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Christ, Our Righteousness by Octavius Winslow
"Behold, the days come, says the Lord, that I will raise
unto David a righteous Branch, and a King shall reign and prosper, and shall
execute judgment and justice in the earth. In his days Judah shall be saved,
and Israel shall dwell safely: and this is his name whereby he shall be
called, the Lord Our Righteousness." Jeremiah 23:5-6
"For the time is coming," says the Lord, "when I will
place a righteous Branch on King David's throne. He will be a King who rules
with wisdom. He will do what is just and right throughout the land. And this
is his name: 'The Lord Is Our Righteousness.' In that day Judah will
be saved, and Israel will live in safety." Jeremiah 23:5-6
There is but one being to whom this remarkable prophecy
can properly apply. But one has ever appeared on the earth to fulfil it. And
if no other ever appears, then it strictly follows that either that one is
He, or else this prophecy shall never be fulfilled. We address this
argument, in the outset of our present exposition, with confidence to the
intelligent Jew, to the candid Gentile, and to all who believe prophecy to
be the Word of God; and, as such, must sooner or later be literally and
inevitably fulfilled. All the expressions of this prophecy refer to
Christ, the Messiah. In Him and by Him it has received its full,
personal accomplishment; and by no torture of criticism, ingenuity of
argument, or sophistry of reasoning can it be properly interpreted of any
other than Jesus of Nazareth. Let us group and examine briefly the several
points in the description.
He was to be of the lineage of David. This was
literally so. Christ was born of a virgin, "of the house and lineage of
David." He was to be righteous. To Christ this particular exactly and
exclusively applies. He was holy, the holy One; "He did no sin,
neither was deceit found in His mouth." He was "holy, harmless, undefiled,
and separate from sinners;" and when tried by Satan- who, had there been
anything in Christ congenial to his nature, would have discovered and
proclaimed it- he found nothing in Him. He was to be "a King" This
also belonged to Christ. He was "king of the Jews." He disguised but never
ignored His regal character. When interrogated by Pontius Pilate, "Are you a
king, then?" He affirmatively replied, "You say that I am a king. To this
end was I born- and for this end came I into the world, that I should bear
witness unto the truth." Deny the kingship of Christ in His own proper
person, and you render ambiguous and unintelligible a great portion of the
New Testament writings. It is predicted in this prophecy that He should
"reign and prosper." Spiritually this was fulfilled in Christ when upon
earth; but there awaits a literal and universal fulfilment, when He shall
come in the glory of His kingdom, and take to Him His great power and reign.
He now reigns on the throne with His Father, and will so reign until His
enemies be made His footstool.
It is said that He should "prosper." This He does in the
progress of His truth and in the extension of His kingdom, going forth by
His Spirit with the gospel conquering and to conquer; in subduing His
enemies and calling in His saints, the pleasure of the Lord prospers in His
hands. Moreover, He was to "execute justice and judgment on the earth." This
He did in the administration of His laws, and in defending His people from
their enemies, and in "rendering unto Caesar the things that were Caesar's,
and unto God the things that were God's." In His reign it is predicted that
"Judah shall be saved, and Israel shall dwell safely." So shall it be
with all the elect of God. All shall believe in and confess Him. They
shall be saved from the guilt and power of their sins; from the law, its
curse and condemnation; from all their enemies, and from the wrath which is
to come. And beneath this victorious standard, and surrounded by Him as with
a wall of fire, His Church shall dwell safely, the gates of hell unable to
prevail against it.
In view of this spiritual and literal exposition
of these several particulars of the prophecy, I again confidently challenge-
Has any individual ever lived, either before or since the days of Christ, in
this or in any land, other than Christ Himself, to whom this description
could apply; or, applying it to whom, would not be absolute and unmitigated
blasphemy! But we are now conducted in the course of our rapid examination
to the very gist of the whole passage- the title which it
ascribes to Christ. "And this is the name by which He
shall be called, the Lord Our Righteousness." In endeavoring to open up this
title of our Lord, we shall show in what sense Christ is our righteousness-
how His righteousness becomes ours- and then the blessings which flow from
its possession.
