever, and
there is indeed no such thing as
justification before God. But this
is contrary unto the whole Scripture,
and destructive of the gospel. Wherefore
it is spoken with respect unto
our own obedience and works. He does
not pray absolutely that he "would
not enter into judgement with him,"
for this were to forego his
government of the world; but that he
would not do so on the account of
his own duties and obedience. But if
so be these duties and obedience did
answer, in any sense or way, what is
required of us as a righteousness
unto justification, there was no reason
why he should deprecate a trial
by them or upon them. But whereas the
Holy Ghost does so positively
affirm that "no man living shall be
justified in the sight of God," by or
upon his own works or obedience, it
is, I confess, marvelous unto me that
some should so interpret the apostle
James as if he affirmed the express
contrary,--namely, that we are justified
in the sight of God by our own
works,--whereas indeed he says no such
thing. This, therefore, is an
eternal rule of truth,--By or upon
his own obedience no man living can be
justified in the sight of God. It will
be said, "That if God enter into
judgment with any on their own obedience
by and according to the law,
then, indeed, none can be justified
before him; but God judging according
to the gospel and the terms of the
new covenant, men may be justified
upon their own duties, works, and obedience."
Ans. (1.) The negative
assertion is general and unlimited,--that
"no man living shall" (on his
own works or obedience) "be justified
in the sight of God." And to limit
it unto this or that way of judging,
is not to distinguish, but to
contradict the Holy Ghost. (2.) The
judgment intended is only with
respect unto justification, as is plain
in the words; but there is no
judgment on our works or obedience,
with respect unto righteousness and
justification, but by the proper rule
and measure of them, which is the
law. If they will not endure the trial
by the law, they will endure no
trial, as unto righteousness and justification
in the sight of God. (3.)
The prayer and plea of the psalmist,
on this supposition, are to this
purpose: "O LORD, enter not into judgment
with thy servant by or
according unto the law; but enter into
judgment with me on my own works
and obedience according to the rule
of the gospel;" for which he gives
this reason, "because in thy sight
shall no man living be justified:"
which how remote it is from his intention
need not be declared. (4.) The
judgment of God unto justification
according to the gospel does not
proceed on our works of obedience,
but upon the righteousness of Christ,
and our interest therein by faith;
as is too evident to be modestly
denied. Notwithstanding this exception,
therefore, hence we argue,--
If the most holy of the
servants of God, in and after a course of
sincere, fruitful obedience, testified
unto by God himself, and witnessed
in their own consciences,--that is,
whilst they have the greatest
evidences of their own sincerity, and
that indeed they are the servants
of God,--do renounce all thoughts of
such a righteousness thereby, as
whereon, in any sense, they may be
justified before God; then there is no
such righteousness in any, but it is
the righteousness of Christ alone,
imputed unto us, whereon we are so
justified. But that so they do, and
ought all of them so to do, because
of the general rule here laid down,
that in the sight of God no man living
shall be justified, is plainly
affirmed in this testimony.
I no way doubt but that
many learned men, after all their pleas for an
interest of personal righteousness
and works in our justification before
God, do, as unto their own practice,
retake themselves unto this method
of the psalmist, and cry, as the prophet
Daniel does, in the name of the
church, "We do not present our supplications
before thee for our own
righteousness, but for thy great mercies,"
chap.9:18. And therefore Job
(as we have formerly observed), after
a long and earnest defense of his
own faith, integrity, and personal
righteousness, wherein he justified
himself against the charge of Satan
and men, being called to plead his
cause in the sight of God, and declare
on what grounds he expected to be
justified before him, renounces all
his former pleas, and betakes himself
unto the same with the psalmist, chap.40:4;
43:6.
It is true, in particular
cases, and as unto some special ends in the
providence of God, a man may plead
his own integrity and obedience before
God himself. So did Hezekiah, when
he prayed for the sparing of his life,
Isa.38:3, "Remember now, O LORD, I
beseech thee, how I have walked before
thee in truth, and with a perfect heart,
and have done that which is good
in thy sight." This, I say, may be
done with respect unto temporal
deliverance, or any other particular
end wherein the glory of God is
concerned: so was it greatly in sparing
the life of Hezekiah at that
time. For whereas he had with great
zeal and industry reformed religion
and restored the true worship of God,
the "cutting him off in the midst
of his days" would have occasioned
the idolatrous multitude to have
reflected on him as one dying under
a token of divine displeasure. But
none ever made this plea before God
for the absolute justification of
their persons. So Nehemiah, in that
great contest which he had about the
worship of God and the service of his
house, pleads the remembrance of it
before God, in his justification against
his adversaries; but resolves
his own personal acceptance with God
into pardoning mercy: "And spare me
according unto the multitude of thy
mercies," chap.13:22.
