by David Clayton
One
of the important questions which faces us today is the question of what
focus our work should take. As we seek to share truth, to minister to
others, what aspect of God’s truth should we regard as most critical?
What particular element of the truth should we concentrate our energies
upon?
Ellen White makes an interesting statement in the Paulson collection. On page 342 she says,
“The end is near. We have not a moment to lose. Light is to shine forth
from God’s people in clear, distinct rays, bringing Jesus before the
churches and before the world. God will give additional light, and old
truths will be recovered and replaced in the framework of truth; and
wherever the laborers go they will triumph. As Christ’s ambassadors,
they are to search the Scriptures to seek for the truths that have been
hidden beneath the rubbish of error, and every ray of light received is
to be communicated to others. One interest will prevail, one subject
will swallow up all others, Christ our Righteousness.” – (Paulson
Collection – 342)
This is a thought-provoking statement and
one which should make us give careful thought to the question of where
our emphasis should really be placed. The more I have come to understand
the implications of the righteousness of Christ, the more clearly I
have seen the truthfulness of this statement of Ellen White.
As we view the landscape of Seventh-day Adventism today
(official and unofficial), we see many confusing ideas. Some are very
emphatic that the thrust of our work must be to warn people of the
impending Sunday laws, others feel that the real issue is that we need
to keep the feast days, or call God by His Hebrew name, others that
health reform holds the key to finishing God’s work, others feel that
the real issue is that the world needs to understand that God does not
kill. We ourselves have placed great emphasis on the truth about God and
insisted that understanding the truth of God’s identity is critically
important and is a major issue in the final message to be given to the
world. Let us note that the message of Christ our Righteousness is to
“swallow up all others.” Those that are false will collapse and
disappear in its light and those which are true will shine with a
greater brilliance and will find their proper emphasis in the context of
Christ our Righteousness.
New Covenant Ministers
In 2 Corinthians 3:5,6, the apostle Paul makes a statement which brings
this issue into focus and very clearly explains what message, what
ministry God has given us. He says,
. . . . our sufficiency is
of God; (6) Who also hath made us able ministers of the new testament;
(covenant) not of the letter, but of the spirit: for the letter killeth,
but the spirit giveth life. (2 Cor 3:5-6)
In that he saith, A
new covenant, he hath made the first old. Now that which decayeth and
waxeth old is ready to vanish away. (Heb 8:13)
God has made
us ministers of the New Testament, or of the new covenant (the word
“covenant” is translated from the Greek word, “diatheke,” and is
translated as either “testament” or “covenant.”). If God has made us
ministers of the New covenant, then obviously we cannot be at the same
time, ministers of the old covenant. This is what Paul is saying, and in
the verses which follow he makes this very clear. He also explains the
critical differences between both covenants.
Notice, he says
that the letter kills (this is not what we must minister to people) but
the spirit gives life (this is what we are to minister). What does he
mean when he refers to “the letter?” What is this thing, associated with
the Old Covenant which “kills?” Paul explains what he is referring to
in the verse which follows.
But if the ministration of death,
written and engraven in stones, was glorious, so that the children of
Israel could not stedfastly behold the face of Moses for the glory of
his countenance; which glory was to be done away: (8) How shall not the
ministration of the spirit be rather glorious? (2 Cor 3:7-8)
It seems difficult to misunderstand what Paul is speaking of here. He
refers to something which was “written and engraven in stones.” When it
was instituted Moses’ face shone with a glory which made it difficult
for the people to look at his face. In Exodus 34:28-30 we find the
passage to which Paul is referring. It says,
And he was there
with the LORD forty days and forty nights; he did neither eat bread, nor
drink water. And he wrote upon the tables the words of the covenant,
the ten commandments. (29) And it came to pass, when Moses came down
from mount Sinai with the two tables of testimony in Moses’ hand, when
he came down from the mount, that Moses wist not that the skin of his
face shone while he talked with him. (30) And when Aaron and all the
children of Israel saw Moses, behold, the skin of his face shone; and
they were afraid to come nigh him. (Exo 34:28-30)
Here we are
told very plainly that what was written on the tables of stone were the
“words of the covenant, the ten commandments.” Which covenant was this?
Of course it was the Old Covenant.
Let us look at a couple of other passages which make it plain that the center of the old covenant was the Ten Commandments.