IN WHAT SENSE CHRIST IS OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS- This title
of our Lord at once points to His essential dignity as God. The construction
is remarkable. The prophet does not designate Him as the righteous One,
using the concrete, but righteousness itself, using the abstract
term. Thus God is said not to be loving, but love- the abstract form in both
texts is thus employed to show that these perfections- righteousness and
love- are essentially and absolutely God's. Would it not be a fraudulent
invasion of the divine dignity, a robbing God of His honor, to have
denominated a mere creature, were he the holiest and purest even of the
species, abstract and essential righteousness? Could this title be grounded
in anything but essential Deity? A mere creature may be righteous through
the possession of a righteousness imputed, a righteousness imparted, a
righteousness given.
Every act of human obedience must necessarily partake of
the moral taint of the being by whom it is offered. Just as under the law
the touch of the leper rendered ceremonially unclean the person or the thing
he came in contact with, so everything to which sinful man puts his hand
must partake of the taint of his sinful and corrupt nature. As water
cannot rise above its level, so no nation can rise above its religion, no
individual can rise above his nature, and no act can rise above its motive.
The moral leprosy sin, of which all by nature are partakers, inoculates with
its virus, and taints with its malaria all our religious doings- thus
corrupting and neutralizing every attempt of man to render obedience and
honor to the commandments and precepts of God's holy law. It follows from
this that, seeing the sinner can only be saved on the footing of a law
obeyed in every enactment, kept in every precept, magnified and honored
in the dignity of its character and in the holiness of its nature, it must
be by another obedience and infinitely beyond his own. This train of thought
conducts us to the truth we seek to establish.
The divine dignity and personal holiness of Christ
provided all the moral fitness and qualification which the case demanded. As
the sinner could only stand with divine acceptance in a Divine
righteousness, the "Lord our righteousness" fully met the case. Hence the
strong language of God's Word. "The Righteousness of God, which is by faith
of Jesus Christ, unto all and upon all those who believe." And again, "He
has made Him to be sin for us, who knew no sin, that we might be made the
Righteousness of God in Him." Magnificent truth! precious announcement! The
believing sinner stands before God in the righteousness of God Himself! He
is as righteous- not essentially so, but legally- as God is
righteous. If he is "made the righteousness of God in Christ," this must
emphatically be so. And since no other righteousness could justify him
before God, this must unquestionably be so. To what dignity does this
righteousness raise the believer here, and to what super-angelic glory will
it raise him hereafter? In your righteousness shall they be exalted."
The justified sinner therefore stands the closest to God
of any created being in the universe. Nearer to the throne of the Eternal he
cannot stand. What marvellous love! Who will dare assert that salvation is
not, from first to last, of free, discriminating grace! Let your eye pierce
the veil that falls between earth and heaven. Behold that shining, warbling
being, standing so near to the throne of glory, bathed in the overpowering
effulgence of its rays. Who is he? He was once a sinner upon earth, the
vilest of his race, the dishonored of his generation, forsaken by man and
abhorred of God. But Jesus met him, and divine love drew him, and sovereign
grace rescued, pardoned, and saved him. And now washed from all his guilt by
the blood, freed from all condemnation by the righteousness of Christ, he
stands before the throne "without fault," a "king and a priest unto God."
Such is the great love of Jesus! "He raises the poor from the dust and lifts
the needy from the ash heap; he seats them with princes and has them inherit
a throne of honor." And all this grace, and all this glory, and all this
bliss flows from the "Lord our righteousness."
