Evaluating
the New Perspective on Paul (15)
Justification
and a Final Judgment According to Works
(Part
Two)
Dr.
Cornelis P. Venema
According
to the reformational understanding of justification, the [mal judgment, though
it involves God's public acquittal of the believer, is not to be understood as
a kind of final or future justification. Because justification is a definitive
pronouncement of the believer's acceptance with God on the basis of the saving
work of Christ, the final judgment publicly confirms but does not determine
the believer's salvation and acceptance with God. Good works, which play an
important role in the final acquittal of believers, are not the basis or reason
for their acquittal, but the evidences and tokens of the genuineness of their
faith. These works, which are themselves the fruits of God's gracious working
by His Spirit, are rewarded, but this reward is a reward of grace and not of
merit. Believers will not be vindicated in the [mal judgment unless their faith
has been active in good works. However, this does not mean that the good works
that faith produces are the ultimate reason for their salvation and acquittal.
The
question that must now be addressed is whether this understanding of the
relation between justification and the final judgment is in accord with the
apostle Paul's writings. One way to put the question would be to ask, is this
reformational view one that is born merely out of desire to protect the
doctrine of justification by grace alone through faith alone? Or does it
represent a fair treatment of Paul's understanding of the final judgment and
the role of good works?
Before
directly addressing the apostle Paul's understanding of the final judgment in
relation to good works, we need to observe that his epistles clearly teach that
believers, who are justified freely on account of the righteousness of Christ,
are sanctified through union with Christ. Those who receive Christ for
righteousness also receive Him for sanctification (1 Corinthians 1:30). However
emphatic may be the apostle's declaration of free justification, he nowhere
countenances the conclusion that this is at the expense of the work of the
Spirit of Christ in renewing believers in the way of obedience to the "law
of Christ" (Galatians 6:2). Expressed theologically, the apostle Paul
affirms that the gospel of God's grace in Christ includes both the benefits of
justification and sanctification.
Antinomianism, which teaches that the free grace of God permits the
believer to live indifferently with respect to the requirements of the law, is
expressly rejected as a false conclusion that fails to appreciate the fullness
of what salvation brings in the life of the believer. Though justification is a
principal benefit of the gospel, it may not be separated from the grace of
renewal by the working of the Spirit of sanctification. Salvation includes not
only the grace of acceptance with God but also the grace of transformation
after the image of His Son (Ro- mans 8:29).
Without attempting to canvass comprehensively Paul's
epistles with respect to this teaching of the necessity of sanctification, we
need only consider a few instances where the apostle emphasizes the
indispensable place of the obedience of faith in the Christian life.
One
of the more remarkable in- stances of this emphasis is to be found in Romans 6
and following, a section of the epistle that follows immediately upon the heels
of the apostle's treatment of the theme of free justification.
What
shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? By no
means! How can we who died to sin still live in it? Do you know that all of us
who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were
buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ
was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in
newness of life. (Vv. 1-4)
In
this transitional portion of the argument in Romans, Paul anticipates a
possible response to his preceding exposition of God's "super-abounding
grace" in Jesus Christ. If salvation is a free gift, which is granted
solely upon the basis of the obedience of Christ (Rom. 5:12-21), the conclusion
seems to follow that the more we sin, the more God's grace is magnified. What
possible motive or reason for obedience remains, if we justified by faith alone
apart from works performed in obedience to the law? Remarkably, without back-
tracking from his insistence upon the grace of free justification, the apostle
simply reminds his readers that those who are united to Christ by faith are
thereby participants in His death and resurrection. By virtue of their
incorporation into Christ, they have died to sin and are being raised in
newness of life (v. 5). Through union with Christ, believers are "set free
from sin" and made alive to God (vv. 7, 11). Therefore, to conclude that
believers may live as they please because they are saved by grace alone rep-
resents a fundamental failure to comprehend what it means to be united with Christ.