And the LORD spake unto you out of the midst of the fire: ye heard the
voice of the words, but saw no similitude; only ye heard a voice. (13)
And he declared unto you his covenant, which he commanded you to
perform, even ten commandments; and he wrote them upon two tables of
stone. (Deu 4:12-13)
Deuteronomy 5:1-22 also make it clear that the old covenant was based on the ten commandments.
The difference between covenants
How can we understand what Paul was saying? Was he teaching that the
ten commandments have been abolished? Was he saying that God’s law has
been done away with because of the new covenant? Of course not! As we
look back at 2 Cor. 3:6 we notice that Paul identifies the critical
difference between both covenants. He says, “not of the letter but of
the spirit.” This phrase holds the key to understanding the difference
between both covenants.
The term, “the letter,” has reference
to what was written (in this case written on stone). Under the old
covenant as well as under the new covenant, the great need of the people
remained the same. The goal was to obtain righteousness, to find a way
to escape from sin and the death which came with it. Under the old
covenant the people sought to find righteousness by obeying the words
(the letter) of the ten commandments. Through strict obedience they
hoped to obtain God’s favour, to reach a place of holiness where God
would be able to bless them and fulfill all His promises to them. It
never happened. That system of seeking righteousness could never work,
all it did was bring the people into condemnation. Paul refers to it as
the “ministration of condemnation.” (2 Cor. 3:9)
Let us notice
that the commandments themselves were faultless. Paul states that they
are “holy and just and good (Rom. 7:12).” But as the means of making men
righteous, as a way of producing godly behaviour they were hopeless.
Paul says,
. . . . if there had been a law given which could
have given life, verily righteousness should have been by the law. (Gal
3:21)
And the commandment, which was ordained to life, I found to be unto death. (Rom 7:10)
Man needed righteousness. The commandments described and required
righteousness. So what was the problem? Why did God have to abolish the
old covenant, based on the law written on stone?
For we know that the law is spiritual: but I am carnal, sold under sin. (Rom 7:14)
The old covenant could never produce righteousness in man. There was a
fundamental conflict between two of the parties involved which made it
impossible for the goal of righteousness to be attained. The law did its
duty faithfully. From the two tables of stone it proclaimed
righteousness and demanded obedience. But the words were only words
carved into stone, only the lifeless letter and they fell upon the
depraved hearts of carnal men with the demand for righteousness. Man
wanted righteousness. He tried and tried to obey that holy law, that
perfect law, but he was only carnal. In such a condition there was not
even the slightest hope that he would ever obtain righteousness by
obedience to the law. So the old covenant, based on the written law (the
letter) could never meet the great need of humanity for righteousness,
therefore, the system had to change.
So in Hebrews chapter
8:7, we are told that there was a fault with the first (the old)
covenant and because of this, God had to introduce the second.
For if that first covenant had been faultless, then should no place have been sought for the second. (Heb 8:7)
Let us note that this covenant which is called the “new covenant” or
the second covenant is actually the everlasting covenant. It is the
covenant by which men have always been saved in all ages and Paul
emphasizes this in Galatians 3:16,17. However, in God’s dealings with
Israel as a nation, the covenant which was made with them at Sinai
constituted the first covenant in terms of their experience as a people.
So Paul says that there was a fault with the covenant and this is why
it had to be changed. In Heb. 8:8,9 he tells us plainly what this fault
was.
For finding fault with them, he saith, Behold, the days
come, saith the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of
Israel and with the house of Judah: (9) Not according to the covenant
that I made with their fathers in the day when I took them by the hand
to lead them out of the land of Egypt; because they continued not in my
covenant, and I regarded them not, saith the Lord. (Heb 8:8-9)
The fault was with the people. The old covenant contained a perfect
law, one which was “holy, just and good.” But the people of whom it
demanded righteousness were “carnal, sold under sin.” The system could
not work because the law and the people were totally opposed to each
other. Obedience was impossible under these conditions and so, God had
to change the system.
For this is the covenant that I will
make with the house of Israel after those days, saith the Lord; I will
put my laws into their mind, and write them in their hearts: and I will
be to them a God, and they shall be to me a people: (Heb 8:10)
What was the difference between this new covenant and the old covenant?
Well, in the old covenant God’s requirements were written on stone. In
the new, they were written on the heart. In the old, there was only the
letter of the law (the written words) in the new, there was the spirit
of the law (the living reality of those words). In the old,
righteousness was only described and demanded, in the new, righteousness
was imparted by the spirit of God entering the heart of the believer.
