THE
DOCTRINE OF JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH
by John Owen
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SECTION VI
SECTION VII
SECTION VI
EVANGELICAL PERSONAL RIGHTEOUSNESS, THE NATURE AND USE OF IT
SECTION VI
EVANGELICAL PERSONAL RIGHTEOUSNESS, THE NATURE AND USE OF
IT
Evangelical personal righteousness, the nature and use of it-- Final judgment, and its respect unto
justification.
Evangelical personal righteousness; the nature and use of it-- Whether there be an angelical
justification on our evangelical righteousness, inquired into--How this is by some affirmed and
applauded--Evangelical personal righteousness asserted as the condition of our righteousness, or
the pardon of sin--Opinion of the Socinians--Personal righteousness required in the gospel--
Believers hence denominated righteous--Not with respect unto righteousness habitual, but actual
only--Inherent righteousness the same with sanctification, or holiness--In what sense we may be
said to be justified by inherent righteousness--No evangelical justification on our personal
righteousness--The imputation of the righteousness of Christ does not depend thereon--None
have this righteousness, but they are antecedently justified--A charge before God, in all
justification before God--The instrument of this charge, the law or the gospel--From neither of
them can we be justified by this personal righteousness--The justification pretended needless and
useless--It has not the nature of any justification mentioned in the Scripture, but is contrary to all
that is so called--Other arguments to the same purpose--Sentential justification at the last day--
Nature of the last judgement--Who shall be then justified --A declaration of righteousness, and an
actual admission into glory, the whole of justification at the last day--The argument that we are
justified in this life in the same manner, and on the same grounds, as we shall be judged at the last
day, that judgement being according unto works, answered; and the impertinency of it
declared
THE things which we have discoursed concerning the first and second justification, and
concerning the continuation of justification, have no other design but only to clear the principal
subject whereof we treat from what does not necessarily belong unto it. For until all things that
are either really heterogeneous or otherwise superfluous are separated from it, we cannot
understand aright the true state of the question about the nature and causes of our justification
before God. For we intend one justification only,-- namely, that whereby God at once freely by his
grace justifies a convinced sinner through faith in the blood of Christ. Whatever else any will be
pleased to call justification, we are not concerned in it, nor are the consciences of them that
believe. To the same purpose we must, therefore, briefly also consider what is usually disputed
about our own personal righteousness, with a justification thereon; as also what is called sentential
justification at the day of judgment. And I shall treat no farther of them in this place, but only as it
is necessary to free the principal subject under consideration from being intermixed with them, as
really it is not concerned in them. For what influence our own personal righteousness has into our
justification before God will be afterwards particularly examined. Here we shall only consider
such a notion of it as seems to interfere with it, and disturb the right understanding of it. But yet I
say concerning this also, that it rather belongs unto the difference that will be among us in the
expression of our conceptions about spiritual things whilst we know but in part, than unto the
substance of the doctrine itself. And on such differences no breach of charity can ensue, whilst
there is a mutual grant of that liberty of mind without which it will not be preserved one
moment.
It is, therefore, by some apprehended that there is an evangelical justification upon our evangelical
personal righteousness. This they distinguish from that justification which is by faith through the
imputation of the righteousness of Christ, in the sense wherein they do allow it; for the
righteousness of Christ is our legal righteousness, whereby we have pardon of sin, and acquitment
from the sentence of the law, on the account of his satisfaction and merit. But, moreover, they say
that as there is a personal, inherent righteousness required of us, so there is a justification by the
gospel thereon. For by our faith, and the plea of it, we are justified from the charge of unbelief; by
our sincerity, and the plea of it, we are justified from the charge of hypocrisy; and so by all other
graces and duties from the charge of the contrary sins in commission or omission, so far as such
sins are inconsistent with the terms of the covenant of grace. How this differs from the second
justification before God, which some say we have by works, on the supposition of the pardon of
sin for the satisfaction of Christ, and the infusion of a habit of grace enabling us to perform those
works, is declared by those who so express themselves.
Some add, that this inherent, personal, evangelical righteousness, is the condition on our part of
our legal righteousness, or of the imputation of the righteousness of Christ unto our justification,
or the pardon of sin. And those by whom the satisfaction and merit of Christ are denied, make it
the only and whole condition of our absolute justification before God. So speak all the Socinians
constantly; for they deny our obedience unto Christ to be either the meritorious or efficient cause
of our justification; only they say it is the condition of it, without which God has decreed that we
shall not be made partakers of the benefit thereof. So does Socinus himself, De Justificat. p. 17,
"Sunt opera nostra, id est, ut dictum fuit, obedientia quam Christo praestamus, licet nec efficiens
nec meritoria, tamen causa est (ut vocant) sine qua non, justificationis coram Deo, tque aeternae
nostrae". Again, p. 14, inter Opuscul, "Ut cavendum est ne vitae sanctitatem atque innocentiam
effectum justificationis nostrae coram Deo esse credamus, neque illam nostrae coram Deo
justificationis causam efficientem aut impulsivam esse affirmemus; set tantummodo causam sine
qua eam justificationem nobis non contingere decrevit Deus". And in all their discourses to this
purpose they assert our personal righteousness and holiness, or our obedience unto the commands
of Christ, which they make to be the form and essence of faith, to be the condition whereon we
obtain justification, or the remission of sins. And indeed, considering what their opinion is
concerning the person of Christ, with their denial of his satisfaction and merit, it is impossible they
should frame any other idea of justification in their minds. But what some among ourselves intend
by a compliance with them herein, who are not necessitated thereunto by a prepossession with
their opinions about the person and mediation of Christ, I know not. For as for them, all their
notions about grace, conversion to God, justification, and the like articles of our religion, they are
nothing but what they are necessarily cast upon by their hypothesis about the person of
Christ.
At present I shall only inquire into that peculiar evangelical justification which is asserted to be the
effect of our own personal righteousness, or to be granted us thereon. And hereunto we may
observe,
- That God does require in and by the gospel a sincere obedience of all that do believe, to be
performed in and by their own persons, though through the aids of grace supplied unto them by
Jesus Christ. He requires, indeed, obedience, duties, and works of righteousness, in and of all
persons whatever; but the consideration of them which are performed before believing is excluded
by all from any causality or interest in our justification before God: at least, whatever any may
discourse of the necessity of such works in a way of preparation unto believing (whereunto we
have spoken before), none bring them into the verge of works evangelical, or obedience of faith;
which would imply a contradiction. But that the works inquired after are necessary unto all
believers, is granted by all; on what grounds, and unto what ends, we shall inquire afterwards.
They are declared, Eph.2:10.
- It is likewise granted that believers, from the performance of this obedience, or these works of
righteousness, are denominated righteous in the Scripture, and are personally and internally
righteous, Luke 1:6; John 3:7. But yet this denomination is nowhere given unto them with respect
unto grace habitually inherent, but unto the effect of it in duties of obedience; as in the places
mentioned: "They were both righteous before God, walking in all the commandments and
ordinances of the Lord blameless;"the latter words give the reason of the former, or their being
esteemed righteous before God. And, "He that does righteousness is righteous;"--the
denomination is from doing. And Bellarmine, endeavouring to prove that it is habitual, not actual
righteousness, which is, as he speaks, the formal cause of our justification before God, could not
produce one testimony of Scripture wherein any one is denominated righteous from habitual
righteousness, (De Justificat., lib. 2 cap. 15); but is forced to attempt the proof of it with this
absurd argument,--namely, that "we are justified by the sacraments, which do not work in us
actual, but habitual righteousness". And this is sufficient to discover the insufficiency of all
pretence for any interest of our own righteousness from this denomination of being righteous
thereby, seeing it has not respect unto that which is the principal part thereof.