The
believer's new life in union with Christ is not an optional "extra,"
but an integral aspect of all that is en- tailed by being united to Christ by
faith and indwelt of His Spirit. Consequently, the apostle sums up his response
to any attempt to use the grace of God as a license for sin in the opening part
of Romans 8: "You, however, are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if in
fact the Spirit of God dwells in you. Anyone who does not have the Spirit of
Christ does not belong to him. But if Christ is in you, although the body is
dead because of sin, the Spirit is life because of righteousness" (vv.
9-10).
This
theme of "life in the Spirit" is sounded at various important points
in Paul's epistles. Fellowship with Christ, who is "become a life-giving
Spirit" (II Corinthians 3: 17; cf.
1 Corinthians 15:45), necessarily means that the believer no longer
lives in the environment of the flesh but in the environment of the Spirit. In
his letter to the Galatians, which primarily argues that believers are
justified by faith and not by the works of the law, Paul insists that those who
are no longer "under" the curse of the law may not use their new
freedom as an opportunity for the flesh (Galatians 5: 13).
Believers
have been crucified with Christ so that the life they now live is no longer
their own because Christ lives in them (Galatians 2: 19- 20). Accordingly, they
must "walk by the Spirit" and bear the "fruit of the Spirit [in]
love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithful- ness, gentleness,
self-control" (Galatians 5:22-23). The same faith that receives the
gracious promise of God and is opposed to the way of justification by works, is
also a faith that "works through love" (Galatians 5:6). Just as in
Romans 6, so in Colossians 3 the apostle appeals to the reality of the
believer's union with Christ in His death and resurrection as a basis for his
exhortations to believers to live in a distinctive manner: "If then you
have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is,
seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things that are above, not
on things that are on the earth. For you have died, and your life is hidden
with Christ in God. When Christ who is your life appears, then you also will
appear with him in glory." Within the setting of this reality of
incorporation into Christ, crucified and risen from the dead, the apostle urges
believers to "put to death" the passions and ways of the flesh (v.
5), to "put off the old self with its practices" (v. 9), and to
"put on the new self which is being renewed in knowledge after the image
of its creator" (v. 10; cf. II Corinthians 3:18).
Because
justified believers are being progressively sanctified in union with Christ
whose Spirit indwells them, the apostle Paul is also able to speak of their
salvation as a still future reality. Indeed, only those in union with Christ
who continue in the way of faith and obedience will obtain the end of their
salvation, eternal life (Romans 6:22). The urgency of such persistence in the
Christian life is the setting for Paul's use of the metaphor of the Christian
life as a race. As he reminds the Corinthian church, not all athletes who
compete in the race obtain the prize. What is required is the kind of
self-control and persistence in the course that will enable the athlete to
finish the race and not be disqualified (I Corinthians 9:24-27). Believers are exhorted to work out their own
salvation, because it is God who works in them both to will and to do for His
good pleasure (Philippians 2: 12). Full participation in Christ, not only in
the likeness of His death but also in the likeness of His resurrection, will
only be obtained when perfection is reached in a yet future state of glory. For
this reason, the apostle confesses that he has not already obtained this, nor
is he perfect, but "I press on to make it my own, because Jesus has made
me his own" (Philippians 3:12).
Thus,
the fullness of salvation includes more than God's act of free justification,
which frees the believer from condemnation and death. It also includes an
incorporation into Christ after whose likeness the believer is being conformed.
Since this saving incorporation into Christ and His likeness has a future end
or goal in view, Paul speaks of the believer's "hope of salvation," which
suggests that from the vantage point of the future salvation is yet to be
obtained (I Thessalonians 5:8,9). The salvation of believers is, accordingly,
nearer than when they first believed, though not yet their complete possession
(Romans 13:11). Because salvation, whether in its present, partial realization
or its future, consummate perfection, involves a complete transformation after
the likeness of Christ, it can be described as an ongoing, yet-unfinished,
process (cf. I Corinthians 1:18; II Corinthians 3:18).