Another testimony we have
unto the same purpose in the prophet Isaiah,
speaking in the name of the church,
chap.64:6, "We are all as an unclean
thing, and all our righteousnesses
are as filthy rags." It is true the
prophet does in this place make a deep
confession of the sins of the
people; but yet withal he joins himself
with them, and asserts the
especial interest of those concerning
whom he speaks, by adoption,--that
God was their Father, and they his
people, chap.63:16, 44:8,9. And the
righteousnesses of all that are the
children of God are of the same kind,
however they may differ in degrees,
and some of them may be more
righteous than others; but it is all
of it described to be such, as that
we cannot, I think, justly expect justification
in the sight of God upon
the account of it. But whereas the
consideration of the nature of our
inherent righteousness belongs unto
the second way of the confirmation of
our present argument, I shall not farther
here insist on this testimony.
Many others also, unto
the same purpose, I shall wholly omit,--namely,
all those wherein the saints of God,
or the church, in a humble
acknowledgment and confession of their
own sins, do retake themselves
unto the mercy and grace of God alone,
as dispensed through the mediation
and blood of Christ; and all those
wherein God promises to pardon and
blot out our iniquities for his own
sake, for his name's sake--to bless
the people, not for any good that was
in them nor for their
righteousness, nor for their works,
the consideration whereof he excludes
from having any influence into any
acting of his grace towards them; and
all those wherein God expresses his
delight in them alone, and his
approbation of them who hope in his
mercy, trust in his name, retaking
themselves unto him as their only refuge,
pronouncing them accursed who
trust in any thing else, or glory in
themselves,--such as contain
singular promises unto them that retake
themselves unto God, as
fatherless, hopeless, and lost in themselves.
There is none of the testimonies
which are multiplied unto this
purpose, but they sufficiently prove
that the best of God's saints have
not a righteousness of their own whereon
they can, in any sense, be
justified before God. For they do all
of them, in the places referred
unto, renounce any such righteousness
of their own, all that is in them,
all that they have done or can do,
and retake themselves unto grace and
mercy alone. And whereas, as we have
before proved, God, in the
justification of any, does exercise
grace towards them with respect unto
a righteousness whereon he declares
them righteous and accepted before
him, they do all of them respect a
righteousness which is not inherent in
us, but imputed to us.
Herein lies the substance
of all that we inquire into, in this matter
of justification. All other disputes
about qualifications, conditions,
causes, "aneu hoon ouk", any kind of
interest for our own works and
obedience in our justification before
God, are but the speculations of
men at ease. The conscience of a convinced
sinner, who presents himself
in the presence of God, finds all practically
reduced unto this one
point,--namely, whether he will trust
unto his own personal inherent
righteousness, or, in a full renunciation
of it, retake himself unto the
grace of God and the righteousness
of Christ alone. In other things he is
not concerned. And let men phrase his
own righteousness unto him as they
please, let them pretend it meritorious,
or only evangelical, not legal,-
-only an accomplishment of the condition
of the new covenant, a cause
without which he cannot be justified,--it
will not be easy to frame his
mind unto any confidence in it, as
unto justification before God, so as
not to deceive him in the issue.
The second part of the
present argument is taken from the nature of
the thing itself, or the consideration
of this personal, inherent
righteousness of our own, what it is,
and wherein it does consist, and of
what use it may be in our justification.
And unto this purpose it may be
observed,--
That we grant an inherent
righteousness in all that do believe, as has
been before declared: "For the fruit
of the Spirit is in all goodness,
and righteousness, and truth", Eph.5:9.
"Being made free from sin, we
become the servants of righteousness",
Rom.6:18. And our duty it is to
"follow after righteousness, godliness,
faith, love, patience, meekness,"
1 Tim.6:11. And although righteousness
be mostly taken for an especial
grace or duty, distinct from other
graces and duties, yet we acknowledge
that it may be taken for the whole
of our obedience before God; and the
word is so used in the Scripture, where
our own righteousness is opposed
unto the righteousness of God. And
it is either habitual or actual. There
is a habitual righteousness inherent
in believers, as they have "put on
the new man, which after God is created
in righteousness and true
holiness," Eph.4:24; as they are the
"workmanship of God, created in
Christ Jesus unto good works," chap.2:10.