- This inherent righteousness, taking it for that which is habitual and actual, is the same with
our sanctification; neither is there any difference between them, only they are diverse names of the
same thing. For our sanctification is the inherent renovation of our natures exerting and acting
itself in newness of life, or obedience unto God in Christ and works of righteousness. But
sanctification and justification are in the Scripture perpetually distinguished, whatever respect of
causality the one of them may have unto the other. And those who do confound them, as the
Papists do, do not so much dispute about the nature of justification, as endeavour to prove that
indeed there is no such thing as justification at all; for that which would serve most to enforce it,-
-namely, the pardon of sin,--they place in the exclusion and extinction of it, by the infusions of
inherent grace, which does not belong unto justification.
- By this inherent, personal righteousness we may be said several ways to be justified. As,--
- (1.) In our own consciences, inasmuch at it is an evidence in us and unto us of our
participation of the grace of God in Christ Jesus, and of our acceptance with him; which has no
small influence into our peace. So speaks the apostle, "Our rejoicing is this, the testimony of our
conscience, that in simplicity and godly sincerity, not with fleshly wisdom, but by the grace of
God, we have had our conversation in the world," 2 Cor.1:12: who yet disclaims any confidence
therein as unto his justification before God; for says he, "Although I know nothing by myself, yet
am I not hereby justified," 1 Cor.4:4.
- (2.) Hereby may we be said to be justified before men; that is, acquitted of evils laid unto our
charge, and approved as righteous and unblamable; for the state of things is so in the world, as
that the professors of the gospel ever were, and ever will be, evil spoken of, as evil doers. The
rule given them to acquit themselves, so as that at length they may be acquitted and justified by all
that are not absolutely blinded and hardened in wickedness, is that of a holy and fruitful walking,
in abounding in good works, 1 Pet.2:12; 3:16. And so is it with respect unto the church, that we
be not judged dead, barren professors, but such as have been made partakers of the like precious
faith with others: "Show me thy faith by thy works", James 2. Wherefore,
- (3.) This righteousness is pleadable unto our justification against all the charges of Satan,
who is the great accuser of the brethren,--of all that believe. Whether he manage his charge
privately in our consciences (which is as it were before God), as he charged Job; or by his
instruments, in all manner of reproaches and calumnies (whereof some in this age have had
experience in an eminent manner), this righteousness is pleadable unto our justification.
On a supposition of these things, wherein our personal righteousness is allowed its proper place
and use (as shall afterward be more fully declared), I do not understand that there is an
evangelical justification whereby believers are, by and on the account of this personal, inherent
righteousness, justified in the sight of God; nor does the imputation of the righteousness of Christ
unto our absolute justification before him depend thereon. For,
- None have this personal righteousness but they are antecedently justified in the sight of God.
It is wholly the obedience of faith, proceeding from true and saving faith in God by Jesus Christ:
for, as it was said before, works before faith, are, as by general consent, excluded from any
interest in our justification, and we have proved that they are neither conditions of it, dispositions
unto it, nor preparations for it, properly so called; but every true believer is immediately justified
on his believing. Nor is there any moment of time wherein a man is a true believer, according as
faith is required in the gospel, and yet not justified; for as he is thereby united unto Christ, which
is the foundation of our justification by him, so the whole Scripture testifies that he that believes is
justified, or that there is an infallible connection in the ordination of God between true faith and
justification. Wherefore this personal righteousness cannot be the condition of our justification
before God, seeing it is consequential thereunto. What may be pleaded in exception hereunto from
the supposition of a second justification, or differing causes of the beginning and continuation of
justification, has been already disproved.
- Justification before God is a freedom and absolution from a charge before God, at least it is
contained therein; and the instrument of this charge must either be the law or the gospel. But
neither the law nor the gospel do before God, or in the sight of God, charge true believers with
unbelief, hypocrisy, or the like; for "who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect," who are
once justified before him? Such a charge may be laid against them by Satan, by the church
sometimes on mistake, by the world, as it was in the case of Job; against which this righteousness
is pleadable. But what is charged immediately before God is charged by God himself either by the
law of the gospel; and the judgement of God is according unto truth. If this charge be by the law,
by the law we must be justified. But the plea of sincere obedience will not justify us by the law.
That admits of none in satisfaction unto its demands but that which is complete and perfect. And
where the gospel lays any thing unto the charge of any persons before God, there can be no
justification before God, unless we shall allow the gospel to be the instrument of a false charge;
for what should justify him whom the gospel condemns? And if it be a justification by the gospel
from the charge of the law, it renders the death of Christ of no effect; and a justification without a
charge is not to be supposed.
- Such a justification as that pretended is altogether needless and senseless. This may easily be
evinced from what the Scripture asserts unto our justification in the sight of God by faith in the
blood of Christ; but this has been spoken to before on another occasion. Let that be considered,
and it will quickly appear that there is no place nor use for this new justification upon our personal
righteousness, whether it be supposed antecedent and subordinate thereunto, or consequential and
perfective thereof.
- This pretended evangelical justification has not the nature of any justification that is
mentioned in the Scripture,--that is, neither that by the law, nor that provided in the gospel.
Justification by the law is this,--The man that does the works of it shall live in them. This it does
not pretend unto. And as unto evangelical justification, it is every way contrary unto it. For
therein the charge against the person to be justified is true,-- namely, that he has sinned, and is
come short of the glory of God; [but] in this it is false,--namely, that a believer is an unbeliever; a
sincere person, a hypocrite; one fruitful in good works, altogether barren: and this false charge is
supposed to be exhibited in the name of God, and before him. Our acquitment, in true, evangelical
justification, is by absolution or pardon of sin; here, by a vindication of our own righteousness.
There, the plea of the person to be justified is, Guilty; all the world is become guilty before God:
but here, the plea of the person on his trial is, Not guilty, whereon the proofs and evidences of
innocence and righteousness do ensue; but this is a plea which the law will not admit, and which
the gospel disclaims.
- If we are justified before God on our own personal righteousness, and pronounced righteous
by him on the account thereof, then God enters into judgement with us on something in ourselves,
and acquits us thereon; for justification is a juridical act, in and of that Judgment of God which is
according unto truth. But that God should enter into judgment with us, and justify us with respect
unto what he judges on, or our personal righteousness, the psalmist does not believe, Ps.130:2,3;
143:2; nor did the publican, Luke 18.
- This personal righteousness of ours cannot be said to be a subordinate righteousness, and
subservient unto our justification by faith in the blood of Christ: for therein God justifies the
ungodly, and imputes righteousness unto him that works not; and, besides, it is expressly excluded
from any consideration in our justification, Eph.2:7,8.
- This personal, inherent righteousness, wherewith we are said to be justified with this
evangelical justification, is our own righteousness. Personal righteousness, and our own
righteousness, are expressions equivalent; but our own righteousness is not the material cause of
any justification before God. For,
- (1.) It is unmeet so to be, Isa.64:6.