Reader, here let me pause and once more remind you of a
truth essential to your everlasting well-being. Nothing short of the
righteousness of Jehovah Himself can free you from endless condemnation. You
must appear before God- if you stand with acceptance- in a divine
righteousness. You must, if saved, be saved upon the footing of a law every
requirement of which has been met. Its demands are holy, its restrictions
are inexorable. It exacts full submission, insists upon perfect holiness,
enters beneath the surface, penetrates every cell of the mind, and grapples
with every fibre of the heart; it analyses every volition of the will, sifts
every desire of the soul, and weighs in its unerring scale every motive and
every action of the man. In a word, it is "the candle of the Lord, searching
all the innermost parts of the belly." "Wherefore the law is holy, and the
commandment holy, just, and good." It is on these stern and inflexible
grounds that the law is so fearfully terrible to all offenders- and all are
so. To look, then, for salvation by the works of the law, it were better to
meet the lion rushing wild and hungry from his lair, than thus to expect
"help from this destroyer, which rends the center of the heart" in pieces,
and from whom none can rescue us. The law is the "minister of death" to
every transgressor, and opens the gates of hell to all impenitent and
unbelieving sinners! We have adverted to its inflexible rule. Nothing can
abate, nothing soften, nothing arrest it. It sifts every motive, shakes
every confidence, storms every citadel, and breaks up every hope not founded
upon the Rock of Ages- the Lord our Righteousness. It meets the sinner like
"a lion by the way and slays him." As says the apostle, "sin revived, and I
died."
Confronted thus by God's holy law, the momentous question
is raised- "How can man be just (or justified) with God?" "Who can bring a
clean thing out of an unclean?" The gospel alone can supply the answer, and
that answer is contained in the significant and impressive title of Christ-
"His name shall be called, the Lord Our Righteousness." And now we pass from
the region of sin, death, and hell, into that of
holiness, life, and heaven; standing, as it were, amid
the splendor of the "great white throne," with the "rainbow round about it,"
the emblem and the pledge that, for us there is no condemnation," since we
stand before God in "the Lord our righteousness." We are thus conducted to
the question-
IN WHAT WAY DOES CHRIST BECOME THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF HIS
PEOPLE? How are we to understand that the righteousness of one
individual becomes in reality the righteousness of another, yes, of
countless myriads of beings? The reply to these questions will bring us to
the practical issues of this great subject.
In the first place, Christ becomes our righteousness by
personal substitution. This was the first step in the wonderful
process, and must be kept prominently before us. The law of substitution is
fully recognized in the affairs of men. It is shadowed forth in various
instances recorded in the Scriptures of truth. We remind the reader of
Reuben becoming surety to his father for Benjamin; and of the apostle Paul
discharging a like obligation to Philemon on behalf of Onesimus. In this
sense, yet infinitely higher, the Son-Surety, stood in your place, did all,
and endured all, and paid all for you. By a substitutionary act He made your
sins His sins, your obedience His obedience, your curse His curse, your debt
His debt- He took it all upon Himself, His Father accepting and sealing His
suretyship by raising Him from the dead. "Who was delivered for our
offences, and was raised again for our, justification." Oh, love and admire,
serve and glorify this precious Savior, who has so freely, so willingly, so
fully done all this for you. You cannot love Him too intensely, nor serve
Him too self-denyingly, nor exalt Him too highly; who threw Himself in the
breach and exclaimed, "Father, lay all their sins and transgressions upon
me. Charge their debt to my account. Upon me let their punishment fall. Let
my life be for their life, my death for their death, my condemnation for
their condemnation, my heaven for their hell!"
Christ becomes our righteousness by His personal
obedience. Not less clear are the Scriptures of truth touching this
essential doctrine of our salvation. Thus we read, "By the obedience
of One shall many be made righteous." Who is this "One" of whom the apostle
speaks, but the "Lord our righteousness?" But, you ask, how could the
Law-giver become the Law-fulfiller? We again answer in the language of God's
Word- "When the fulness of time was come, God sent forth His Son made of a
woman, made under the law, to redeem those who were under the law,
that we might receive the adoption of sons." Could any answer be more
explicit? It tells us that, in assuming our humanity, the Son of God
necessarily became submissive to the law, since He took upon Him a nature
born under its obligation and exposed to its penalty. As man, therefore, He
was as much under the law, and was as personally and as strictly bound to
obey the law, and in default of obedience as much exposed to its penalty, as
any individual of the human race. Keeping in view the doctrine we have just
insisted upon- the substitution of Christ for us- we shall experience no
difficulty in understanding, still less in receiving, the doctrine of
Christ's personal obedience to the precepts of the law in our stead. It
follows that creature-merit, or man's own righteousness, can avail nothing
in the great matter of his justification. Jehovah must keep, Jehovah must
honor, Jehovah must magnify His own law, if, on the basis of a law
inviolate, a law upheld and preserved in its most stringent precept, the
sinner is saved. Rob Christ of His divinity, and you rob His obedience of
its efficacy, and the sinner of his hope.
