Heidelberg Catechism: Only By True Faith (2)

Open Quote 5 lines60. How are you righteous before God?

Only by true faith in Jesus Christ; that is, although my conscience accuse me, that I have grievously sinned against all the commandments of God, and have never kept any of them, and am still prone always to all evil; yet God without any merit of mine, of mere grace, grants and imputes to me the perfect satisfaction, righteousness, and holiness of Christ, as if I had never committed nor had any sin, and had myself accomplished all the obedience which Christ has fulfilled for me; if only I accept such benefit with a believing heart.

— Heidelberg Catechism 60

In part 1 we considered briefly the significance of beginning the answer with the words, “only by true faith.” This expression intentionally evokes Heidelberg Catechism 21, which we have already considered extensively. Rome has us saved by grace and cooperation with grace, through the formation of saving virtue formed in us by grace and cooperation with grace. The gospel message is that we are justified and saved not by anything done by us or in us but by grace alone, through faith alone and that faith is an outward-looking knowledge, assent, and confidence in Christ and his finished work. These are two very different conceptions of justification and salvation.

The question is how are right with God. Righteousness is necessary a legal category. It is fashionable in some circles to dismiss the question as if it were irrelevant to our age or as if we have matured beyond it or as if it were a parochial question (e.g., Western as distinct from Eastern). Let me ask you a question. Let’s say you go on vacation only to find upon your return that some folks have moved into your house, changed the locks, and claimed your house as their new home. What do you think about justice now? You paid the mortgage. You fixed the plumbing. You mowed the lawn but now it’s their house? “That’s not right!” That’s not what, you say? We might like to tell ourselves that righteousness is passé or parochial, in truth, it is unavoidable. In the nature of human existence the question of righteousness is unavoidable. We shall always have laws and where there are laws there is either righteousness (conformity to the law) or unrighteousness (transgression of the law). Laws are for sinners:

understanding this, that the law is not laid down for the just but for the lawless and disobedient, for the ungodly and sinners (1 Tim 1:9; ESV)

Adam was created in righteousness and true holiness with the intent that he would know God rightly, love, and, after passing the probation, enter into eternal blessedness with him (Heidelberg Catechism 6). After the fall we are all under the law (Rom 7) for righteousness and the law is good and holy (Rom 7:7–12). The law promises life to all who obey but because our fall, we are unable to obey. In Adam we are all, by nature, sinners (Rom 5:12–21). As Paul says, after the fall, the law remains good, holy, and righteous but we do not. The demands of the law do not end simply because we are now, by nature, unable and unwilling to fulfill them perfectly. It says:

Cursed is everyone who does not continue to do everything written in the book of the law. Deut 27:26; Gal 3:10)

God’s law does not say to lawbreakers, “Good try but not quite. Try again.” It says “cursed.” That’s not a good state in which to be. According to Deuteronomy 28:20, cursedness manifests in frustration. It leads to destruction. Deuteronomy 29:20 says that one who is under a curse is not forgiven. He is under Yahweh’s anger, as it were, i.e., his holy wrath. Yahweh’s zeal for his own holiness “will smoke against that man” and his cursedness will result in his name being blotted out from under heaven. Our Lord Jesus said that to be cursed is to be eternally condemned:

“Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels (Matt 25:41; ESV)

When he cursed the fig tree (Mark 11:21) it withered and died. Clearly being cursed or accursed is a truly miserable state. A reasonable person would do all he could to avoid it. Tragically, the effects of sin are that we are, by nature, blind to own state. Paul says that we’re “dead in sins and trespasses” (Eph 2:1–4) and we don’t even realize it.

So we need righteousness. Because of our own condition we can only get this righteousness by faith. We cannot undo what we, in Adam, did. We cannot undo what we have each down individually, actually. You and I cannot make expiation (make payment for sin) or propitiation (to turn away God’s wrath) because whatever we do, we do as sinners. All our affections, our thinking, and our willing is corrupted by sin. Everything we touch is corrupted by sin. To paraphrase Cornelius Van Til, we are like man of sin, in a sea of sin, trying to climb a ladder of sin. It’s utterly futile. We’re toast.

This is why the gospel is such good news. The gospel is that Christ “became a curse” for us who believe:

Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us—for it is written, “Cursed is everyone who is hanged on a tree”(Gal 3:13; ESV)

This brings us back to part 1 of this series. This is why faith is the “sole instrument” of our justification (Belgic Confession art. 22). This is why we confess in Belgic Confession art. 24 against all moralists (e.g., Rome, the Federal Vision, Norman Shepherd, the New Perspective and all their minions) that we are justified “even before we do good works.”

For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast. (Eph 2:8–9)

It’s not by medicinal, substantial grace and our free cooperation with that grace we are justified and saved but it is by God’s favor merited for us by Christ, who was born without sin, who obeyed God’s holy, righteous law for us, and who, by his powerful Holy Spirit raises dead sinners to life, gives them true faith, and through that true faith unites them to Christ.

There is no question whether there is cursedness and righteousness. There is no question whether we are, by nature, under a curse or whether we need Christ’s righteousness. Praise God that his righteousness earned for us is given to us freely, by God’s free favor.

Why we must say “simul iustus et peccator.”

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