And there is an actual
righteousness, consisting in those
good works whereunto we are so
created, or the fruits of righteousness,
which are to the praise of God
by Jesus Christ. And concerning this
righteousness it may be observed,
first, That men are said in the Scripture
to be just or righteous by it;
but no one is said to be justified
by it before God. Secondly, That it is
not ascribed unto, or found in, any
but those that are actually justified
in order of nature antecedent thereunto.
This being the constant
doctrine of all the Reformed churches and
divines, it is an open calumny whereby
the contrary is ascribed unto
them, or any of those who believe the
imputation of the righteousness of
Christ unto our justification before
God. So Bellarmine affirms that no
Protestant writers acknowledge an inherent
righteousness but only Bucer
and Chemnitius; when there is no one
of them by whom either the thing
itself or the necessity of it is denied.
But some excuse may be made for
him, from the manner whereby they expressed
themselves, wherein they
always carefully distinguished between
inherent holiness and that
righteousness whereby we are justified.
But we are now told by one, that
if we should affirm it a hundred times,
he could scarce believe us. This
is somewhat severe; for although he
speaks but to one, yet the charge
falls equally upon all who maintain
that imputation of the righteousness
of Christ which he denies, who being
at least the generality of all
Protestant divines, they are represented
either as so foolish as not to
know what they say, or so dishonest
as to say one thing and believe
another. But he endeavours to justify
his censure by sundry reasons; and,
first, he says, "That inherent righteousness
can on no other account be
said to be ours, than that by it we
are made righteous; that is, that it
is the condition of our justification
required in the new covenant. This
being denied, all inherent righteousness
is denied." But how is this
proved? What if one should say that
every believer is inherently
righteous, but yet that this inherent
righteousness was not the condition
of his justification, but rather the
consequent of it, and that it is
nowhere required in the new covenant
as the condition of our
justification? How shall the contrary
be made to appear? The Scripture
plainly affirms that there is such
an inherent righteousness in all that
believe; and yet as plainly that we
are justified before God by faith
without works. Wherefore, that it is
the condition of our justification,
and so antecedent unto it, is expressly
contrary unto that of the
apostle, "Unto him that worketh not,
but believeth on him that justifieth
the ungodly, his faith is counted unto
him for righteousness," Rom.4:5.
Nor is it the condition of the covenant
itself, as that whereon the whole
grace of the covenant is suspended;
for as it is habitual, wherein the
denomination of righteous is principally
taken, it is a grace of the
covenant itself, and so not a condition
of it, Jer.31:33; 32:39;
Ezek.36:25-27. If no more be intended
but that it is, as unto its actual
exercise, what is indispensably required
of all that are taken into
covenant, in order unto the complete
ends of it, we are agreed; but hence
it will not follow that it is the condition
of our justification. It is
added, "That all righteousness respects
a law and a rule, by which it is
to be tried; and he is righteous who
has done these things which that law
requires by whose rule he is to be
judged." But, First, This is not the
way whereby the Scripture expresses
our justification before God, which
alone is under consideration,--namely,
that we bring unto it a personal
righteousness of our own, answering
the law whereby we are to be judged;
yea, an assertion to this purpose is
foreign to the gospel, and
destructive of the grace of God by
Jesus Christ. Secondly, It is granted
that all righteousness respects a law
as the rule of it; and so does this
whereof we speak, namely, the moral
law; which being the sole, eternal,
unchangeable rule of righteousness,
if it do not in the substance of it
answer thereunto, a righteousness it
is not. But this it does, inasmuch
as that, so far as it is habitual,
it consists in the renovation of the
image of God, wherein that law is written
in our hearts; and all the
actual duties of it are, as to the
substance of them, what is required by
that law. But as unto the manner of
its communication unto us, and of its
performance by us, from faith in God
by Jesus Christ, and love unto him,
as the author and fountain of all the
grace and mercy procured and
administered by him, it has respect
unto the gospel. What will follow
from hence? Why, that he is just that
does those things which that law
requires whereby he is to be judged.