You see, the ten commandments describe righteousness. They proclaim
God’s will for all humanity in unmistakable words. But they cannot
produce righteousness. Righteousness is not obtained by practice or by
the forming of habits. It is a quality of nature, an aspect of life and
can only be received by birth. Therefore the commandments do not offer a
solution to man’s problem. As far as the sinner is concerned, carnal
and “sold under sin,” the only purpose the law can serve is to make him
know how utterly wretched and hopeless is his condition and to make him
see how incapable he is of changing and improving that condition. All it
can do is condemn him for his sin, it cannot deliver him from his sin.
The true source
If we are to have true righteousness, then we must find the source of
righteousness. We must find the place where righteousness is produced.
The law can only describe righteousness, but what I need is to find the
place where righteousness itself exists as a reality.
Let me
make my point a little more plain. When Isaac Newton discovered gravity
he wrote down his findings, and his words described the way gravity
works. Even in schools today, students study those words and they refer
to what Newton wrote as “Newton’s Law of Gravity.” Yet no one is foolish
enough to believe that gravity itself exists in Newton’s words. They
know that Newton’s words are only the “letter” and that if they want to
find gravity itself they have to look somewhere else apart from those
words. The words can help a person to understand gravity but not to
experience it. This is the exact relationship which the ten commandments
have to righteousness. They can describe righteousness but they can
never produce it.
And so, the apostle Paul says,
But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets; (Rom 3:21)
So there, we see, there is a righteousness which exists “without the
law,” that is, without the letter of the law. It is not contrary to the
law, but it is independent of the law because the law cannot produce it.
A person cannot obtain this righteousness by relating to the law
because the law does not have it to give. There is a place where
righteousness exists as a living reality. It is not dependent on the
observance of the law. This place is, in Christ Jesus. (Rom. 3:22; 2
Cor. 5:21; Phil. 3:9). So a person may come to Christ who is the source
of all righteousness, who is Himself the living law, the living reality
of all that the law describes, and there in Christ he may find as a free
gift the perfect righteousness for which he has been searching. That
which the law demanded, but could not give.
Natural Righteousness
Consider this question; was the law made for God? Was it something put
in place to keep God from doing wrong? Why does God do only good, is it
because the commandments restrain Him from doing evil? What a ridiculous
idea! God does not need the law to ensure that He does good. He is
goodness itself, He is the living law. The commandments are only an
expression of what He is. When a person has received Christ by faith, it
is this very life of God which becomes his, through the holy spirit. He
has become a partaker of the divine nature – that is, God’s nature has
become his nature. Do you see why he no longer needs a relationship with
the letter of the law? He now has the mind of Christ, the nature of
God. Now he does what is right, not because the law demands it, but
because Christ is living in him and the only life Christ can live is a
holy life – one which is in perfect harmony with the law.
Suppose a man finds a photograph of a beautiful woman. He falls in love
with what he sees and so every day he takes this picture wherever he
goes. He talks to it, kisses it, embraces it and takes it to bed with
him at night. How much satisfaction will he get? Not much, unless he is a
madman. All he will do is only frustrate himself, because the picture
is only a description. It is not the reality. To find true satisfaction
he must find the real thing. The photograph has many limitations. It is a
likeness of the reality but it is lacking many, many of the qualities
of the original. Of course, the photograph may be helpful, it may assist
the man in finding the person whom it portrays but that is the only
good it can do. And so the Bible says of the law,
Wherefore the law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith. (Gal 3:24)
For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth. (Rom 10:4)
Why then give the law?
A question which arises as we consider all this, is the question, why
then did God institute the system of law? Why did He ordain a
ministration which could not produce righteousness? Again Paul gives us a
clear and reasonable answer:
Moreover the law entered, that the offence might abound. But where sin abounded, grace did much more abound: (Rom 5:20)
Wherefore then serveth the law? It was added because of transgressions,
till the seed should come to whom the promise was made; and it was
ordained by angels in the hand of a mediator. (Gal 3:19)
Man’s condition was hopeless. He was depraved and lost, but how could he
know it? How could he be led to see himself as he really was so that he
could seek a remedy? This was one purpose of the law. The law entered
“that the offence might abound” – that “sin by the commandment might
become exceedingly sinful (Romans 7:10).” As Paul says, “I had not known
sin but by the law (Rom. 7:7).”
But the law also served
another purpose. It was “added because of transgressions.” As sin
abounded and the innate wickedness of men’s hearts produced all kinds of
atrocities, there was the need for man to be placed under some kind of
discipline and restraint. Even among those who were called God’s people
there was the need of a system which would restrain the natural
tendencies of the carnal heart. This is why God placed Israel “under the
law.” He put them under a system of government where the law ruled.