- (2.) It is directly opposed unto that righteousness whereby we are justified, as inconsistent
with it unto that end, Phil.3:9; Rom.10:3,4.
It will be said that our own righteousness is the righteousness of the law, but this personal
righteousness is evangelical. But,
- (1.) It will be hard to prove that our personal righteousness is any other but our own
righteousness; and our own righteousness is expressly rejected from any interest in our
justification in the places quoted.
- (2.) That righteousness which is evangelical in respect of its efficient cause, its motives and
some especial ends, is legal in respect of the formal reason of it and our obligation unto it; for
there is no instance of duty belonging unto it, but, in general, we are obliged unto its performance
by virtue of the first commandment, to "take the LORD for our God." Acknowledging therein his
essential verity and sovereign authority, we are obliged to believe all that he shall reveal, and to
obey in all that he shall command.
- (3.) The good works rejected from any interest in our justification, are those whereunto we
are "created in Christ Jesus", Eph.2:8~10; the "works of righteousness which we have done,"
Tit.3:5, wherein the Gentiles are concerned, who never sought for righteousness by the works of
the law, Rom.9:30. But it will yet be said, that these things are evident in themselves. God does
require an evangelical righteousness in all that do believe; this Christ is not, nor is it the
righteousness of Christ. He may be said to be our legal righteousness, but our evangelical
righteousness he is not; and, so far as we are righteous with any righteousness, so far we are
justified by it. For according unto this evangelical righteousness we must be tried; if we have it we
shall be acquitted, and if we have it not we shall be condemned. There is, therefore, a justification
according unto it.
I answer,
- According to some authors or maintainers of this opinion, I see not but that the Lord Christ is
as much our evangelical righteousness as he is our legal. For our legal righteousness he is not, in
their judgement, by a proper imputation of his righteousness unto us, but by the communication of
the fruits of what he did and suffered for us. And so he is our evangelical righteousness also; for
our sanctification is an effect or fruit of what he did and suffered for us, Eph.5:26,27;
Tit.2:14.
- None have this evangelical righteousness but those who are, in order of nature at least,
justified before they actually have it; for it is that which is required of all that do believe, and are
justified thereon. And we need not much inquire how a man is justified after he is
justified.
- God has not appointed this personal righteousness in order unto our justification before him in
this life, though he have appointed it to evidence our justification before others, and even in his
sight; as shall be declared. He accepts of it, approves of it, upon the account of the free
justification of the person in and by whom it is wrought: so he had "respect unto Abel and his
offering". But we are not acquitted by it from any real charge in the sight of God, nor do receive
remission of sins on the account of it. And those who place the whole of justification in the
remission of sins, making this personal righteousness the condition of it, as the Socinians do, leave
not any place for the righteousness of Christ in our justification.
- If we are in any sense justified hereby in the sight of God, we have whereof to boast before
him. We may not have so absolutely, and with respect unto merit; yet we have so comparatively,
and in respect of others who cannot make the same plea for their justification. But all boasting is
excluded; and it will not relieve, to say that this personal righteousness is of the free grace and gift
of God unto some, and not unto others; for we must plead it as our duty, and not as God's
grace.
- Suppose a person freely justified by the grace of God, through faith in the blood of Christ,
without respect unto any works, obedience, or righteousness of his own, we do freely
grant,
- (1.) That God does indispensably require personal obedience of him; which may be called his
evangelical righteousness.
- (2.) That God does approve of and accept, in Christ, this righteousness so
performed.
- (3.) That hereby that faith whereby we are justified is evidenced, proved, manifested, in the
sight of God and men.
- (4.) That this righteousness is pleadable unto an acquitment against any charge from Satan,
the world, or our own consciences.
- (5.) That upon it we shall be declared righteous at the last day, and without it none shall so
be. And if any shall think meet from hence to conclude unto an evangelical justification, or call
God's acceptance of our righteousness by that name, I shall by no means contend with then. And
wherever this inquiry is made,--not how a sinner, guilty of death, and obnoxious unto the curse,
shall be pardoned, acquitted, and justified, which is by the righteousness of Christ alone imputed
unto him--but how a man that professes evangelical faith, or faith in Christ, shall be tried, judged,
and whereon, as such, he shall be justified, we grant that it is and must be, by his own personal,
sincere obedience.
And these things are spoken, not with a design to contend with any, or to oppose the opinions of
any; but only to remove from the principal question in hand those things which do not belong unto
it.
A very few words will also free our inquiry from any concernment in that which is called
sentential justification, at the day of judgement; for of what nature soever it be, the person
concerning whom that sentence is pronounced was,
- (1.) Actually and completely justified before God in this world;
- (2.) Made partaker of all the benefits of that justification, even unto a blessed resurrection in
glory: "It is raised in glory", 1 Cor.15:43.
- (3.) The souls of the most will long before have enjoyed a blessed rest with God, absolutely
discharged and acquitted from all their labours and all their sins; there remains nothing but an
actual admission of the whole person into eternal glory. Wherefore this judgement can be no more
but declaratory, unto the glory of God, and the everlasting refreshment of them that have
believed. And without reducing of it unto a new justification, as it is nowhere called in the
Scripture, the ends of that solemn judgement,--in the manifestation of the wisdom and
righteousness of God, in appointing the way of salvation by Christ, as well as in giving of the law;
the public conviction of them by whom the law has been transgressed and the gospel despised; the
vindication of the righteousness, power, and wisdom of God in the rule of the world by his
providence, wherein, for the most part, his paths unto all in this life are in the deep, and his
footsteps are not known; the glory and honour of Jesus Christ, triumphing over all his enemies,
then fully made his footstool; and the glorious exaltation of grace in all that do believe, with
sundry other things of an alike tendency unto the ultimate manifestation of divine glory in the
creation and guidance of all things,--are sufficiently manifest.
And hence it appears how little force there is in that argument which some pretend to be of so
great weight in this cause. "As every one", they say, "shall be judged of God at the last day, in the
same way and manner or on the same grounds, is he justified of God in this life; but by works, and
not by faith alone, every one shall be judged at the last day: wherefore by works, and not by faith
alone, every one is justified before God in this life". For,
- It is nowhere said that we shall be judged at the last day "ex operibus"; but only that God will
render unto men "secundum opera". But God does not justify any in this life "secundum opera";
being justified freely by his grace, and not according to the works of righteousness which we have
done. And we are everywhere said to be justified in this life "ex fide", "per fidem", but nowhere
"propter fidem"; or, that God justifies us "secundum fidem", by faith, but not for our faith, nor
according unto our faith. And we are not to depart from the expressions of the Scripture, where
such a difference is constantly observed.
- It is somewhat strange that a man should be judged at the last day, and justified in this life,
just in the same way and manner,-- that is, with respect unto faith and works,--when the Scripture
does constantly ascribe our justification before God unto faith without works; and the judgment at
the last day is said to be according unto works, without any mention of faith.
- If justification and eternal judgment proceed absolutely on the same grounds, reasons, and
causes, then if men had not done what they shall be condemned for doing at the last day, they
should have been justified in this life; but many shall be condemned only for sins against the light
of nature, Rom.2:12, as never having the written law or gospel made known unto them:
wherefore unto such persons, to abstain from sins against the light of nature would be sufficient
unto their justification, without any knowledge of Christ or the gospel.