He is so certainly; for "not the
hearers of the law are just before
God, but the doers of the law shall be
justified," Rom.2:13. "So Moses describeth
the righteousness of the law,
that the man which does those things
shall live in them," Rom.10:5. But
although the righteousness whereof
we discourse be required by the law,--
as certainly it is, for it is nothing
but the law in our hearts, from
whence we walk in the ways and keep
the statutes or commandments of God,-
-yet does it not so answer the law
as that any man can be justified by
it. But then it will be said that if
it does not answer that law and rule
whereby we are to be judged, then it
is no righteousness; for all
righteousness must answer the law whereby
it is required. And I say it is
most true, it is no perfect righteousness;
it does not so answer the rule
and law as that we can be justified
by it, or safely judged on it. But,
so far as it does answer the law, it
is a righteousness,--that is,
imperfectly so, and therefore is an
imperfect righteousness; which yet
gives the denomination of righteous
unto them that have it, both
absolutely and comparatively. It is
said, therefore, that it is "the law
of grace or the gospel from whence
we are denominated righteous with this
righteousness;" but that we are by
the gospel denominated righteous, from
any righteousness that is not required
by the moral law, will not be
proved. Nor does the law of grace or
the gospel anywhere require of us or
prescribe unto us this righteousness,
as that whereon we are to be
justified before God. It requires faith
in Christ Jesus, or the receiving
of him as he is proposed in the promises
of it, in all that are to be
justified. It requires, in like manner,
"repentance from dead works" in
all that believe; as also the fruits
of faith, conversion unto God, and
repentance, in the works of righteousness,
which are to the praise of God
by Jesus Christ, with perseverance
therein unto the end; and all this
may, if you please, be called our evangelical
righteousness, as being our
obedience unto God according to the
gospel. But yet the graces and duties
wherein it does consist do no more
perfectly answer the commands of the
gospel than they do those of the moral
law; for that the gospel abates
from the holiness of the law, and makes
that to be no sin which is sin by
the law, or approves absolutely of
less intention or lower degrees in the
love of God than the law does, is an
impious imagination.
And that the gospel requires
all these things entirely and equally, as
the condition of our justification
before God, and so antecedently
thereunto, is not yet proved, nor ever
will be. It is hence concluded
that "this is our righteousness, according
unto the evangelical law which
requires it; by this we are made righteous,--that
is, not guilty of the
nonperformance of the condition required
in that law." And these things
are said to be very plain! So, no doubt,
they seemed unto the author;
unto us they are intricate and perplexed.
However, I wholly deny that our
faith, obedience, and righteousness,
considered as ours, as wrought by
us, although they are all accepted
with God through Jesus Christ,
according to the grace declared in
the gospel, do perfectly answer the
commands of the gospel requiring them
of us, as to matter, manner, and
degree; and [assert] that therefore
it is utterly impossible that they
should be the cause or condition of
our justification before God. Yet in
the explanation of these things, it
is added by the same author, that
"our maimed and imperfect righteousness
is accepted unto salvation, as if
it were every way absolute and perfect;
for that so it should be, Christ
has merited by his most perfect righteousness."
But it is justification,
and not salvation, that alone we discourse
about; and that the works of
obedience or righteousness have another
respect unto salvation than they
have unto justification, is too plainly
and too often expressed in the
Scripture to be modestly denied. And
if this weak and imperfect
righteousness of ours be esteemed and
accepted as every way perfect
before God, then either it is because
God judges it to be perfect, and so
declares us to be most just, and justified
thereon in his sight; or he
judges it not to be complete and perfect,
yet declares us to be perfectly
righteous in his sight thereby. Neither
of these, I suppose, can well be
granted. It will therefore be said,
it is neither of them; but "Christ
has obtained, by his complete and most
perfect righteousness and
obedience, that this lame and imperfect
righteousness of ours should be
accepted as every way perfect." And
if it be so, it may be some will
think it best not to go about by this
weak, halt, and imperfect
righteousness, but, as unto their justification,
retake themselves
immediately unto the most perfect righteousness
of Christ; which I am
sure the Scripture encourages them
unto. And they will be ready to think
that the righteousness which cannot
justify itself, but must be obliged
unto grace and pardon through the merits
of Christ, will never be able to
justify them. But what will ensue on
this explanation of the acceptance
of our imperfect righteousness unto
justification, upon the merit of
Christ? This only, so far as I can
discern, that Christ has merited and
procured, either that God should judge
that to be perfect which is
imperfect, and declare us perfectly
righteous when we are not so; or that
he should judge the righteousness still
to be imperfect, as it is, but
declare us to be perfectly righteous
with and by this imperfect
righteousness. These are the plain
paths that men walk in who cannot deny
but that there is a righteousness required
unto our justification, or
that we may be declared righteous before
God, in the sight of God,
according unto the judgment of God;
yet, denying the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ unto us, will
allow us no other righteousness
unto this end but that which is so
weak and imperfect as that no man can
justify it in his own conscience, nor,
without a frenzy of pride, can
think or imagine himself perfectly
righteous thereby.
