SAVED
BY GRACE ALONE
Sola Gratia
Sola Gratia
An
Evangelical Problem
Stes de Necker
Kim Riddlebarger
INDEX
(1) What do we mean by the phrase
"grace alone?"
(2) What is the human condition according to
the Scriptures?
(3) What do the Scriptures say about Sola
Gratia?
(4) Why do some Evangelicals have such a
difficult time with this doctrine?
(5) How do we respond when these issues are
at stake?
1) What do we mean when we say "that we are saved by grace alone"
When we use the term "grace alone,"
what we mean is that our salvation from the wrath of God - our deliverance from
hell - is because of something good in God, and not because of anything good in
us.
The Biblical conception of human nature after
Adam and Eve's fall into sin is not a pretty picture, and many people, who
seem to have an unlimited confidence in human nature and human goodness, have a
very difficult time accepting what the bible says about the human condition.
In a democratic culture, we believe that our
vote counts, and that by exercising our right to choose, we can actually and
significantly change the world around us. We are all taught from our youth that
we have it within ourselves to accomplish anything, if we simply put our minds
to it and give it our best efforts.
And when we become Christians we carry that
optimism over into our theology. If God tells us to do something, it must be
because we have the ability to do what he commands! Choice becomes everything.
It is really quite simple; grace alone
doesn't make much sense to anyone who
doesn't think that much is wrong with the human condition in the first place.
For if people are basically good, why then, do we need grace in order to be
saved.
But to those who understand what the bible
teaches about the effects of sin, grace alone is our only hope of heaven. And
thus when we speak of grace alone (sola gratia), we are speaking of the fact
that God saves us, because of his mercy and graciousness toward us, and not
because of something - indeed anything - in us that makes us desirable to God.
We really cannot understand grace alone
unless we understand what it is, exactly, that sin has wrought upon us.
2) What is the
Human Condition according to
the Scriptures
The Scriptures are very clear about the
effects of Adam's sin upon the human race, and there are a host of passages
that speak to the issue of human sinfulness. In Job 14:1-4 we read, "Man
born of woman is of few days and full of trouble. He springs up like a flower
and withers away; like a fleeting shadow, he does not endure.
Do you fix your eye on such a one? Will you
bring him before you for judgment? Who can bring what is pure from the impure?
No one!" In other words, we are born "impure" or sinful, and
therefore, subject to the judgment of God.
Job asks the poignant question in this
regard, "who can bring what is pure from what is impure?" and the
answer is emphatically, "no one."
Jeremiah (13:23) asks a similar question,
"Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard its spots? Neither can
you do good who are accustomed to doing evil.”
Thus because of our sin, we are impure,
accustomed to doing evil, and unable to do anything to change our true nature
any more than a
leopard can wish his spots away, or that we can change the colour of
our skin simply by wishing it were so.
The Scriptures are also clear that our sinful
nature is something with which we are born. According to the Psalmist in Psalm
51:5, "Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my mother
conceived me."
Thus we are born sinful, sinful from the very
moment of conception.
The Psalmist goes on to say in Psalm 58(3),
"Even from birth the wicked go astray; from the womb they are wayward and
speak lies." We go astray from birth and we are born liars. We do not need
to learn how to sin, it comes quite naturally to us.
The sinful nature (i.e., "the
flesh") with which we are born produces a host of sinful actions. The
author of 1 Kings (8:46) contends "there is no one who does not sin"
and the author of Proverbs (20:9) laments, "Who can say, `I have kept my
heart pure; I am clean and without sin'? Indeed Moses writes in Genesis 6:5,
"the LORD saw how great man's wickedness on the earth had become, and that
every inclination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil all the
time."
Thus because we are born in sin, every
thought, every inclination is purely evil. This is not something that we enjoy
hearing, but it is what the Scripture clearly teaches about human nature.
