TEXT--"Do we then make void the law through
faith? God forbid; yea, we establish the law."--Romans iii.
31.
THE apostle had been proving that all mankind, both Jews
and Gentiles, were in their sins, and refuting the doctrine
so generally entertained by the Jews, that they were a holy
people and saved by their works. He showed that
justification can never be by works, but by faith. He then
anticipates an objection, like this, "Are we to understand
you as teaching that the law of God is abrogated and set
aside by this plan of justification?" "By no means," says
the apostle, "we rather establish the law." In treating of
this subject, I design to pursue the following order:
I. Show that the gospel method of justification does not
set aside or repeal the law.
II. That it rather establishes the law, by producing true
obedience to it, and as the only means that does this.
The greatest objection to the doctrine of Justification
by Faith has always been, that it is inconsistent with good
morals, conniving at sin, and opening the flood-gates of
iniquity. It has been said, that to maintain that men are
not to depend on their own good behavior for salvation, but
are to be saved by faith in another, is calculated to make
men regardless of good morals, and to encourage them to live
in sin, depending on Christ to justify them. By others, it
has been maintained that the gospel does in fact release
from obligation to obey the moral law, so that a more lax
morality is permitted under the gospel than was allowed
under the law.
I. I am to show that the gospel method of justification
does not set aside the moral law.
1. It cannot be that this method of justification sets
aside the moral law, because the gospel everywhere enforces
obedience to the law, and lays down the same standard of
holiness.
Jesus Christ adopted the very words of the moral law,
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and
with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy
strength, and thy neighbor as thyself."
2. The conditions of the gospel are designed to sustain
the moral law.
The gospel requires repentance, as the condition of
salvation. What is repentance? The renunciation of sin. The
man must repent of his breaches of the law of God, and
return to obedience to the law. This is tantamount to a
requirement of obedience.
3. The gospel maintains that the law is right.
If it did not maintain the law to its full extent, it
might be said that Christ is the minister of sin.
4. By the gospel plan, the sanctions of the gospel are
added to the sanctions of the law, to enforce obedience to
the law.
The apostle says, "He that despised Moses' law, died
without mercy under two or three witnesses: of how much
sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy,
who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted
the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an
unholy thing, and hath done despite unto the Spirit of
grace?" Thus adding the awful sanctions of the gospel to
those of the law, to enforce obedience to the precepts of
the law.
II. I am to show that the doctrine of justification by
faith produces sanctification, by producing the only true
obedience to the law.
By this I mean, that when the mind understands this plan,
and exercises faith in it, it naturally produces
sanctification. Sanctification is holiness, and holiness is
nothing but obedience to the law, consisting in love to God
and love to man.
In support of the proposition that justification by faith
produces true obedience to the law of God, my first position
is, that sanctification never can be produced among selfish
or wicked beings, by the law itself, separate from the
considerations of the gospel, or the motives connected with
justification by faith.
The motives of the law did not restrain those beings from
committing sin, and it is absurd to suppose the same motives
can reclaim them from sin, when they have fallen under the
power of selfishness, and when sin is confirmed by habit.
The motives of the law lose a great part of their influence,
when a being is once fallen. They even exert an opposite
influence. The motives of the law, as viewed by a selfish
mind, have a tendency to cause sin to abound. This is the
experience of every sinner. When he sees the spirituality of
the law, and does not see the motives of the gospel, it
raises the pride of his heart, and confirms him in his
rebellion. The case of the devil is an exhibition of what
the law can do, with all its principles and sanctions, upon
a wicked heart. He understands the law, sees its
reasonableness, has experienced the blessedness of
obedience, and knows full well that to return to obedience
would restore his peace of mind. This he knows better than
any sinner of our race, who never was holy, can know it, and
yet it presents to his mind no such motives as reclaim him,
but on the contrary, drive him to a returnless distance from
obedience.
When obedience to the law is held forth to the sinner as
the condition of life, immediately it sets him upon making
self-righteous efforts. In almost every instance, the first
effort of the awakened sinner is to obey the law. He thinks
he must first make himself better, in some way, before he
may embrace the gospel. He has no idea of the simplicity of
the gospel plan of salvation by faith, offering eternal life
as a mere gratuitous gift. Alarm the sinner with the penalty
of the law, and he naturally, and by the very laws of his
mind, sets himself to do better, to amend his life, and in
some self-righteous manner obtain eternal life, under the
influence of slavish fear. And the more the law presses him,
the greater are his pharisaical efforts, while hope is left
to him, that if he obeys he may be accepted. What else could
you expect of him? He is purely selfish, and though he ought
to submit at once to God, yet, as he does not understand the
gospel terms of salvation, and his mind is of course first
turned to the object of getting away from the danger of the
penalty, he tries to get up to heaven some other way. I do
not believe there is an instance in history, of a man who
has submitted to God, until he has seen that salvation must
be by faith, and that his own self-righteous strivings have
no tendency to save him.
