Romans 3:19-28 The Church exists
for one purpose and that is to clearly teach the world the way of
salvation: that we are saved by God’s
grace through faith in Jesus Christ. And
the church of Luther’s day was dead wrong about this one thing that truly
matters eternally because they taught that salvation was found not only in
Christ—but also in what we do.
On October 31,
1517 Luther posted 95 Theses on the church door at Wittenberg that challenged this false
doctrine-- and that act of his confessional courage began the Reformation of
the church through the restoration of the pure Gospel of Jesus Christ.
Each year on
Reformation Sunday we remember with thanksgiving a man who knew the truth about
the Gospel of Jesus Christ and restored that truth to the church-- and we give
thanks for our Lutheran Church because it still clearly teaches the one thing
needful: that we are right in God’s
sight through faith in Jesus. The Bible
says:
We know that whatever
the law says it speaks to those who are under the law, so that every mouth may
be stopped, and the whole world may be held accountable to God. For by works of the law no human being
will be justified in his sight, since through the law comes knowledge of
sin.
In the church of Luther’s
day—the fundamental truth of God’s Word regarding sin and grace and the way of
salvation (the very heart of Christianity)-- had been lost. Monasticism and prayers to the saints and
indulgences—as wrong as they were and still are—were only symptoms of something
much worse. The real problem went much
deeper. People were taught that their works could merit salvation.
God’s Word teaches
just the opposite. The Bible says that “every mouth is stopped” by the
law—that the “whole world” is
accountable to God—and that by the works of the law (that is by what we do) no human being will be justified in God’s
sight. Far from leading to salvation
as the church of Luther’s day taught—the law leads to our condemnation because
it reveals the depth of our sinfulness.
Each Sunday in the
Lutheran Church the Law is still preached and taught-- not so that we can
justify ourselves by what we do—but so that we can see our great need for a
salvation that lies outside of ourselves—a salvation that must be given to us
as a gift.
Because the poor righteousness
of our best deeds- and the perfect righteousness of God- are so far removed
from one another, we cannot bridge that gulf on our own. Someone else must make a way for us to God. Paul writes:
But now the
righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the
Law and the Prophets bear witness to it— the righteousness of God through faith
in Jesus Christ for all who believe.
The
“righteousness of God” was a phrase that tormented Luther. He knew that if righteousness like God’s was what
was required of him for salvation, he was lost forever. No matter how hard he tried he could never
measure up to God’s standard of holiness.
But when he came
to this verse about there being a
righteousness of God APART from the law--his life was changed! He discovered that the righteousness that God
demanded from him in the Law—was also the righteousness that God gave to him as
a free gift through faith in Jesus-and he found peace with God.
This Good News was
not just something that one lone monk came up with—in fact, it was not a new
teaching at all--but it was the teaching of all of Holy Scripture—New Testament
and Old. It wasn’t just found in the
Pauline epistles, it was found in the law and prophets as well. It is the central message of the Bible.
From the beginning
in Genesis to the end in Revelation, the Bible tells just one story—and that is
the story of God’s gracious love for us and desire to save us by giving us his
righteousness as a gift. Paul writes
that:
There is no
distinction: for all have sinned
and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified by his grace as a
gift,
Just
as surely as God’s guilty sentence falls upon us all through the condemnation
of the Law-- so also does God’s justification apply to us all through the Gospel.
Now, to justify
means to declare someone righteous. And
that is what God has done for us. But
how did God do that? Did he turn his
eyes from our sins? NO! Did he lower his standard for our holiness so
that we could meet it by our works? NO!
Instead, HE has fully and finally dealt with our
sin in his Son—laying our sins upon his Son.
HE has punished his Son in
our place. And HE has forgiven us and declared us right in his sight. The Bible says that HE has done that:
through the
redemption that is in Christ Jesus, whom God put forward as a propitiation
by his blood
We
don’t hear that word “propitiation”
very much outside of the Bible. In fact,
it is not even a very common word in the Bible.
It means that the bloody sacrifice of Jesus upon the cross has taken
away God’s wrath over our sins. Other English
translations say that Christ was put forward as the atoning sacrifice that has brought God and mankind back together. And that’s a good translation too.