- This proposition,--that God pardons men their sins, gives then the adoption of children, with a
right unto the heavenly inheritance, according to their works,--is not only foreign to the gospel,
but contradictory unto it, and destructive of it, as contrary unto all express testimonies of the
Scripture, both in the Old Testament and the New, where these things are spoken of; but that God
judges all men, and renders unto all men, at the last judgment, according unto their works, is true,
and affirmed in the Scripture.
- In our justification in this life by faith, Christ is considered as our propitiation and advocate,
as he who has made atonement for sin, and brought in everlasting righteousness; but at the last
day, and in the last judgment, he is considered only as the judge.
- The end of God in our justification is the glory of his grace, Eph.1:6; but the end of God in
the last judgment is the glory of his remunerative righteousness, 2 Tim.4:8.
- The representation that is made of the final judgment, Matt.7 and 25, is only of the visible
church. And therein the plea of faith, as to the profession of it, is common unto all, and is equally
made by all. Upon that plea of faith, it is put unto the trial whether it were sincere, true faith or
no, or only that which was dead and barren. And this trial is made solely by the fruits and effects
of it; and otherwise, in the public declaration of things unto all, it cannot be made. Otherwise, the
faith whereby we are justified comes not into judgment at the last day. See John 5:24, with Mark
16:16.
SECTION VII
IMPUTATION {OF RIGHTEOUSNESS}, AND THE NATURE OF IT; WITH THE
IMPUTATION OF THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF CHRIST IN PARTICULAR
SECTION VII
IMPUTATION {OF RIGHTEOUSNESS}, AND THE NATURE OF IT, WITH THE
IMPUTATION OF THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF CHRIST IN PARTICULAR
Imputation, and the nature of it; with the imputation of the righteousness of Christ in
particular,
Imputation, and the nature of it--The first express record of justification determines it to be by
imputation, Gen.15:6--Reasons of it--The doctrine of imputation cleared by Paul; the occasion of
it--Maligned and opposed by many--Weight of the doctrine concerning imputation of
righteousness, on all hands acknowledged--Judgment of the Reformed churches herein,
particularly of the church of England- -By whom opposed, and on what grounds--Signification of
the word-- Difference between "reputare" and "imputare"--Imputation of two kinds
1. Of what was ours antecedently unto that imputation, whether good or evil--Instances in both
kinds--Nature of this imputation--The thing imputed by it, imputed for what it is, and nothing
else.
2. Of what is not ours antecedently unto that imputation, but is made so by it--General nature of
this imputation--Not judging of others to have done what they have not done--Several distinct
grounds and reasons of this imputation:
1. "Ex justitia";
--(1.) "Propter relationem foederalem;"
--(2.) "Propter relationem naturalem;"
2. "Ex voluntaria sponsione"--Instances, Philem.18; Gen.43:9--Voluntary sponsion, the ground of
the imputation of sin to Christ.
3. "Ex injuria", 1 Kings 1:21.
4. "Ex mera gratia," Rom. 4--Difference between the imputation of any works of ours, and of the
righteousness of God--Imputation of inherent righteousness is "ex justitia"--Inconsistency of it
with that which is "ex mera gratia," Rom.4--Agreement of both kinds of imputation--The true
nature of the imputation of righteousness unto justification explained--Imputation of the
righteousness of Christ--The thing itself imputed, not the effect of it; proved against the
Socinians.
THE first express record of the justification of any sinner is of Abraham. Others were
justified before him from the beginning, and there is that affirmed of them which sufficiently
evidences them so to have been; but this prerogative was reserved for the father of the faithful,
that his justification, and the express way and manner of it, should be first entered on the sacred
record. So it is, Gen.15:6, "He believed in the LORD, and it was counted unto him for
righteousness." "wayachsheveha",--it was "accounted" unto him, or "imputed" unto him, for
righteousness. "Elogisthe",--it was "counted, reckoned, imputed." And "it was not written for his
sake alone that it was imputed unto him, but for us also, unto whom it shall be imputed if we
believe," Rom.4:23,24. Wherefore, the first express declaration of the nature of justification in the
Scripture affirms it to be by imputation,--the imputation of somewhat unto righteousness; and this
[is] done in that place and instance which is recorded on purpose, as the precedent and example of
all those that shall be justified. As he was justified so are we, and no otherwise.
Under the New Testament there was a necessity of a more full and clear declaration of the
doctrine of it; for it is among the first and most principal parts of that heavenly mystery of truth
which was to be brought to light by the gospel. And, besides, there was from the first a strong and
dangerous opposition made unto it; for this matter of justification, the doctrine of it, and what
necessarily belongs thereunto, was that whereon the Jewish church broke off from God, refused
Christ and the gospel, perishing in their sins; as is expressly declared, Rom.9:31; 10:3,4. And, in
like manner, a dislike of it, an opposition unto it, ever was, and ever will be, a principle and cause
of the apostasy of any professing church from Christ and the gospel that falls under the power and
deceit of them; as it fell out afterwards in the churches of the Galatians. But in this state the
doctrine of justification was fully declared, stated, and vindicated, by the apostle Paul, in a
peculiar manner. And he does it especially by affirming and proving that we have the
righteousness whereby and wherewith we are justified by imputation, or, that our justification
consists in the non-imputation of sin, and the imputation of righteousness.
But yet, although the first-recorded instance of justification,-- and which was so recorded that it
might be an example, and represent the justification of all that should be justified unto the end of
the world,--is expressed by imputation and righteousness imputed, and the doctrine of it, in that
great case wherein the eternal welfare of the church of the Jews, or their ruin, was concerned, is
so expressed by the apostle; yet is it so fallen out in our days, that nothing in religion is more
maligned, more reproached, more despised, than the imputation of righteousness unto us, or an
imputed righteousness. "A putative righteousness, the shadow of a dream, a fancy, a mummery,
an imagination," say some among us. An opinion, "foeda, execranda, pernitiosa, detestanta", says
Socinus. And opposition arises unto it every day from great variety of principles; for those by
whom it is opposed and rejected can by no means agree what to set up in the place of it.