Again; if you undertake to produce holiness by legal
motives, the very fear of failure has the effect to divert
attention from the objects of love, from God and Christ. The
sinner is all the while compassing Mount Sinai, and taking
heed to his footsteps, to see how near he comes to
obedience; and how can he get into the spirit of heaven?
Again; the penalty of the law has no tendency to produce
love in the first instance. It may increase love in those
who already have it, when they contemplate it as an
exhibition of God's infinite holiness. The angels in heaven,
and good men on earth, contemplate its propriety and
fitness, and see in it the expression of the good will of
God to his creatures, and it appears amiable and lovely, and
increases their delight in God and their confidence towards
him. But it is right the reverse with the selfish man. He
sees the penalty hanging over his own head, and no way of
escape, and it is not in mind to become enamored with the
Being that holds the thunderbolt over his devoted head. From
the nature of mind, he will flee from him, not to him. It
seems never to have been dreamed of, by the inspired
writers, that the law could sanctify men. The law is given
rather to slay than to make alive, to cut off men's
self-righteous hopes for ever, and compel them to flee to
Christ.
Again; Sinners, under the naked law, and irrespective of
the gospel--I say, sinners, naturally and necessarily, and
of right, under such circumstances, view God as an
irreconcilable enemy. They are wholly selfish; and apart
from the considerations of the gospel, they view God just as
the devil views him. No motive in the law can be exhibited
to a selfish mind that will beget love. Can the influence of
penalty do it?
A strange plan of reformation this, to send men to hell
to reform them! Let him go on in sin and rebellion to the
end of life, and then be punished till he becomes holy. I
wonder the devil has not become holy! He has suffered long
enough, he has been in hell these thousands of years, and he
is no better than he was. The reason is, there is no gospel
there, and no Holy Spirit there to apply the truth, and the
penalty only confirms his rebellion.
Again: The doctrine of justification by faith can relieve
these difficulties. It can produce and it has produced real
obedience to the precept of the law. Justification by faith
does not set aside the law as a rule of duty, but only sets
aside the penalty of the law. And the preaching of
justification as a mere gratuity, bestowed on the simple act
of faith, is the only way in which obedience to the law is
ever brought about. This I shall now show from the following
considerations:
1. It relieves the mind from the pressure of those
considerations that naturally tend to confirm
selfishness.
While the mind is looking only at the law, it only feels
the influence of hope and fear, perpetuating purely selfish
efforts. But justification by faith annihilates this spirit
of bondage. The apostle says, "We have not received the
spirit of bondage again to fear." This plan of salvation
begets love and gratitude to God, and leads the soul to
taste the sweets of holiness.
2. It relieves the mind also from the necessity of making
its own salvation its supreme object.
The believer in the gospel plan of salvation finds
salvation, full and complete, including both sanctification
and eternal life, already prepared; and instead of being
driven to the life of a Pharisee in religion, of laborious
and exhausting effort, he receives it as a free gift, a mere
gratuity, and is now left free to exercise disinterested
benevolence, and to live and labor for the salvation of
others, leaving his own soul unreservedly to Christ.
3. The fact that God has provided and given him salvation
as a gratuity, is calculated to awaken in the believer a
concern for others, when he sees them dying for the want of
this salvation, that they may be brought to the knowledge of
the truth and be saved. How far from every selfish motive
are those influences. It exhibits God, not as the law
exhibits him, as an irreconcilable enemy, but as a grieved
and offended father, willing to be reconciled, nay, very
desirous that his subjects should become reconciled to him
and live. This is calculated to beget love. It exhibits God
as making the greatest sacrifice to reconcile sinners to
himself; and from no other motive than a pure and
disinterested regard to their happiness. Try this in your
own family. The law represents God as armed with wrath, and
determined to punish the sinner, without hope or help. The
gospel represents him as offended, indeed, but yet so
anxious they should return to him, that he has made the
greatest conceivable sacrifices, out of pure disinterested
love to his wandering children.
I once heard a father say, that he had tried in his
family to imitate the government of God, and when his child
did wrong he reasoned with him and showed him his faults;
and when he was fully convinced and confounded and
condemned, so that he had not a word to say, then the father
asked him, Do you deserve to be punished? "Yes, sir." I know
it, and now if I were to let you go, what influence would it
have over the other children? Rather than do that, I will
take the punishment myself. So he laid the ferule on
himself, and it had the most astonishing effect on the mind
of the child. He had never tried any thing so perfectly
subduing to the mind as this. And from the laws of mind, it
must be so. It affects the mind in a manner entirely
different from the naked law.