This was not God’s final plan, it was only a stop-gap. Such a plan could
never produce true righteousness, but there was need to put a restraint
on man’s naturally wicked behaviour and so, the law was “added because
of transgressions till the seed should come (Gal. 3:19)
Notice, this system was only to last “till the seed should come.” After
that faith is come we are no longer under a schoolmaster (Gal. 3:25).”
Ministers of Christ
So what we have seen very clearly is that we are not ministers of the
old covenant. The commandments as they were written on stone (the
letter) cannot be the focus of our work. We are made “able ministers of
the new covenant,” not of the letter but the spirit.
“Now the
Lord is that spirit … (2 Cor. 3:17).” Christ Himself is the reality of
the new covenant. He Himself is the living reality of the law. All that
the commandments described, He is the reality of it. Now we are
ministers not of dead words, written on lifeless stone, but of the
living reality to which those words only pointed. Christ is to be the
center, the focus of our ministry. Christ is to be all, and in all (Col.
3:11).
The Law Established
What then is the relevance of the ten commandments? Now that they have
led us to Christ are they abolished? We know that the “ministration,” or
the system of government based on the ten commandments has been
abolished (2 Cor. 3:11,13) but does this mean that the ten commandments
themselves have been abolished? Absolutely not!
Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the law. (Rom 3:31)
When God gave the commandments to Israel He had two purposes in mind.
Firstly, He wanted to make them aware of their true condition, to make
them see how deeply integrated sin was into their nature (Rom. 7:10;
5:20) so that they would seek a remedy (Gal. 3:24). Secondly He wanted
to put some restraint upon their naturally sinful behaviour to prevent
them from becoming totally depraved in their way of life (Gal. 3:19).
Did God give them an artificial standard of righteousness to convince
them of sin and to show them how He desired that they should live? Did
God say, “this is the way of righteousness,” although what He gave them
was not a true description of righteousness? Of course not! The ten
commandments as they were written on stone did not express all the
deeper meanings of God’s law. Jesus showed us that they go much deeper
than the words actually say (Matt. 5:20-28), but they were a genuine and
true description of righteousness nevertheless. They may have been
limited in their expression of the truth, but they were absolute truth
nevertheless. Note the words of Paul:
Knowing this, that the
law is not made for a righteous man, but for the lawless and
disobedient, for the ungodly and for sinners, for unholy and profane,
for murderers of fathers and murderers of mothers, for manslayers, (10)
For whoremongers, for them that defile themselves with mankind, for
menstealers, for liars, for perjured persons, and if there be any other
thing that is contrary to sound doctrine; (1 Tim 1:9-10)
Paul
does not teach that the law is abolished. There is a class of people
who still very much need the law. They are the lawless, the disobedient
etc. They still need the rule of law to prevent the open manifestation
of gross sin and to make them aware of their true condition. They have
not yet come to Christ so they still need the schoolmaster. But the law
is not made for a “righteous man.” Why not? Because having received
Christ’s righteousness (the only righteousness there is), the righteous
man is by nature in harmony with the law. He has obtained the
righteousness which is the goal of the law and he obtained it without
the law (Rom. 3:21) The law did its work when it led him to Christ, but
now, his relationship is no longer with the law, but with Christ.
Nevertheless, everything which the law demanded is present in Christ,
who is the living law, and the man who truly has obtained the
righteousness of Christ, will, in Christ, walk in perfect harmony with
the law (Rom. 8:4; Rom. 3:31; 1 John 2:6).
This is not
difficult to see. God did not say to the sinner, “here are the ten
commandments. They show you how you must behave.” But then, after the
sinner has found Christ He tells him, “now you no longer are required to
behave in the same way.” What! This would mean that when a man is a
sinner, God holds up a certain standard of behaviour before him and
tells him that if he does not obey it, he is guilty, but then as soon as
the person becomes a Christian, then what was wrong for the sinner is
no longer wrong for the Christian. But this is foolishness. If God said
something was wrong when I was a sinner, then it is still wrong when I
am a saint. The difference is, I was, as a sinner, trying to obey the
rules but my nature was opposed to the work. Now I am in Christ, His
nature is my nature. My whole life is an expression of Christ. I don’t
need the rules to demand that I live righteously. In Him, it is my
normal way of life.
Righteousness by Faith