But the actual
Greek word that we translate as propitiation
or atoning sacrifice was the same
word used in the Greek translation of the Old Testament for the mercy seat on
the Ark of the Covenant where once a year the high priest would take the blood
of the sacrifice and lay his hands upon the mercy seat and so atone for the
sins of Israel.
No matter how this
important biblical word is translated: propitiation,
atoning sacrifice, or mercy seat--the picture is the same: that Jesus’ bloody sacrifice on the cross was
offered up for us and has reconciled us to God.
Paul calls Jesus’ blood
our redemption because in the ancient
world, that word described the price that would have been paid to set free a
slave or prisoner of war.
That’s what God
has done for us: the blood of Jesus was
the price that was paid to set us free from the condemnation of the law that our
sins deserve. It was the perfect
offering that removed God’s wrath from us!
It was the sacrifice that has reconciled God to us! And it is the reason that God has declared us
“not guilty” in Christ!
But it is
critically important for us to remember that-- while God has done this for us—the
Bible also teaches that Christ’s atoning, forgiving, reconciling work must “be received by faith” by us, personally
and individually, if we are to be saved.
Nowhere does the
Bible teach that all people will be saved irrespective of faith in Jesus. In fact, the Bible teaches just the
opposite: that while Christ’s sacrifice
was for all people, reconciling God to mankind and justifying the world, each
person must believe in Jesus and receive that gift in faith if they are to be
saved.
And that is why we
are so grateful for Martin Luther and the other reformers—it is why we set
aside this day to thank God for the Reformation of the church—because there was
a time when the Gospel of salvation in Christ had become so obscured by false
teaching and false practice that it was nearly impossible for people to come to
a knowledge of the truth and be saved.
It is only in the
preaching of Christ crucified for the sins of the world that people can be
saved and come to a knowledge of the truth.
It is only at the cross that people can come to know God as he truly
desires to be known: holy and righteous
to be sure—but also merciful and forgiving.
Paul says that Christ’s sacrifice on the cross:
…was to show God's
righteousness, because in his divine forbearance he had passed over former
sins. It was to show his righteousness
at the present time, so that he might be just and the justifier of the one
who has faith in Jesus.
And
so what does Paul mean when he says that “in
his divine forbearance God has passed over the former sins”? After all, God sent the flood- and he
destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah -and he raised up the Egyptians and
Assyrians and Babylonians to chastise his people—terrible temporal punishments
indeed!
But as terrible as
those chastisements were, it is only in the death of the sinless Son of God
that we see what our sin deserves from God.
When Jesus cried out on the cross “My
God, my God why have you forsaken me?” that was the cry of every sinner
separated from God—except that Jesus suffered it for us—in our place—so that we
will never be forsaken by God in life or in death.
That dark Good
Friday afternoon was the “present time”
of which Paul writes when God showed his righteousness: both in his justice—but also in his mercy--for
the death of God’s own Son on the cross was not only the fullness of his wrath--
but it was also the fullness of his grace and mercy.
Through faith in
Jesus Christ, we can be confident that we are right in God’s sight and innocent
of all wrongdoing. What our works could
never do in bringing us to God—God has done for us in his Son Jesus Christ—and
so there is nothing left but to receive God’s gift of salvation in humble faith
and thanksgiving. Paul writes:
Then what becomes of
our boasting? It is excluded. By what kind of law? By a law of works? No, but
by the law of faith. For we hold that
one is justified by faith apart from works of the law.
The
Good News for us today on this Reformation Sunday is the same as it was for
Martin Luther—that while we cannot work our way to God, God has come to us in
his Son Jesus Christ and brought us to himself and made us his children.
As members of the
Lutheran Church we are blessed to be a part of that apostolic “we” of Christ and the apostles and the
church fathers and the blessed reformers who continue to believe that one is justified by faith apart from works
of the law. There is no boastful
pride in this for us because we know that it is only by God’s grace that we
continue to believe the Gospel and proclaim that Gospel to the world.
But knowing the
Gospel of Jesus -and having this heritage of the true faith- also lays a
responsibility upon our shoulders to do all within our power to make sure that
there will always be a church that clearly and courageously proclaims that we
are justified by God’s grace and right in Good’s sight through faith in Jesus.
To this holy end,
may God keep us steadfast in his Word!
Amen.
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