And this doctrine of human sinfulness is not
only clearly taught in the OT, it is found with equal force in the New
Testament, even on the lips of our Lord. For our Lord says much the same thing
in Matthew 15:19, when he declares "For out of the heart come evil
thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false testimony,
slander."
Thus the specific sins which we commit come from the
sinful condition of our hearts.
For as it is used in Scripture, the heart is
the seat of our very personality - the heart is the true self, what we really
are. Jesus went on to point out in Matthew 7:16-20, that "By their fruit
you will recognize [wolves who come in sheep's clothes]. Do people pick grapes
from thorn bushes, or
figs from thistles? Likewise every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree
bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, and a bad tree cannot bear
good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown
into the fire. Thus, by their fruit you will recognize them."
Can any one of us here pretend for even a
single moment that unlike everyone else, we are born good trees, and that we
somehow escape the effects of sin which befall the entire human race? For out
of each of our hearts inevitably spring the evil deeds and sins that all of us
commit on a regular basis.
And if that is not all, it is Jesus who also
reminds us that even if we haven't committed a specific sin with our hands, you
can bet we have done it in our hearts.
It is Jesus who declares, "anyone who
looks at a women lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his
heart." Jesus also said, "You have heard it said, `Do not murder,'
and anyone who murders will be subject to judgement.'" And so there may be
someone who is even now saying to themselves, "I am not a murderer!"
I have never taken a life. Jesus says otherwise. You may not have taken the
life of another, but as Jesus says, "anyone who is angry with his brother
will be subject to judgement," and "anyone who calls his brother a
fool will be in danger of the fire of hell."
While the Scriptures are clear that we are
born in sin, and that we sin because we are sinners, the Scriptures are equally
clear about the specific effects of our own sinfulness upon our relationship
with God.
According to the Apostle Paul, (Romans
8:7-8), "the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to God's
law, nor can it do so. Those controlled by the sinful nature cannot please
God." Thus because of the sin into which we are born, we cannot submit to
God's law, nor do anything to please Him.
So much for non-Christians supposedly keeping the 10
Commandments.
In his letter to the Galatians (5:19-21),
Paul speaks of the human condition this way: "The acts of the sinful
nature [the flesh] are obvious: sexual immorality, impurity and debauchery;
idolatry and witchcraft; hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish
ambition, dissensions, factions and envy; drunkenness, orgies, and the like. I
warn you, as I did before, that those who live like this will not inherit the
kingdom of God."
While we are apt to make distinctions between
so-called big and little sins, Paul would not agree. All sins damn, even such things
as jealousy and ambition, and these sins that damn spring forth spontaneously
from our sinful nature. This certainly calls to mind our Lord's comments about
bad fruit coming forth from a bad tree. The sins of the flesh spring forth from
our sinful hearts as surely as apples grow on an apple tree.
And when all is said and done, Paul indeed
paints a very dark picture. In Romans 3:10-12 he writes; "There is no one
righteous, not even one; there is no one who understands, no one who seeks God.
All have turned away, they have together become worthless; there is no one who
does good, not even one." Paul is clear, here, though many of us do not
like what he says.
First, he points out that there are none
righteous, that is, none without the guilt of sin. And for the sake of
emphasis, he repeats the phrase, "no, not even one."
Next he states that because of sin, there is
no one who understands, for as he says elsewhere, sin has darkened our
understanding, made our thinking futile, and hardened our hearts to the things
of God (Ephesians 4:18 ff).
Third, the result of these blinding effects
of sin is that there is no one who seeks God. Even though these words make many
of us choke, Paul is utterly clear, because of sin, "no one seeks
God."
Tough words, but we cannot evade them simply
because we do not like them.
And if we do not believe the testimony of
Paul, Jesus says exactly the same thing. Speaking to the crowds that followed
him after he feed the five thousand and because they saw the miracles and
wanted their stomachs filled (John 6:44), Jesus declared, "No one can come
to me unless the Father who sent me draws him, and I will raise him up at the
last day." In other words, you cannot come to God unless you are drawn, the
term translated here as "to draw" is also translated "to
drag" elsewhere in the NT, as for example, when Paul is dragged out of the
temple against his will in Acts 21:30.