However, the weight and importance of this doctrine is on all hands acknowledged, whether it be
true or false. It is not a dispute about notions, terms, and speculations, wherein Christian practice
is little or not at all concerned (of which nature many are needlessly contended about); but such as
has an immediate influence into our whole present duty, with our eternal welfare or ruin. Those by
whom this imputation of righteousness is rejected, do affirm that the faith and doctrine of it do
overthrow the necessity of gospel obedience, of personal righteousness and good works, bringing
in antinomianism and libertinism in life. Hereon it must, of necessity, be destructive of salvation in
those who believe it, and conform their practice thereunto. And those, on the other hand, by
whom it is believed, seeing they judge it impossible that any man should be justified before God
any other way but by the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, do, accordingly, judge that
without it none can be saved. Hence a learned man of ]ate concludes his discourse concerning it,
"Hactenus de imputatione justitiae Christi; sine qua nemo unquam aut salvtus est, aut slvari
queat", Justificat. Paulin. cap. 8;--"Thus far of the imputation of the righteousness of Christ;
without which no man was ever saved, nor can any so be." They do not think nor judge that all
those are excluded from salvation who cannot apprehend, or do deny, the doctrine of the
imputation of the righteousness of Christ, as by them declared; but they judge that they are so
unto whom that righteousness is not really imputed: nor can they do otherwise, whilst they make
it the foundation of all their own acceptation with God and eternal salvation. These things greatly
differ. To believe the doctrine of it, or not to believe it, as thus or thus explained, is one thing; and
to enjoy the thing, or not enjoy it, is another. I no way doubt but that many men do receive more
grace from God than they understand or will own, and have a greater efficacy of it in them than
they will believe. Men may be really saved by that grace which doctrinally they do deny; and they
may be justified by the imputation of that righteousness which, in opinion, they deny to be
imputed: for the faith of it is included in that general assent which they give unto the truth of the
gospel, and such an adherence unto Christ may ensue thereon, as that their mistake of the way
whereby they are saved by him shall not defraud them of a real interest therein. And for my part, I
must say that notwithstanding all the disputes that I see and read about justification (some
whereof are full of offense and scandal), I do not believe but that the authors of them (if they be
not Socinians throughout, denying the whole merit and satisfaction of Christ) do really trust unto
the mediation of Christ for the pardon of their sins and acceptance with God, and not unto their
own works or obedience; nor will I believe the contrary, until they expressly declare it. Of the
objection, on the other hand, concerning the danger of the doctrine of the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ, in reference unto the necessity of holiness and works of righteousness, we
must treat afterwards.
The judgment of the Reformed churches herein is known unto all, and must be confessed, unless
we intend by vain cavils to increase and perpetuate contentions. Especially the church of England
is in her doctrine express as unto the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, both active and
passive, as it is usually distinguished. This has been of late so fully manifested out of her authentic
writings,--that is, the articles of religion, and books of homilies, and other writings publicly
authorized,--that it is altogether needless to give any farther demonstration of it. Those who
pretend themselves to be otherwise minded are such as I will not contend withal; for to what
purpose is it to dispute with men who will deny the sun to shine, when they cannot bear the heat
of its beams? Wherefore, in what I have to offer on this subject, I shall not in the least depart from
the ancient doctrine of the church of England; yea, I have no design but to declare and vindicate
it, as God shall enable.
There are, indeed, sundry differences among persons learned, sober, and orthodox (if that term
displease not), in the way and manner of the explication of the doctrine of justification by the
imputation of the righteousness of Christ, who yet all of them agree in the substance of it,--in all
those things wherein the grace of God, the honour of Christ, and the peace of the souls of men,
are principally concerned. As far as it is possible for me, I shall avoid the concerning of myself at
present in these differences; for unto what purpose is it to contend about them, whilst the
substance of the doctrine itself is openly opposed and rejected? Why should we debate about the
order and beautifying of the rooms in a house, whilst fire is set unto the whole? When that is well
quenched, we may return to the consideration of the best means for the disposal and use of the
several parts of it.
There are two grand parties by whom the doctrine of justification by the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ is opposed,-- namely, the Papists and the Socinians; but they proceed on
different principles, and unto different ends. The design of the one is to exalt their own merits; of
the other, to destroy the merit of Christ. But besides these, who trade in company, we have many
interlopers, who, coming in on their hand, do make bold to borrow from both as they see
occasion. We shall have to do with them all in our progress; not with the persons of any, nor the
way and manner of their expressing themselves, but the opinions of all of them, so far as they are
opposite unto the truth: for it is that which wise men despise, and good men bewail,--to see
persons pretending unto religion and piety, to cavil at expressions, to contend about words, to
endeavour the fastening of opinions on men which they own not, and thereon mutually to revile
one another, publishing all to the world as some great achievement or victory. This is not the way
to teach the truths of the gospel, nor to promote the edification of the church. But, in general, the
importance of the cause to be pleaded, the greatness of the opposition that is made unto the truth,
and the high concernment of the souls of believers to be rightly instructed in it, do call for a
renewed declaration and vindication of it. And what I shall attempt unto this purpose I do it under
this persuasion,--that the life and continuance of any church on the one hand, and its apostasy or
ruin on the other, do depend in an eminent manner on the preservation or rejection of the truth in
this article of religion; and, I shall add, as it has been professed, received, and believed in the
church of England in former days.
The first thing we are to consider is the meaning of these words, to impute, and imputation; for,
from a mere plain declaration hereof, it will appear that sundry things charged on a supposition of
the imputation we plead for are vain and groundless, or the charge itself is so.
"Chashav", the word first used to this purpose, signifies to think, to esteem, to judge, or to refer a
thing or matter unto any; to impute, or to be imputed, for good or evil. See Lev.7:18; 17:4, and
Ps.106:31. "Watechashev lo litsdakah"--"And it was counted, reckoned, imputed unto him for
righteousness;" to judge or esteem this or that good or evil to belong unto him, to be his. The
LXX express it by "logidzoo" and "logidzomai", as do the writers of the New Testament also; and
these are rendered by "reputare, imputare, acceptum ferre, tribuere, assignare, ascribere." But
there is a different signification among these words: in particular, to be imputed righteous, and to
have righteousness imputed, differ, as cause and effect; for that any may be reputed righteous,--
that is, be judged or esteemed so to be,-- there must be a real foundation of that reputation, or it
is a mistake, and not a right judgment; as a man may be reputed to be wise who is a fool, or
reputed to be rich who is a beggar. Wherefore, he that is reputed righteous must either have a
righteousness of his own, or another antecedently imputed unto him, as the foundation of that
reputation. Wherefore, to impute righteousness unto one that has none of his own, is not to
repute him to be righteous who is indeed unrighteous; but it is to communicate a righteousness
unto him, that he may rightly and justly be esteemed, judged, or reputed righteous.
"Imputare" is a word that the Latin tongue owns in the sense wherein it is used by divines.
"Optime de pessimis meruisti, ad quos pervenerit incorrupta rerum fides, magno authori suo
imputate", Senec. ad Mart. And Plin., lib. 18 cap. 1, in his apology for the earth, our common
parent, "Nostris eam criminibus urgemus, culpamque nostram illi imputamus".
In their sense, to impute any thing unto another is, if it be evil, to charge it on him, to burden him
with it: so says Pliny, "We impute our own faults to the earth, or charge them upon it." If it be
good, it is to ascribe it unto him as his own, whether originally it were so or no: "Magno authori
imputate". Vasquez, in Thom. 22, tom. 2: disp. 132, attempts the sense of the word, but
confounds it with "reputare:" "Imputare aut reputare quidquam alicui, est idem atque inter ea
quae sunt ipsius, et ad eum pertinent, connumerare et recensere". This is "reputare" properly;
"imputare" includes an act antecedent unto this accounting or esteeming a thing to belong unto
any person.
But whereas that may be imputed unto us which is really our own antecedently unto that
imputation, the word must needs have a double sense, as it has in the instances given out of Latin
authors now mentioned. And,
- To impute unto us that which was really ours antecedently unto that imputation, includes two
things in it:
- (1.) An acknowledgment or judgment that the thing so imputed is really and truly ours, or in
us. He that imputes wisdom or learning unto any man does, in the first place, acknowledge him to
be wise or learned.