4. It brings the mind under an entire new set of
influences, and leaves it free to weigh the reasons for
holiness, and decide accordingly.
Under the law, none but motives of hope and fear can
operate on the sinner's mind. But under the gospel, the
influence of hope and fear are set aside, and a new set of
considerations presented, with a view of God's entire
character, in all the attractions he can command. It gives
the most heart-breaking sin-subduing views of God. It
presents him to the senses in human nature. It exhibits his
disinterestedness. The way Satan prevailed against our first
parents was by leading them to doubt God's
disinterestedness. The gospel demonstrates the truth, and
corrects this lie. The law represents God as the inexorable
enemy of the sinner as securing happiness to all who
perfectly obey, but thundering down wrath on all who
disobey. The gospel reveals new features in God's character,
not known before. Doubtless the gospel increases the love of
all holy beings, and gives greater joy to the angels in
heaven, greatly increasing their love and confidence and
admiration, when they see God's amazing pity and forbearance
towards the guilty. The law drove the devils to hell, and it
drove Adam and Eve from Paradise. But when the blessed
spirits see the same holy God waiting on rebels, nay,
opening his own bosom and giving his beloved Son for them,
and taking such unwearied pains for thousands of years to
save sinners, do you think it has no influence in
strengthening the motives in their minds to obedience and
love?
The devil, who is a purely selfish being, is always
accusing others of being selfish. He accused Job of this,
"Doth Job fear God for naught?" He accused God to our first
parents, of being selfish, and that the only reason for his
forbidding them to eat of the tree of knowledge was the fear
that they might come to know as much as himself. The gospel
shows what God is. If he was selfish, he would not take such
pains to save those whom he might with perfect ease crush to
hell. Nothing is so calculated to make selfish persons
ashamed of their selfishness, as to see disinterested
benevolence in others. Hence the wicked are always trying to
appear disinterested. Let the selfish individual, who has
any heart, see true benevolence in others, and it is like
coals of fire on his head. The wise man understood this,
when he said, "If thine enemy hunger, feed him; and if he is
thirsty, give him drink; for in so doing thou shalt heap
coals of fire on his head." Nothing is so calculated to cut
down an enemy, and win him over, and make him a friend.
This is what the gospel does to sinners. It shows them,
that notwithstanding all that they have done to God, God
still exercises towards them disinterested love. When he
sees God stooping from heaven to save him, and understands
that it is indeed TRUE, O, how it melts and breaks down the
heart, strikes a death blow to selfishness, and wins him
over to unbounded confidence and holy love. God has so
constituted the mind that it must necessarily do homage to
virtue. It must do this, as long as it retains the powers of
moral agency. This is as true in hell as in heaven. The
devil feels this. When an individual sees that God has no
interested motives to condemn him, when he sees that God
offers salvation as a mere gratuity, through faith, he
cannot but feel admiration of God's benevolence. His
selfishness is crushed, the law has done its work, he sees
that all his selfish endeavors have done no good; and the
next step is for his heart to go out in disinterested
love.
Suppose a man was under sentence of death for rebellion,
and had tried many expedients to recommend himself to the
government, but failed, because they were all hollow-hearted
and selfish. He sees that the government understands his
motives, and that he is not really reconciled. He knows
himself that they were all hypocritical and selfish, moved
by the hope of favor or the fear of wrath, and that the
government is more and more incensed at his hypocrisy. Just
now let a paper be brought to him from the government,
offering him a free pardon on the simple condition that he
would receive it as a mere gratuity, making no account of
his own works--what influence will it have on his mind? The
moment he finds the penalty set aside, and that he has no
need to go to work by any self-righteous efforts, his mind
is filled with admiration. Now, let it appear that the
government has made the greatest sacrifices to procure this;
his selfishness is slain, and he melts down like a child at
his sovereign's feet, ready to obey the law because he loves
his sovereign.
5. All true obedience turns on faith. It secures all the
requisite influences to produce sanctification. It gives the
doctrines of eternity access to the mind and a hold on the
heart. In this world the motives of time are addressed to
the senses. The motives that influence the spirits of the
just in heaven do not reach us through the senses. But when
faith is exercised, the wall is broken down, and the vast
realities of eternity act on the mind here with the same
kind of influence that they have in eternity. Mind is mind,
every where. And were it not for the darkness of unbelief,
men would live here just as they do in the eternal world.