And then again in that same discourse in John
6, as if he was not clear enough the first time he said it, Jesus went on to say in verse
65, "This is why I told you that no one can come to me unless the Father
has enabled him." Thus unless we are enabled to come to Father, we cannot
and indeed will not turn to God and embrace Jesus Christ. For we are sinful, we
do not seek God, we do not understand God, we do not obey God's law, and indeed
says Paul, we cannot. Our hearts are sinful, there are none righteous, not even
one, and we sin freely and willingly because we want to.
Thus when all is said and done, what this
means is that if God does not do something to rescue us from our predicament,
we will perish in our sins.
And this is what we mean when we say we are
saved by grace alone, because there is certainly nothing in us worth saving and
there is nothing that creatures in such a predicament can do to save
themselves.
Our salvation depends upon God's graciousness and not
upon our goodness.
So it is against this backdrop the biblical
description of sin and its effects that we now turn our focus to grace alone.
3) What the Scriptures
say about Sola Gratia
Simply stated, if the Scriptures are clear
that men and women are sinful by nature and cannot do anything to save
themselves or even prepare themselves to be saved, the Scriptures are equally
clear that it is God who saves by grace alone through faith alone on account of
Christ alone.
This means that it is God who acts first,
upon the sinner, while the sinner is dead in sin. For as we have seen, the
sinner is enslaved to the sinful nature and its passions, and will not come to
God, as Paul declares. But the good news is that while sinners do not seek God,
God seeks sinners. And this is what we mean by the phrase, grace alone.
The Bible approaches the idea of grace alone
from a number of ways and there are three passages that we need to consider in
some detail, John 3, John 11, and Ephesians 2.
Many Evangelicals identify themselves as
"born again" Christians. And indeed, as our Lord expressly states in
John 3:3-7, "unless one is born again," they cannot see, much less
enter into the kingdom of God."
What then, does it mean to be "born
again?" Historic Protestants, both the Lutherans and Reformed, have not
placed the notion of being "born again" at the center of the
Christian faith in the way in which many of our Evangelical contemporaries do.
The reason for this is not because Lutheran and Reformed Christians reject the
idea of being "born again." Instead, they equate John's teaching on
being born again with the larger Biblical category of "regeneration."
That is, being "born again," is a
synonym for being "regenerate," or "being made alive," and
therefore, while an essential aspect of the Christian life, it is approached
from the perspective that regeneration is something God does, not man.
Another reason historic Protestants have not
stressed being "born again," is because regeneration is an act of God
upon the sinner, whereas the New Testament, on the other hand, stresses that
the Gospel is something that God has done for us in Christ outside of
ourselves, and that the Gospel alone - the message that Christ died and rose
again for sinners (1 Corinthians 15:1-8) - is the power of God unto salvation.
It is through preaching the Gospel, the
sacrificial death of Jesus Christ for sinners, that God gives the new birth, or
causes one to be "born again," to use John's phrase. The new birth,
it is important to note, does not come through preaching the new birth, it
comes through the preaching of Christ crucified!
If being "born again" or
"regenerated" is an essential aspect of the Christian faith, what
exactly do we mean by the term? The noted Reformed theologian Louis Berkhof,
defines regeneration as "a work in which man is purely passive, and in
which there is no place for human co-operation....The creative work of God
produces new life, in virtue of which man, made alive with Christ, shares the
resurrection life, and can be called a new creature."
Indeed, no one will ever see heaven if they
are not regenerate or "born again."
It is also vital to notice that Jesus' words
here are not to be taken as a command in which we are to do what it takes to
"be born again." In John 3, Jesus is not telling us to do anything!
Instead, he is telling us about our condition - telling us that something must
happen to us first, if we are to see and then enter the kingdom of God. Thus,
"Unless you are born again, you cannot enter into the Kingdom of
God."