- (2.) A dealing with them according unto it, whether it be good or evil. So when, upon a trial,
a man is acquitted because he is found righteous; first, he is judged and esteemed righteous, and
then dealt with as a righteous person,--his righteousness is imputed unto him. See this
exemplified, Gen.30:33.
- To impute unto us that which is not our own antecedently unto that imputation, includes also
in it two things:
- (1.) A grant or donation of the thing itself unto us, to be ours, on some just ground and
foundation; for a thing must be made ours before we can justly be dealt withal according unto
what is required on the account of it.
- (2.) A will of dealing with us, or an actual dealing with us, according unto that which is so
made ours; for in this matter whereof we treat, the most holy and righteous God does not justify
any,--that is, absolve them from sin, pronounce them righteous, and thereon grant unto them right
and title unto eternal life,--but upon the interveniency of a true and complete righteousness, truly
and completely made the righteousness of them that are to be justified in order of nature
antecedently unto their justification.
But these things will be yet made more clear by instances; and it is necessary they should be
so.
- (1.) There is an imputation unto us of that which is really our own, inherent in us, performed
by us, antecedently unto that imputation, and this whether it be evil or good. The rule and nature
hereof is given and expressed, Ezek.18:20, "The righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him,
and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him." Instances we have of both sorts. First, in the
imputation of sin when the person guilty of it is so judged and reckoned a sinner as to be dealt
withal accordingly. This imputation Shimei deprecated, 2 Sam.19:19. He said unto the king, "Let
not my lord impute iniquity unto me,"--"'al-yachashav-li 'adoni 'awon", the word used in the
expression of the imputation of righteousness, Gen.15:6,--"neither do thou remember that which
thy servant did perversely: for thy servant does know that I have sinned." He was guilty, and
acknowledged his guilt; but deprecates the imputation of it in such a sentence concerning him as
his sin deserved. So Stephen deprecated the imputation of sin unto them that stoned him, whereof
they were really guilty, Acts 7:60, "Lay not this sin to their charge;"--impute it not unto them: as,
on the other side, Zechariah the son of Jehoiada, who died in the same cause and the same kind of
death with Stephen, prayed that the sin of those which slew him might be charged on them, 2
Chron.24:22. Wherefore to impute sin is to lay it unto the charge of any, and to deal with them
according unto its desert.
To impute that which is good unto any, is to judge and acknowledge it so to be theirs, and
thereon to deal with them in whom it is according unto its respect unto the law of God. The
"righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him." So Jacob provided that his "righteousness
should answer for him," Gen.30:33. And we have an instance of it in God's dealing with men,
Ps.106:30,31, "Then stood up Phinehas and executed judgment; and that was counted unto him
for righteousness." Notwithstanding it seemed that he had not sufficient warrant for what he did,
yet God, that knew his heart, and what guidance of his own Spirit he was under, approved his act
as righteous, and gave him a reward testifying that approbation.
Concerning this imputation it must be observed, that whatever is our own antecedently thereunto,
which is an act of God thereon, can never be imputed unto us for any thing more or less than what
it is really in itself. For this imputation consists of two parts, or two things concur thereunto:--
First, A judgment of the thing to be ours, to be in us, or to belong unto us. Secondly, A will of
dealing with us, or an actual dealing with us, according unto it. Wherefore, in the imputation of
any thing unto us which is ours, God esteems it not to be other than it is. He does not esteem that
to be a perfect righteousness which is imperfect; so to do, might argue either a mistake of the
thing judged on, or perverseness in the judgment itself upon it. Wherefore, if, as some say, our
own faith and obedience are imputed unto us for righteousness, seeing they are imperfect, they
must be imputed unto us for an imperfect righteousness, and not for that which is perfect; for that
judgment of God which is according unto truth is in this imputation. And the imputation of an
imperfect righteousness unto us, esteeming it only as such, will stand us in little stead in this
matter. And the acceptilation which some plead (traducing a fiction in human laws to interpret the
mystery of the gospel) does not only overthrow all imputation, but the satisfaction and merit of
Christ also. And it must be observed, that this imputation is a mere act of justice, without any
mixture of grace; as the apostle declares, Rom.11:6. For it consists of these two parts:--First, An
acknowledging and judging that to be in us which is truly so; Secondly, A will of dealing with us
according unto it: both which are acts of justice.
- (2.) The imputation unto us of that which is not our own antecedently unto that imputation,
at least not in the same manner as it is afterwards, is various also, as unto the grounds and causes
that it proceeds upon. Only it must be observed, that no imputation of this kind is to account them
unto whom anything is imputed to have done the things themselves which are imputed unto them.
That were not to impute, but to err in judgment, and, indeed, utterly to overthrow the whole
nature of gracious imputation. But it is to make that to be ours by imputation which was not ours
before, unto all ends and purposes whereunto it would have served if it had been our own without
any such imputation.
It is therefore a manifest mistake of their own which some make the ground of a charge on the
doctrine of imputation. For they say, "If our sins were imputed unto Christ, then must he be
esteemed to have done what we have done amiss, and so be the greatest sinner that ever was;"
and on the other side, "If his righteousness be imputed unto us, then are we esteemed to have
done what he did, and so to stand in no need of the pardon of sin." But this is contrary unto the
nature of imputation, which proceeds on no such judgment; but, on the contrary, that we
ourselves have done nothing of what is imputed unto us, nor Christ any thing of what was
imputed unto him.
To declare more distinctly the nature of this imputation, I shall consider the several kinds of it, or
rather the several grounds whence it proceeds. For this imputation unto us of what is not our own
antecedent unto that imputation, may be either,
1. "Ex justitia;" or,
2. "Ex voluntaria sponsione;" or,
- 3. "Ex injuria; or,
- 4. "Ex gratia;"--all which shall be exemplified. I do not place them thus distinctly, as if they
might not some of them concur in the same imputation, which I shall manifest that they do; but I
shall refer the several kinds of imputation unto that which is the next cause of every one.
- Things that are not our own originally, personally, inherently, may yet be imputed unto us "ex
justitia," by the rule of righteousness. And this may be done upon a double relation unto those
whose they are:
(1.) Federal.
(2.) Natural.
- (1.) Things done by one may he imputed unto others, "propter relationem foederalem",--
because of a covenant relation between them. So the sin of Adam was and is imputed unto all his
posterity; as we shall afterward more fully declare. And the ground hereof is that we stood all in
the same covenant with him, who was our head and representative therein. The corruption and
depravation of nature which we derive from Adam is imputed unto us with the first kind, of
imputation,--namely, of that which is ours antecedently unto that imputation: but his actual sin is
imputed unto us as that which becomes ours by that imputation; which before it was not. Hence,
says Bellarmine himself, "Peccatum Adami ita posteris omnibus imputatur, ac si omnes idem
peccatum patravissent", De Amiss. Grat., lib.4 cap.10;--"The sin of Adam is so imputed unto all
his posterity, as if they had all committed the same sin." And he gives us herein the true nature of
imputation, which he fiercely disputes against in his books on justification. For the imputation of
that sin unto us, as if we had committed it, which he acknowledges, includes both a transcription
of that sin unto us, and a dealing with us as if we had committed it; which is the doctrine of the
apostle, Rom.5.