Sinners here would rage and blaspheme, just as they do in
hell; and saints would love and obey and praise, just as
they do in heaven. Now, faith makes all these things
realities, it swings the mind loose from the clogs of the
world, and he beholds God, and apprehends his law and his
love. In no other way can these motives take hold on the
mind. What a mighty action must it have on the mind, when it
takes hold of the love of Christ! What a life-giving power,
when the pure motives of the gospel crowd into the mind and
stir it up with energy divine! Every Christian knows, that
in proportion to the strength of his faith, his mind is
buoyant and active, and when his faith flags, his soul is
dark and listless. It is faith alone that places the things
of time and eternity in their true comparison, and sets down
the things of time and sense at their real value. It breaks
up the delusions of the mind, the soul shakes itself from
its errors and clogs, and it rises up in communion with
God.
REMARKS.
I. It is as unphilosophical as it is unscriptural to
attempt to convert and sanctify the minds of sinners without
the motives of the gospel.
You may press the sinner with the law, and make him see
his own character, the greatness and justice of God, and his
ruined condition. But hide the motives of the gospel from
his mind, and it is all in vain.
II. It is absurd to think that the offers of the gospel
are calculated to beget a selfish hope.
Some are afraid to throw out upon the sinner's mind all
the character of God; and they try to make him submit to
God, by casting him down in despair. This is not only
against the gospel, but it is absurd in itself. It is absurd
to think that, in order to destroy the selfishness of a
sinner, you must hide from him the knowledge of how much God
loves and pities him, and how great sacrifices he has made
to save him.
III. So far is it from being true, that sinners are in
danger of getting false hopes if they are allowed to know
the real compassion of God, while you hide this, it is
impossible to give him any other than a false hope.
Withholding from the sinner who is writhing under
conviction, the fact that God has provided salvation as a
mere gratuity, is the very way to confirm his selfishness;
and if he gets any hope, it must be a false one. To press
him to submission by the law alone, is to set him to build a
self-righteous foundation.
IV. So far as we can see, salvation by grace, not
bestowed in any degree for our own works, is the only
possible way of reclaiming selfish beings.
Suppose salvation was not altogether gratuitous, but that
some degree of good works was taken into the account, and
for those good works in part we were justified--just so far
as this consideration is in the mind, just so far there is a
stimulus to selfishness. You must bring the sinner to see
that he is entirely dependent on free grace, and that a full
and complete justification is bestowed, on the first act of
faith, as a mere gratuity, and no part of it as an
equivalent for any thing he is to do. This alone dissolves
the influence of selfishness, and secures holy action.
V. If all this is true, sinners should be put in the
fullest possible possession, and in the speediest manner, of
the whole plan of salvation.
They should be made to see the law, and their own guilt,
and that they have no way to save themselves; and then, the
more fully the whole length and breadth and height and depth
of the love of God should be opened, the more effectually
will you crush his selfishness, and subdue his soul in love
to God. Do not be afraid, in conversing with sinners, to
show the whole plan of salvation, and give the fullest
possible exhibition of the infinite compassion of God. Show
him that, notwithstanding his guilt, the Son of God is
knocking at the door and beseeching him to be reconciled to
God.
VI. You see why so many convicted sinners continue so
long compassing Mount Sinai, with self-righteous efforts to
save themselves by their own works.
How often you find sinners trying to get more feeling, or
waiting till they have made more prayers and made greater
efforts, and expecting to recommend themselves to God in
this way. Why is all this? The sinner needs to be driven off
from this, and made to see that he is all the while looking
for salvation under the law. He must be made to see that all
this is superseded by the gospel offering him all he wants
as a mere gratuity. He must hear Jesus, saying, "Ye will not
come unto me that ye may have life: O, no, you are willing
to pray, and go to meeting, and read the Bible, or any
thing, but come unto me. Sinner, this is the road; I am the
way, and the truth, and the life. No man cometh to the
Father but by me. I am the resurrection and the life. I am
the light of the world. Here, sinner, is what you want.
Instead of trying your self-righteous prayers and efforts,
here is what you are looking for, only believe and you shall
be saved."
VII. You see why so many professors of religion are
always in the dark.
They are looking at their sins, confining their
observations to themselves, and losing sight of the fact,
that they have only to take right hold of Jesus Christ and
throw themselves upon him, and all is well.
VIII. The law is useful to convict men; but, as a matter
of fact, it never breaks the heart. The gospel alone does
that. The degree in which a convert is broken hearted, is in
proportion to the degree of clearness with which he
apprehends the gospel.
IX. Converts, if you call them so, who entertain a hope
under legal preaching, may have an intellectual approbation
of the law, and a sort of dry zeal, but never make mellow,
broken hearted Christians. If they have not seen God in the
attitude in which he is exhibited in the gospel, they are
not such Christians as you will see sometimes, with the tear
trembling in their eye, and their frames shaking with
emotion, at the name of Jesus.
X. You see what needs to be done with sinners who are
under conviction, and what with those professors who are in
darkness. They must be led right to Christ, and made to take
hold of the plan of salvation by faith. It is in vain to
expect to do them good in any other way.
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