Later in the same gospel, our Lord tells us
that "we must cross over from death to life" (John 5:24), and that no
one can even come to Him unless the Father not only draw them (6:44), but also
enables them to come to Him (6:65). In fact, in John 3:3-8, notice that Jesus
makes it very clear that "flesh gives birth to flesh, but Spirit gives
birth to spirit."
The Spirit is like the wind, it blows
wherever it wills.
When we look back at John chapter one, we
find the very similar statement that "we are born not of natural descent,
nor of a human decision or a husband's will, but [we are] born of God (John
1:13)."
We
often quote the first part of the verse, "to all who received him, to
those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of
God," and we then interpret this to mean, that unless we first choose God
we cannot be saved. But the very next clause tells us just the opposite,
namely, "we are born not of natural descent, nor of a human decision or a
husband's will, but [we are] born of God."
Therefore, it is vital to notice that
throughout the Scriptural data, especially here in John 3, God the Holy Spirit
is the agent of regeneration, the one who gives the new birth, and not a human
"decision" to accept Jesus as saviour, or to invite him into our
hearts. As most commentators point out, the word translated here as "born
again," is a word that can either mean "from above" or
"second time."
Nicodemus very likely understood it to have the latter
meaning since he very pointedly asks Jesus, "how can I go back into the
womb to be born all over again."
Second, it is also important to notice that
Jesus connects being "born again" to being born of "water and
the Spirit." What on earth does Jesus mean by this? The Christian family
has generally answered this question in one of three ways. Some such as Luther
and most of the church fathers, have understood this to refer to Christian
baptism; the water spoken of here is the water of baptism.
A second group of commentators have argued
that water is a reference to the baptism of John the Baptist. This connection
perhaps can be found in chapter 2, verse 6 and can be strengthened by looking
further in chapter three, where water is connected with purification (v. 25). A
third view equates water with natural birth or procreation.
There is some evidence that Rabbinic writers
did indeed connect water with natural birth and male semen. If water is seen in
this manner, the idea is conveyed that just as Nicodemus was born the first
time (of natural descent - water), he must also be born again a second time by
the Holy Spirit.
This is the way most modern Evangelical and
Reformed commentators interpret the passage. This would also pick up on the
notion that two births are in view. In the first birth "flesh gives birth
to flesh," and in the second birth (the birth about which Jesus is
informing Nicodemus), the Spirit gives birth to spirit, and we are "born
again."
But no matter how we decide upon this matter,
there is one thing that is certainly precluded by John 3, and that is the idea
that being "born again," is something that results from an act on our
part. If Jesus is clear about anything, it is that God is the active party
while we remain passive, and are acted upon by God. In the new birth, God is
the active party as men and women, who are dead in sins and transgressions,
cannot be seen to resurrect themselves.
Both the Lutheran and Reformed traditions
carefully following the Scriptures, connect regeneration to the proclamation of
the Word of God, specifically the Law and the Gospel, and not to the powers of
the fallen human will. Therefore, if we wish to see God call the dead to life
and give the gift of new birth, we preach Christ crucified, for it is through
this message that God gives the gift of the new birth and calls people to faith
in His Son.
Thus any view of being "born
again," which defines regeneration either as a work of man, or resulting
from a work of man, is therefore, seriously deficient, and denies that we are
saved by grace alone.
Another one of the passages we need to
briefly consider is found in John 11, when our Lord raises his friend Lazarus
from the dead. In this account John details for us the utterly amazing story of
how our Lord brought back to life a man who had been dead for some four days.
The raising of Lazarus is important for
several reasons, one of which being it clearly demonstrates the idea of sola
gratia. The miracle of raising the dead demonstrates perhaps more clearly than
anything else, Jesus' power over death and the grave. For only God in human
flesh can call forth life where there is death. As Jesus himself declares to Martha,
"I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me will live, even
though he dies; and whoever lives and believes in me will never die (v.
25)."