We learn from this part of our subject, the utter
inadequacy of a human righteousness to justify the sinner before God. If
it required the merit of Deity, if no other than Jehovah Himself could
supply an obedience to the law man had broken, on the ground of which God
could, with honor to Himself, justify the guilty, then the inference is as
strictly logical as the fact is tremendously solemn that, in the language of
Scripture, "By the works of the law shall no flesh be justified." Again, "As
many as are of the works of the law are under the curse; for it is written,
Cursed is every one that continues not in all things which are written in
the book of the law to do them." What a fatal blow do
these words aim at the Babel of self-righteousness which multitudes are
raising up, from the summit of which they vainly hope to leap into heaven!
"Under the curse!" No repeal of its tremendous anathemas, no possible avenue
of escape- while still under it- from its fiery and eternal condemnation!
"Under the curse!" The very law you are striving to keep, cursing your every
effort to keep it! The law cursing your soul, cursing your religion, cursing
your duties, cursing your engagements- yes, turning your every blessing into
a curse. This may be thought strong language, but the word of God justifies
it. "As many as are of the works of the law are under the curse."
What language could be stronger- what declaration more impressive? Oh that
the Holy Spirit might use it to the rousing to a conviction of his state and
danger every mere notionalist, every proud pharisee, every self-deceived
professor, every soul dead in trespasses and sins, whose eye may light upon
this page!
I have said there is no way of escape open to those who
live and die in this condition. But to others whose eyes the Holy Spirit has
opened to see their sin and danger, the righteousness of Christ provides a
remedy. He was "made a curse for us," He was the "end of the law for
righteousness to every one that believes," and so by His obedience and
death, by His blood and righteousness, He emancipates us from the thraldom,
cancels the curse, and delivers from the condemnation of the law, and thus
we are "made the righteousness of God in Him."
What a "door of hope" is here set open to the soul,
brought, after long and painful teaching, to despair of finding acceptance,
pardon, and grace by its own works. Long and earnestly have you striven to
work your way to heaven. Like the disciples on the sea, you have "toiled in
rowing" against a contrary wind and a strong current, and are ready to give
up all for lost. Like the poor diseased woman in the gospel, you are
"nothing bettered, but rather grown worse." Oh, blessed extremity! Happy end
of all hope springing from yourself! Your soul is now, if the expression may
be used, ripe for Christ. You are just in the condition to accept
Him, and He to accept you. You have reached that critical point in your
spiritual history which decides your state for eternity. Like Paul's
mariners, you are in danger of sinking; and like them, you are prepared to
throw overboard everything that imperils your safety, exclaiming with the
apostle on another occasion, and who doubtless recalled to mind his
shipwreck when he wrote the words, "I once thought all these things were so
very important, but now I consider them worthless because of what Christ has
done. Yes, everything else is worthless when compared with the priceless
gain of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. I have discarded everything else,
counting it all as garbage, so that I may have Christ and be found in him,
not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which
is through faith in Christ– the righteousness that comes from God and is by
faith." And now having thus "lightened the ship," like the weary mariners,
you "wish and wait for the dawn" of salvation. Lo! it is come! Jesus draws
near and says to your soul, "I am your salvation without a work of your own.
Look unto Me and be you saved; I am the Lord your righteousness. Only
believe." What joyful tidings are these! Saved without a work of human
merit! Saved just as you are! Saved by free and sovereign grace! Saved by
simple, childlike faith in Christ! Saved forever! Hope now dawns upon your
path, heaven smiles down upon your soul, and henceforth your Christian life
on earth becomes a sweet and holy psalm.