And whereas it is added,
that "he is blind who sees not that this
righteousness of ours is subordinate
unto the righteousness of Christ," I
must acknowledge myself otherwise minded,
notwithstanding the severity of
this censure. It seems to me that the
righteousness of Christ is
subordinate unto this righteousness
of our own, as here it is stated, and
not the contrary: for the end of all
is our acceptance with God as
righteous; but according unto these
thoughts, it is our own
righteousnesses whereon we are immediately
accepted with God as
righteous. Only Christ has deserved
by his righteousness that our
righteousness may be so accepted; and
is therefore, as unto the end of
our justification before God, subordinate
thereunto.
But to return from this
digression, and to proceed unto our argument.
This personal, inherent righteousness
which, according to the Scripture,
we allow in believers, is not that
whereby or wherewith we are justified
before God; for it is not perfect,
nor perfectly answers any rule of
obedience that is given unto us: and
so cannot be our righteousness
before God unto our justification.
Wherefore, we must be justified by the
righteousness of Christ imputed unto
us, or be justified without respect
unto any righteousness, or not be justified
at all. And a threefold
imperfection does accompany it:--
1. As to the principle
of it, as it is habitually resident in us;
for,--(1.) There is a contrary principle
of sin abiding with it in the
same subject, whilst we are in this
world. For contrary qualities may be
in the same subject, whilst neither
of them is in the highest degree. So
it is in this case, Gal.5:17, "For
the flesh lusts against the Spirit,
and the Spirit against the flesh; and
these are contrary one to the
other: so that ye cannot do the things
that ye would." (2.) None of the
faculties of our souls are perfectly
renewed whilst we are in this world.
"The inward man is renewed day by day",
2 Cor.4:16; and we are always to
be purging ourselves from all pollution
of flesh and spirit, 2 Cor.7:1.
And hereunto belongs whatever is spoken
in the Scripture, whatever
believers find in themselves by experience,
of the remainders of
indwelling sin, in the darkness of
our minds; whence at best we know but
in part, and through ignorance are
ready to wander out of the way,
Heb.5:2, in the deceitfulness of the
heart and disorder of affections. I
understand not how any one can think
of pleading his own righteousness in
the sight of God, or suppose that he
can be justified by it, upon this
single account, of the imperfection
of its inherent habit or principle.
Such notions arise from the ignorance
of
God and ourselves, or the want
of a due consideration of the one and
the other. Neither can I apprehend
how a thousand distinctions can safely
introduce it into any
consideration in our justification
before God. He that can search in any
measure, by a spiritual light, into
his own heart and soul, will find
"God be merciful to me a sinner," a
better plea than any he can be
furnished withal from any worth of
his own. "What is man, that he should
be clean? And he that is born of a
woman, that he should be righteous?"
Job 15:14-16; 4:18,19. Hence says Gregory,
in Job.9, lib.9, cap.14, "Ut
saepe diximus omnis justitia humana
injustitia esse convincitur si
distincte judicetur". Bernard speaks
to the same purpose, and almost in
the same words, Serm.1. fest. omn.
sanct., "Quid potest esse omnis
justitia nostra coram Deo? Nonne juxta
prophetam velut 'pannus
menstruatae' reputabitur; et si districte
judicetur, injustitia
invenietur omnis justitia nostra, et
minus habens". A man cannot be
justified in any sense by that righteousness
which, upon trial, will
appear rather to be an unrighteousness
2. It is imperfect with
respect unto every act and duty of it, whether
internal or external. There is iniquity
cleaving unto our holy things,
and all our "righteousnesses are as
filthy rags," Isa.64:6. It has been
often and well observed, that if a
man, the best of men, were left to
choose the best of his works that ever
he performed, and thereon to enter
into judgment with God, if only under
this notion, that he has answered
and fulfilled the condition required
of him as unto his acceptation with
God, it would be his wisest course
(at least it would be so in the
judgment of Bellarmine) to renounce
it, and retake himself unto grace and
mercy alone.