This power to give life takes two forms. In
John 5:24-25, Jesus says "I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and
believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has
crossed over from death to life. I tell you the truth, a time is coming and has
now come when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God and those who hear
will live."
This means that in a sense, there are two
resurrections for the one who trusts in Christ for salvation.
The first resurrection - a
"spiritual" resurrection - occurs so that one can believe in Christ,
for our Lord Himself
states that whoever believes in him has already crossed over from death to
life. That is, as we have seen in our treatment of John 3, through the
sovereign power of God, we are "born again" or regenerated by the
Holy Spirit, through the Word of God.
When we are given the new birth, in effect,
at that very moment, we cross over from death to life. The second resurrection,
of course, occurs at the end of the age when Jesus Christ returns in judgement
and to raise the dead at the end of the age. This is the bodily resurrection.
But the most important thing to note about
the account of the raising of Lazarus, is that Lazarus was dead! He was not
merely sick, or a tad under the weather, nor was he doing anything to
co-operate with the grace of God, when Jesus called him forth from the grave.
In fact, his only contribution to his salvation was the fact that he was dead!
Lazarus was not inside the tomb taking the bandages off, unwrapping himself, so
that Jesus would do his part if Lazarus did his!
Our Lord did not go to the tomb and leave a
medicine outside that would help Lazarus to raise himself, if only he Lazarus
would reach out and take the medicine. Jesus did not stand outside and
"woo" Lazarus to come forth! Lazarus could do nothing to raise
himself, apart from the sovereign voice of God calling him forth from the tomb
and giving life to him in the process.
And this exactly what the Scripture says of
us, we are dead in sins and transgressions, and just like Lazarus, we too must
be called to life by God through the word of Jesus or else we remain dead in
our sins.
And
this is the meaning of grace alone.
God calling us to life when we are reeking in death, and calling us not because
of anything he sees in us.
Another very important text in this regard is
found in the first 10 verses of the second chapter of Paul's letter to the
Ephesians. Listen very carefully to what Paul says: "As for you, you were
dead in your transgressions and sins, in which you used to live when you
followed the ways of this world and of the ruler of the kingdom of the air, the
spirit who is now at work in those who are disobedient."
Like Jesus, Paul is crystal clear that we are
"dead in transgressions and sins." There is no way for optimistic
Americans to circumvent the thrust of Paul's argument here. And so in verse 3,
Paul can describe how it is, that being dead in sin, leads to a life
characterized by sinful actions. "All of us also lived among them at one
time, gratifying the cravings of our sinful nature [our flesh] and following
its desires and thoughts. Like the rest, we were by nature objects of
wrath."
Thus because we are born sinful, dead in
trespasses and in sins, we live our lives trying to gratify the cravings of our
flesh to which we are enslaved. As Paul says, we are by nature children of
wrath, and therefore, rightfully subject to God's righteous judgement.
This is very clear: we are dead in sins and
transgressions, enslaved to our sinful passions and desires, and by nature
children of wrath. If left to ourselves, we are headed for hell and eternal judgement,
and we can do nothing to change things.
It is here, then, with this picture of human
sinfulness in his mind that Paul abruptly changes subjects, and gives us one of
the clearest presentations of sola gratia, found anywhere in Scripture. Thus we
read in verse 4, "But because of
his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ
even when we were dead in transgressions it is by grace you have been
saved."
It is vital to note that Paul says that it is
when we are dead in sins and transgressions that God made us alive with Christ.
As Jesus called Lazarus forth from the tomb, a man who had been dead for four
days and who was totally incapable of doing anything to co-operate and save
himself, so too, God makes us alive with Christ when we were dead in sin.
And this is what we mean when we speak of
"grace alone." It is because of God's mercy and His love for helpless
sinners, that folk who are sinful by nature and by choice, are now believers in
Jesus Christ! It is God's choice of us in Jesus Christ that saves, not our
choice of Christ! For the Scriptures declare that it t is God who acts upon us
in his love and mercy when we are dead in sin.