HOW DOES THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF CHRIST BECOME OURS? The
righteousness of Christ, by which we are alone justified, becomes ours by
imputation. What is meant by imputation? The literal idea is, the
imputation of anything to an individual which did not originally belong to
him. Now our justification strikingly illustrates this. The instance of
Abraham is the first we quote. "Abraham believed in the Lord, and it was
counted unto him for righteousness." James, alluding to the same event,
says, "Abraham's faith was imputed unto him for righteousness." Paul
confirms this idea when he says, noticing the case of Abraham, "And it was
not written for his sake alone, that it was imputed to him, but for us also,
unto whom it shall be imputed if we believe." We are clearly taught in these
passages that the justification of Abraham, the friend of God, the father of
all those who believe, the mirror of Old Testament piety, resulted not from
a personal righteousness, but from an imputed righteousness.
And that the divine dealing with Abraham is an example of God's dealing with
us, the apostle says, "To him that works not, but believes in Him that
justifies the ungodly, his faith is counted unto him for righteousness."
Thus, written as with a sunbeam, the glorious truth shines upon the sacred
page, that when any child of Adam is justified it is by the imputation of a
righteousness not his own- even the righteousness of Him who is emphatically
called "The Lord our Righteousness."
The righteousness of Christ becomes ours by faith. This
truth has already appeared in the course of our discussion. Faith is the
divine and holy principle which places us in a justified state. "Being
justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ."
"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith– and this not from
yourselves, it is the gift of God– not by works, so that no one can boast."
Tell me that I must purchase my pardon, must merit no justification, must
come to the Savior with a price in my hand, and you extinguish the last ray
of hope. If these be the terms upon which I am to be saved, then I am lost
to all eternity! But, tell me that I have nothing to pay, that I may come to
the waters of salvation, to the milk and honey of the gospel, "without money
and without price," that, if I present myself at the door of Divine mercy,
as Naaman "covered with leprosy," as Lazarus "full of sores," as the
prodigal "clothed with rags," as Paul the "chief of sinners," as the
malefactor on the cross turning his last and final look at Jesus, that I may
come as a bankrupt debtor, as a self-destroyed sinner, then you pencil the
hue of hope in its brightest hues upon the dark thunder-cloud draping my
soul." Oh, do words more inspiring, does music so enchanting breathe through
this world of sin and woe than the divine announcement of a freely-given
salvation to the vilest child of Adam's fallen race? Truly may the inspired
apostle write- "Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but
according to His mercy He saved us." What are these words but a New
Testament echo of an Old Testament voice- "Ho, every one that thirsts, come
to the waters, and he that has no money: come, buy, and eat; yes, come, buy
wine and milk without money, and without price."
Thus the voice of free grace, which strikes its key-note
in paradise, rolls throughout the inspired Scriptures, waxing stronger and
growing sweeter until it reached its heightened note in the last and closing
echoes of the Apocalypse. "And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let
him that hears say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whoever
will, let him take the water of life freely." Come, then, my reader, just as
you are, poor, penniless, naked, and receive in faith, and as the gratuitous
bestowment of the God that justifies the ungodly, this divine and beauteous
righteousness, "which is unto all and upon all those who believe." Are you a
penitent prodigal, returning to your Father in rags and wretchedness and
woe? Behold, He comes running to you.
Joy, too, is a fruit of justification. "I will
greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God; for He has
clothed me with the garments of salvation, He has covered me with the robe
of righteousness." Oh, be joyful, you who stand in the Lord your
righteousness! You maybe heavily afflicted, deeply tried, sorely tempted,
yet, standing in righteousness of Christ you are exalted above the billows
and clouds that gather around your pathway to heaven, eternal sunshine
bathing all your glorious and endless future!
Then the hope of glory is the last blessing to
which we refer. A present justification is the pledge of a future
glorification. "Whom He justified, them He also glorified." Oh, how truly
has Christ, the "Lord our righteousness," "opened the kingdom of heaven to
all believers!"
When from the dust of death I rise,
To take my mansion in the skies,
Even then shall this be all my plea,
'Jesus has lived and died for me.'
"Bold shall I stand in that great day,
For who aught to my charge shall lay?
While through Your blood absolved I am
From sin's tremendous curse and shame."
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