- (2) There is an imputation of sin unto others, "ex justitia propter relationem naturalem",--on
the account of a natural relation between them and those who had actually contracted the guilt of
it. But this is so only with respect unto some outward, temporary effects of it. So God speaks
concerning the children of the rebellious Israelites in the wilderness, "Your children shall wander
in the wilderness forty years, and bear your whoredoms," Numb.14:33;- -"Your sin shall be so far
imputed unto your children, because of their relation unto you, and your interest in them, as that
they shall suffer for them in an afflictive condition in the wilderness." And this was just because of
the relation between them; as the same procedure of divine justice is frequently declared in other
places of the Scripture. So, where there is a due foundation of it, imputation is an act of
justice.
- Imputation may justly ensue "ex voluntaria sponsione,"--when one freely and willingly
undertakes to answer for another. An illustrious instance hereof we have in that passage of the
apostle unto Philemon in the behalf of Onesimus, verse 18, "If he has wronged thee, or ows thee
ought" ("touto emoi ellogei"), "impute it unto me,--put it on my account." He supposes that
Philemon might have a double action against Onesimus.
- (1.) "Injuriarum," of wrongs: "Ei de ti edikese se"--If he has dealt unjustly with thee, or by
thee, if he has so wronged thee as to render himself obnoxious unto punishment."
- (2.) "Damni", or of loss: "E ofeilei"--"If he ows thee ought, be a debtor unto thee;" which
made him liable to payment or restitution. In this state the apostle interposes himself by a
voluntary sponsion, to undertake for Onesimus: "I Paul have written it with my own hand," "Egoo
apotisoo"--"I Paul will answer for the whole." And this he did by the transcription of both the
debts of Onesimus unto himself; for the crime was of that nature as might be taken away by
compurgation, being not capital. And the imputation of them unto him was made just by his
voluntary undertaking of them. "Account me," says he, "the person that has done these things;
and I will make satisfaction, so that nothing be charged on Onesimus." So Judas voluntarily
undertook unto Jacob for the safety of Benjamin, and obliged himself unto perpetual guilt in case
of failure, Gen.43:9, "I will be surety for him; of my hand shalt thou require him: if I bring him not
unto thee, and set him before thee," "wechata'ti lecha kol-hayamim",--"I will sin," or "be a sinner
before thee always,"--be guilty, and, as we say, bear the blame. So he expresses himself again unto
Joseph, chap.44:32. It seems this is the nature and office of a surety; what he undertakes for is
justly to be required at his hand, as if he had been originally and personally concerned in it. And
this voluntary sponsion was one ground of the imputation of our sin unto Christ. He took on him
the person of the whole church that had sinned, to answer for what they had done against God
and the law. Hence that imputation was "fundamentaliter ex compacto, ex voluntaria sponsione";-
-it had its foundation in his voluntary undertaking. But, on supposition hereof, it was actually "ex
justitia;" it being righteous that he should answer for it, and make good what he had so
undertaken, the glory of God's righteousness and holiness being greatly concerned herein.
- There is an imputation "ex injuria," when that is laid unto the charge of any whereof he is not
guilty: so Bathsheba says unto David, "It shall come to pass that when my lord the king shall sleep
with his fathers, that I and my son Solomon shall be 'chatta'im'" (sinners), 1 Kings 1:21;--"shall be
dealt with as offenders, as guilty persons; have sin imputed unto us, on one pretence or other,
unto our destruction. We shall be sinners,--be esteemed so, and be dealt withal accordingly." And
we may see that, in the phrase of the Scripture, the denomination of sinners follows the
imputation as well as the inhesion of sin; which will give light unto that place of the apostle, "He
was made sin for us," 2 Cor.5:21. This kind of imputation has no place in the judgment of God. It
is far from him that the righteous should be as the wicked.
- There is an imputation "ex mera gratia," of mere grace and favor. And this is, when that which
antecedently unto this imputation was no way ours, not inherent in us, not performed by us, which
we had no right nor title unto, is granted unto us, made ours, so as that we are judged of and dealt
with according unto it. This is that imputation, in both branches of it,--negative in the non-
imputation of sin, and positive in the imputation of righteousness,- -which the apostle so
vehemently pleads for, and so frequently asserts, Rom. 4; for he both affirms the thing itself, and
declares that it is of mere grace, without respect unto any thing within ourselves. And if this kind
of imputation cannot be fully exemplified in any other instance but this alone whereof we treat, it
is because the foundation of it, in the mediation of Christ, is singular, and that which there is
nothing to parallel in any other case among men.
From what has been discoursed concerning the nature and grounds of imputation, sundry things
are made evident, which contribute much light unto the truth which we plead for, at least unto the
right understanding and stating of the matter under debate. As,
- The difference is plain between the imputation of any works of our own unto us, and the
imputation of the righteousness of faith without works. For the imputation of works unto us, be
they what they will, be it faith itself as a work of obedience in us, is the imputation of that which
was ours before such imputation; but the imputation of the righteousness of faith, or the
righteousness of God which is by faith, is the imputation of that which is made ours by virtue of
that imputation. And these two imputations differ in their whole kind. The one is a judging of that
to be in us which indeed is so, and is ours before that judgment be passed concerning it; the other
is a communication of that unto us which before was not ours. And no man can make sense of the
apostle's discourse,-- that is, he cannot understand any thing of it,--if he acknowledge not that the
righteousness he treats of is made ours by imputation, and was not ours antecedently
thereunto.
- The imputation of works, of what sort soever they be, of faith itself as a work, and all the
obedience of faith, is "ex justitia," and not "ex gratia," of right, and not of grace. However the
bestowing of faith on us, and the working of obedience in us, may be of grace, yet the imputation
of them unto us, as in us, and as ours, is an act of justice; for this imputation, as was showed, is
nothing but a judgment that such and such things are in us, or are ours, which truly and really are
so, with a treating of us according unto them. This is an act of justice, as it appears in the
description given of that imputation; but the imputation of righteousness, mentioned by the
apostle, is as unto us "ex mera gratia", of mere grace, as he fully declares,--"doorean tei chariti
outou". And, moreover, he declares that these two sorts of imputation are inconsistent and not
capable of any composition, so that any thing should be partly of the one, and partly of the other,
Rom.9:6, "If by grace, then it is no more of works; otherwise grace is no more grace: but if it be
of works, then it is no more grace; otherwise work is no more work." For instance, if faith itself
as a work of ours be imputed unto us, it being ours antecedently unto that imputation, it is but an
acknowledgment of it to be in us and ours, with an ascription of it unto us for what it is; for the
ascription of any thing unto us for what it is not, is not imputation, but mistake. But this is an
imputation "ex justitia," of works; and so that which is of mere grace can have no place, by the
apostle's rule. So the imputation unto us of what is in us is exclusive of grace, in the apostle's
sense. And on the other hand, if the righteousness of Christ be imputed unto us, it must be "ex
mera gratia," of mere grace; for that is imputed unto us which was not ours antecedently unto that
imputation, and so is communicated unto us thereby. And here is no place for works, nor for any
pretence of them. In the one way, the foundation of imputation is in ourselves; in the other, it is in
another; which are irreconcilable.