How on earth, do dead men and women make
themselves alive? Can they co-operate with God's grace? How do dead men and
women do their part so that God can supposedly do his? This is sheer nonsense.
It is because God calls us forth from death through his word, and only because
God calls us forth that we embrace Jesus Christ through faith in the first
place.
This is why we speak of grace alone.
Paul goes on make this point with even
greater clarity in the balance of the chapter. "And God raised us up with
Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus, in order
that in the coming ages he might show the incomparable riches of his grace,
expressed in his kindness to us in Christ Jesus."
Because God has made us alive, we are now
seen as raised and seated with Christ in heaven, because as Paul will say in
Romans 11:29, "God's gifts and calling are irrevocable."
God doesn't start something and loose interest and quit.
He is faithful even when we are not.
Thus Paul can conclude in verses 8 and ff.,
"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. For
we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God
prepared in advance for us to do."
Though this is one of the most oft-quoted
passages in the New Testament, I'm not sure if we ever stop to fully consider
what it is, exactly, that Paul is saying here.
The context of Ephesians 2:8 is the condition
of being dead in sins and transgressions, and our enslavement to the sinful
nature in verses 1-5. And so it is clear, I think, that when pointing out that
"God makes us alive with Christ, even when we were dead in sin,"
Paul's explanation is sola gratia that is,
"it is by grace you have been saved." That God raised us in Christ
when we were dead in sin, is to be saved by grace.
We must be clear about this, or we will miss
what Paul is saying. I have heard far too many people say to me over the years,
"Oh yes, I believe we are saved by grace alone," and approvingly
quote this verse, and then they turn right around and argue that unless we do
something first, unless we decide, unless we choose, unless we accept Jesus
Christ as our personal Saviour,
grace is useless. It is crystal clear that this is not what Paul is saying, and
to argue that grace is of no avail to us, unless we do something first, is to
deny sola gratia altogether!
If you are not convinced, consider the rest
of the passage. "For it is by grace
you have been saved though faith -- and this is not from yourselves, it is the
gift of God, not by works so that no one can boast."
Whether or not the faith mentioned here by
Paul is the gift spoken of or not, it doesn't matter. First, we are not saved
by faith, we are saved by grace through faith. We are not saved because we
believe, but it is through faith in Christ (sola fide) that God saves --- from
our being made alive in Christ, to our exercising faith, to being saved from
God's wrath, and our being raised in Christ and even now, our being seated in
the heaven with
him --- it is all God's doing, not ours.
The fact is, Paul says that we are saved by
grace alone, through faith alone, on account of Christ alone and the whole
thing, from beginning to end, is a gift.
We'll talk about how faith relates to this in
our second hour, but if you think that grace depends upon faith, and not the
other way around, you misread and misunderstand Paul at this point. This
becomes clear in Romans 10, as Paul says there that "faith comes by
hearing, and hearing by the Word of Christ." That is, faith arises in
connection with the preaching of the gospel.
As Jesus spoke forth the word of God and
raised Lazarus from the dead, the same thing happens to us through the
preaching and sharing of the gospel today. For it is through the word of the
Gospel, and only through the Word of the Gospel, that God calls us forth from
the dead -- or to use Paul's language here, "God made us alive with Christ
even when we were dead in sin, for you have been saved by grace."
And this beloved, is precisely what we mean
when we speak of grace alone. God makes us alive, when we are dead in sin.
This is what it means to be saved by grace alone.
4) Why is it, then, that some evangelicals have so many problems with this biblical teaching
There is no teac
hing in Christian theology
that offends our contemporaries (especially our Christian friends and family),
any more then the teaching of sola gratia.
People hate
to be told "no," that they are helpless. People hate to be told that God does not
depend upon them and a decision that they make. And it is here, then, that we
as Reformation Christians
And sola gratia is no longer a doctrine to be
defended, it is an offence and an embarrassment.
Who needs God when man is quite capable on
his own.