3. It is imperfect by reason
of the incursion of actual sins. Hence
our Saviour has taught us continually
to pray for the "forgiveness of our
sins;" and "if we say that we have
no sins, we deceive ourselves," for
"in many things we offend all." And
what confidence can be placed in this
righteousness, which those who plead
for it in this cause acknowledge to
be weak, maimed, and imperfect?
I have but touched on these
things, which might have been handled at
large, and are indeed of great consideration
in our present argument. But
enough has been spoken to manifest,
that although this righteousness of
believers be on other accounts like
the fruit of the vine, that glads the
heart of God and man, yet as unto our
justification before God, it is
like the wood of the vine,--a pin is
not to be taken from it to hang any
weight of this cause upon.
Two things are pleaded
in the behalf of this righteousness, and its
influence into our justification:--1.
That it is absolutely complete and
perfect. Hence some say that they are
perfect and sinless in this life;
they have no more concern in the mortification
of sin, nor of growth in
grace. And indeed this is the only
rational pretence of ascribing our
justification before God thereunto;
for were it so with any, what should
hinder him from being justified thereon
before God, but only that he has
been a sinner?--which spoils the whole
market. But this vain imagination
is so contrary unto the Scripture,
and the experience of all that know
the terror of the Lord, and what it
is to walk humbly before him, as that
I shall not insist on the refutation
of it.
2. It is pleaded, "That
although this righteousness be not an exact
fulfilling of the moral law, yet is
it the accomplishment of the
condition of the new covenant, or entirely
answers the law of grace, and
all that is required of us therein."
Ans. (1.) This wholly takes
away sin, and the pardon of it, no less
than does the conceit of sinless perfection
which we now rejected; for if
our obedience do answer the only law
and rule of it whereby it is to be
tried, measured, and judged, then is
there no sin in us, nor need of
pardon. No more is required of any
man, to keep him absolutely free from
sin, but that he fully answer, and
exactly comply with, the rule and law
of his obedience whereby he must be
judged. On this supposition,
therefore, there is neither sin nor
any need of the pardon of it. To say
that there is still both sin and need
of pardon, with respect unto the
moral law of God, is to confess that
law to be the rule of our obedience,
which this righteousness does no way
answer; and therefore none by it can
be justified in the sight of God.
(2.) Although this righteousness
be accepted in justified persons by
the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,
yet consider the principle of it,
with all the acts and duties wherein
it does consist, as they are
required and prescribed in the gospel
unto us, and they do neither
jointly nor severally fulfill and answer
the commands of the gospel, no
more than they do the commands of the
law. Wherefore, they cannot all of
them constitute a righteousness consisting
in an exact conformity unto
the rules of the gospel, or the law
of it; for it is impious to imagine
that the gospel requiring any duty
of us, suppose the love of God, does
make any abatement, as unto the matter,
manner, or degrees of perfection
in it, from what was required by the
law. Does the gospel require a lower
degree of love to God, a less perfect
love, than the law did? God forbid.
The same may be said concerning the
inward frame of our natures, and all
other duties whatever. Wherefore, although
this righteousness is accepted
in justified persons (as God had respect
unto Abel, and then unto his
offering), in the way and unto the
ends that shall be afterwards
declared; yet, as it relates unto the
commands of the gospel, both it and
all the duties of it are no less imperfect
than it would be if it should
be left unto its trial by the law of
creation only.
(3.) I know not what some
men intend. On the one hand they affirm that
our Lord Jesus Christ has enlarged
and heightened the spiritual sense of
the moral law, and not only so, but
added unto it new precepts of more
exact obedience than it did require;--but
on the other, they would have
him to have brought down or taken off
the obligation of the law, so as
that a man, according as he has adapted
it unto the use of the gospel,
shall be judged of God to have fulfilled
the whole obedience which it
requires, who never answered any one
precept of it according unto its
original sense and obligation; for
so it must be if this imperfect
righteousness be on any account esteemed
a fulfilling of the rule of our
obedience, as that thereon we should
be justified in the sight of God.
(4.) This opinion puts
an irreconcilable difference between the law
and the gospel, not to be composed
by any distinctions; for, according
unto it, God declares by the gospel
a man to be perfectly righteous,
justified, and blessed, upon the consideration
of a righteousness that is
imperfect; and in the law he pronounces
every one accursed who continues
not in all things required by it, and
as they are therein required. But
it is said that this righteousness
is no otherwise to be considered but
as the condition of the new covenant,
whereon we obtain remission of sins
on the sole account of the satisfaction
of Christ, wherein our
justification does consist.