- Herein both these kinds of imputation do agree,--namely, in that whatever is imputed unto us,
it is imputed for what it is, and not for what it is not. If it be a perfect righteousness that is
imputed unto us, so it is esteemed and judged to be; and accordingly are we to be dealt withal,
even as those who have a perfect righteousness; and if that which is imputed as righteousness
unto us be imperfect, or imperfectly so, then as such must it be judged when it is imputed; and we
must be dealt withal as those which have such an imperfect righteousness, and no otherwise. And
therefore, whereas our inherent righteousness is imperfect (they are to be pitied or despised, not
to be contended withal, that are otherwise minded), if that be imputed unto us, we cannot be
accepted on the account thereof as perfectly righteous, without an error in judgment.
- Hence the true nature of that imputation which we plead for (which so many cannot or will
not understand) is manifest, and that both negatively and positively; for,
- (1.) NegativelyFirst, It is not a judging or esteeming of them to be righteous who truly and really are
not so. Such a judgment is not reducible unto any of the grounds of imputation before mentioned.
It has the nature of that which is "ex injuria," or a false charge, only it differs materially from it;
for that respects evil, this that which is good. And therefore the glamours of the Papists and
others are mere effects of ignorance or malice, wherein they cry out "ad ravim," [till they are
hoarse,] that we affirm God to esteem them to be righteous who are wicked, sinful, and polluted.
But this falls heavily on them who maintain that we are justified before God by our own inherent
righteousness: for then a man is judged righteous who indeed is not so; for he who is not perfectly
righteous cannot be righteous in the sight of God unto justification.
Secondly, It is not a naked pronunciation or declaration of any one to be righteous,
without a just and sufficient foundation for the judgement of God declared therein. God declares
no man to be righteous but him who is so; the whole question being how he comes so to be.
Thirdly, It is not the transmission or transfusion of the righteousness of another into
them that are to be justified, that they should become perfectly and inherently righteous thereby;
for it is impossible that the righteousness of one should be transfused into another, to become his
subjectively and inherently: but it is a great mistake, on the other hand, to say that therefore the
righteousness of one can no way be made the righteousness of another; which is to deny all
imputation.
Wherefore,
- (2.) Positively
This imputation is an act of God "ex mera gratia," of his mere love and grace; whereby, on the
consideration of the mediation of Christ, he makes an effectual grant and donation of a true, real,
perfect righteousness, even that of Christ himself unto all that do believe; and accounting it as
theirs, on his own gracious act, both absolves them from sin and grants them right and title unto
eternal life. Hence,
- In this imputation, the thing itself is first imputed unto us, and not any of the effects of it, but
they are made ours by virtue of that imputation. To say that the righteousness of Christ,--that is,
his obedience and sufferings,--are imputed unto us only as unto their effects, is to say that we
have the benefit of them, and no more; but imputation itself is denied. So say the Socinians; but
they know well enough, and ingenuously grant, that they overthrow all true, real imputation
thereby. "Nec enim ut per Christi justitiam justificemur, opus est ut illius justitia, nostra fiat
justitia; sed sufficit ut Christi justitia sit causa nostrae justificationis; et hactenus possumus tibi
concedere, Christi justitiam esse nostram justitiam, quatenus nostrum in bonum justitiamque
redundat; verum tu proprie nostram, id est, nobis attributam ascriptamque intelligis", says
Schlichtingius, Disp. pro Socin. ad Meisner. p. 250. And it is not pleasing to see some among
ourselves with so great confidence take up the sense and words of these men in their disputations
against the Protestant doctrine in this cause; that is, the doctrine of the church of
England,.
That the righteousness of Christ is imputed unto us as unto its effects, has this sound sense in it,--
namely, that the effects of it are made ours by reason of that imputation. It is so imputed, so
reckoned unto us of God, as that he really communicates all the effects of it unto us. But to say
the righteousness of Christ is not imputed unto us, only its effects are so, is really to overthrow all
imputation; for (as we shall see) the effects of the righteousness of Christ cannot be said properly
to be imputed unto us; and if his righteousness itself be not so, imputation has no place herein, nor
can it be understood why the apostle should so frequently assert it as he does, Rom.4. And
therefore the Socinians, who expressly oppose the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, and
plead for a participation of its effects or benefits only, do wisely deny any such kind of
righteousness of Christ,--namely, of satisfaction and merit (or that the righteousness of Christ, as
wrought by him, was either satisfactory or meritorious),--as alone may be imputed unto us. For it
will readily be granted, that what alone they allow the righteousness of Christ to consist in cannot
be imputed unto us, whatever benefit we may have by it. But I do not understand how those who
grant the righteousness of Christ to consist principally in his satisfaction for us, or in our stead,
can conceive of an imputation of the effects thereof unto us, without an imputation of the thing
itself; seeing it is for that, as made ours, that we partake of the benefits of it. But, from the
description of imputation and the instances of it, it appears that there can be no imputation of any
thing unless the thing itself be imputed; nor any participation of the effects of any thing but what is
grounded on the imputation of the thing itself. Wherefore, in our particular case, no imputation of
the righteousness of Christ is allowed, unless we grant itself to be imputed; nor can we have any
participation of the effects of it but on the supposition and foundation of that imputation. The
impertinent cavils that some of late have collected from the Papists and Socinians,--that if it be so,
then are we as righteous as Christ himself, that we have redeemed the world and satisfied for the
sins of others, that the pardon of sin is impossible and personal righteousness needless,-- shall
afterward be spoken unto, so far as they deserve.
All that we aim to demonstrate is, only, that either the righteousness of Christ itself is imputed
unto us, or there is no imputation in the matter of our justification; which, whether there be or no,
is another question, afterward to be spoken unto. For, as was said, the effects of the righteousness
of Christ cannot be said properly to be imputed unto us. For instance, pardon of sin is a great
effect of the righteousness of Christ. Our sins are pardoned on the account thereof. God for
Christ's sake, forgives us all our sins. But the pardon of sin cannot be said to be imputed unto us,
nor is so. Adoption, justification, peace with God, all grace and glory, are effects of the
righteousness of Christ; but that these things are not imputed unto us, nor can be so, is evident
from their nature. But we are made partakers of them all upon the account of the imputation of
the righteousness of Christ unto us, and no otherwise.
Thus much may suffice to be spoken of the nature of imputation of the righteousness of Christ;
the grounds, reasons, and causes whereof, we shall in the next place inquire into. And I doubt not
but we shall find, in our inquiry, that it is no such figment as some, ignorant of these things, do
imagine; but, on the contrary, an important truth immixed with the most fundamental principles of
the mystery of the gospel, and inseparable from the grace of God in Christ Jesus.
END of SECTION 6 and SECTION 7
RETURN TO
| CONTENTS & PREFACE & TO THE READER |
| General Considerations PART 1, 2, 3 |
| General Considerations PART 4, 5 |
| General Considerations PART 6, 7, 8 |
| Main Text - SECTION I |
| Main Text - SECTION II |
| Main Text - SECTION III|
| Main Text - SECTION IV |
| Main Text - SECTION V |
GO TO | Main Text - SECTION VIII |
| Main Text - SECTION IX, X |
| Main Text - SECTION XI, XII |
| Main Text - SECTION XIII, XIV, XV, XVI, XVII |
| Main Text - SECTION XVIII, Part 1 |
| Main Text - SECTION XVIII, Part 2 |
| Main Text - SECTION XIX |
| Main Text - SECTION XX |
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