5) How are we
to respond
First, the Bible does not approach this
subject from the perspective that everyone is entitled to a chance at heaven. God is not democratic and he does not
operate according to democratic ideals.
The Scriptures do not begin with human
freedom, as it is argued, they begin with the fall of Adam into sin and its
consequences. This means that we lost our vote and our freedom in the Fall! And
because the entire human race fell with Adam, we are everything that the
Scriptures say about us.
Thus, as Christians, we must begin where the
Bible does, with the fact of human sinfulness and with the idea clearly in our
minds that no one deserves to go to heaven, and that none of us can do anything
to get there. To start with the presupposition that unless we have free will to
choose God whenever we want to, or else Christianity (and by implication - God)
would not be fair, we miss the point.
God does not owe sinners anything.
And if we are thinking this way, we have,
perhaps, imbibed too deeply from our democratic culture, and we are not
approaching things, as we should, from the perspective found in the Holy
Scriptures.
Second, the degree to which we argue that we
contribute something to our salvation is the degree to which we deny sola
gratia.
It was Charles Spurgeon who said, "he
that thinks lightly of sin, thinks lightly of the Saviour." It is really very simple.
Either God saves sinners who are dead in sin, by calling them forth from the
grave when they could contribute nothing, or else sinners have something good
within them is that not somehow tainted, corrupted, polluted our damaged by the
fall.
As we have seen the Scriptures teach the
former rather than the latter. To add anything we do to grace alone, is to deny
grace alone! You cannot have it either way. As Calvin puts in the Institutes,
"Whatever mixture men study to add from the power of free-will to the
grace of God, is only a corruption of it; just as if anyone should dilute good
wine with dirty or bitter water."
Since we are sinful from head to toe, from
hair to toe-nail, whatever our contribution we might add to God's grace, only
can serve to pollute, not to activate the grace of God! And so when we look to
as answers for questions like, "Why does God save this one rather than
that one?" we do well to answer as one Puritan divine put it, "There
is no reason to be given for grace, but grace."
God is God and we are sinful creatures. It is not ours to
ask why.
Third, sola gratia is the basis for our
comfort and assurance as sinners before a Holy God.
Since any contribution that I am supposed to
make to make my salvation possible is necessarily tainted by sin, I will always
be plagued by doubts about what it is that I am supposed to contribute, and
whether or not I contributed it in the right way. If I think that I am saved by
my decision to accept Jesus as my Saviour, how
do I know if I really meant it when I asked him into my heart? If I am saved
because of my faith, what do I do when my faith is weak, or when I am in sin or
else plagued by nagging doubts? Do I need to be saved all over again?
This is not religion of faith but a religion
of fear and of pride.
Since the Scriptures teach that we are saved
not because of anything that is in us, and that the merit necessary for our
salvation comes to us from the person and work of Jesus Christ, we look, not
within at what we have done, but we to our Saviour to see what he has done.
In
Jesus Christ we see what it means to be saved by grace.
We look to a Saviour who calls the dead from the tomb
when they still reek of their sins; a Saviour who
promises never to leave or forsake us, even when we go astray.
We look to a good shepherd who will lose none
of his sheep and who declares; "all that the Father gives to me will come
to me, and I will lose none of them, but raise them all up on the last
day."
We look to a Saviour who died for all of our sins and
who kept God's Law perfectly every minute of his life, so that his perfect
righteousness could be given to cover our unrighteousness.
We look to a Saviour who was crucified, but who
conquered death and the grave and who rose again who ascended into heaven, and
who even now is ruling and reigning, all the while praying for us, as our
advocate and defender.
Sola gratia is most clearly seen in the fact
that Jesus Christ came to do for us they very thing that we could not do for ourselves.
For he came to seek and to save that which
was lost.
This beloved is sola gratia, the sinless Son
of God, dying upon a Roman cross for the sins of the world, rising from the
dead for our justification, and making us alive, through his word, when we were
still dead in our sins.
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