Ans. (1.) Some, indeed,
do say so, but not all, not the most, not the
most learned, with whom in this controversy
we have to do. And in our
pleas for what we believe to be the
truth, we cannot always have respect
unto every private opinion whereby
it is opposed. (2.) That justification
consists only in the pardon of sin
is so contrary to the signification of
the word, the constant use of it in
the Scripture, the common notion of
it amongst mankind, the sense of men
in their own consciences who find
themselves under an obligation unto
duty, and express testimonies of the
Scripture, as that I somewhat wonder
how it can be pretended. But it
shall be spoken unto elsewhere. (3.)
If this righteousness be the
fulfilling of the condition of the
new covenant whereon we are justified,
it must be in itself such as exactly
answers some rule or law of
righteousness, and so be perfect: which
it does not; and therefore cannot
bear the place of a righteousness in
our justification. (4.) That this
righteousness is the condition of our
justification before God, or of
that interest in the righteousness
of Christ whereby we are justified, is
not proved, nor ever will be.
I shall briefly add two
or three considerations, excluding this
personal righteousness from its pretended
interest in our justification,
and close this argument:--
1. That righteousness which
neither answers the law of God nor the end
of God in our justification by the
gospel, is not that whereon we are
justified. But such is this inherent
righteousness of believers, even of
the best of them. (1.) That it answers
not the law of God has been proved
from its imperfection. Nor will any
sober person pretend that it exactly
and perfectly fulfill the law of our
creation. And this law cannot be
disannulled whilst the relation of
creator nd rewarder on the one hand,
and of creatures capable of obedience
and rewards on the other, between
God and us does continue. Wherefore,
that which answers not its law will
not justify us; for God will not abrogate
that law, that the
transgressors of it may be justified.
"Do we", says the apostle, by the
doctrine of justification by faith
without works, "make void the law? God
forbid: yea, we establish it," Rom.3:31.
(2.) That we should be justified
with respect unto it answers not the
end of God in our justification by
the gospel; for this is to take away
all glorying in ourselves and all
occasion of it, every thing that might
give countenance unto it, so as
that the whole might be to the praise
of his own grace by Christ,
Rom.3:27; 1 Cor.1:29-31. How it is
faith alone that gives glory to God
herein has been declared in the description
of its nature. But it is
evident that no man has, or can possibly
have, any other, any greater
occasion of boasting in himself, with
respect unto his justification,
than that he is justified on his performance
of that condition of it,
which consists in his own personal
righteousness.
2. No man was ever justified
by it in his own conscience, much less
can he be justified by it in the sight
of God; "for God is greater than
our hearts and knoweth all things."
There is no man so righteous, so
holy, in the whole world, nor ever
was, but his own conscience would
charge him in many things with his
coming short of the obedience required
of him, in matter or manner, in the
kind or degrees of perfection; for
there is no man that lives and sins
not. Absolutely, "Nemo absolvitur se
judice". Let any man be put unto a
trial in himself whether he can be
justified in his own conscience by
his own righteousness, and he will be
cast in the trial at his own judgment-seat;
and he that does not thereon
conclude that there must be another
righteousness whereby he must be
justified, that originally and inherently
is not his own, will be at a
loss for peace, with God. But it will
be said, that "men may be justified
in their consciences that they have
performed the condition of the new
covenant, which is all that is pleaded
with respect unto this
righteousness" And I no way doubt but
that men may have a comfortable
persuasion of their own sincerity in
obedience, and satisfaction in the
acceptance of it with God. But it is
when they try it as an effect of
faith, whereby they are justified,
and not as the condition of their
justification. Let it be thus stated
in their minds,--that God requires a
personal righteousness in order unto
their justification, whereon their
determination must be, "This is my
righteousness which I present unto God
that I may be justified", and they
will find difficulty in arriving at
it, if I be not much mistaken.
3. None of the holy men
of old, whose faith and experience are
recorded in the Scripture, did ever
plead their own personal
righteousness, under any notion of
it, either as to the merit of their
works or as unto their complete performance
of what was required of them
as the condition of the covenant, in
order unto their justification
before God. This has been spoken unto
before.