A
Final Judgment According to Works
Within
the context of Paul's insistence upon the necessary transformation of the life
of the believer by the Spirit of Christ, it is not surprising to find that he
links the procurement of the fullness of salvation in the future with a final
judgment according to works. The believer's present enjoyment of salvation
through union with the crucified and risen Christ ("already") does
not represent the fullness of salvation that will be enjoyed when the end comes
("not yet"). According to the apostle, the present experience of
salvation is an anticipation and beginning of a more glorious future of
consummate blessing. To use the metaphor of harvest, the "first
fruits" of Christ's resurrection life, which are shared with believers
through union with Christ by His indwelling Spirit (Romans 8: I- 11), are the
beginnings of the complete harvest, when all that believers presently enjoy in
the form of an earnest or down payment will be received in full (II Corinthians
5:4- 5). The obtaining of salvation in its fullest measure will only occur
within the setting of Christ's coming and the final judgment.
The
prospect of a final judgment is, therefore, a central and inescapable feature
of the future. This final judgment is an unavoidable prospect for believers and
unbelievers alike, all of whom will be judged according to their works and
their respective responses to the gospel of Jesus Christ. Even believers, who
enjoy the grace of acceptance with God on the basis of Christ's saving work,
will be subject to a future judgment. Though they presently know that
"there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus" (Romans
8:1), this does not exempt them from a future judgment that will include their
public acquittal before others. Nor does it require the conclusion that good
works are not a necessary fruit of faith, which confirm the believer's
incorporation into Christ and full participation in His death and resurrection.
Some
passages in Paul's epistles speak of the final judgment in the most
comprehensive terms. All people, whether Jews or Gentiles, whether believers or
non-believers, will be judged by God. In the opening chapters of Romans, which
present the universal sin and divine condemnation that hold sway over all
flesh, the apostle emphasizes that all will be judged by God in "the day
of wrath when God's righteous judgment will be revealed" (Romans 2:5). At
that time God "will render to each one according to his works: to those
who by patience in well-doing seek for glory and honor and immortality, he will
give eternal life; but for those who are self-seeking and do not obey the
truth, but obey unrighteousness, there will be wrath and fury" (vv. 6-8).
This judgment will fall upon all who have sinned, whether those who sinned
"under the law" or "without the law." No one will be spared
the judgment of God "on that day," says the apostle, "when,
according to my gospel, God judges the secrets of men by Christ Jesus" (v.
16).
The
point of the apostle's insistence upon this universal judgment of God is to
insist that all sinners, Jews as well as Gentiles, will not escape being
examined by God and found guilty and worthy of condemnation. There is no
possible escape avail- able to anyone by means of the law. The advantage of
having the law and oracles of God, which distinguishes the Jews from the
Gentiles, will not safeguard those who do not do what the law requires, but
rather live in disobedience to it. The principle the apostle enunciates in his
argument is that all will be judged according to what they have received, and
no one will be found acceptable to God by that standard: "For all who have
sinned without the law will also perish without the law, and all who have
sinned under the law will be judged by the law" (Romans 2:12).
In
other passages, the apostle speaks of the final judgment particularly with
respect to its application to those who obey or disobey the gospel. These
passages describe the final judgment as the occasion for a separation between
those who are saved and those who are not saved. In the case of non-believers
who have disobeyed the gospel of Jesus Christ, the final judgment holds only a
fearful certainty of divine wrath and displeasure. In a passage remarkable for
its vivid imagery, the apostle portrays the second coming of Christ as a time
when Christ will be "revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in
flaming fire, inflicting vengeance on those who do not know God and on those
who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus" (II Thessalonians 1:7-8).
The coming of Christ promises rest to His beleaguered people, but terrible
distress for those who have rejected Him. In the case of believers, the final judgment
promises the fullness of salvation, provided they continue in the course of
faith and obedience (II Corinthians 11:15).
Whether
in those passages that speak of God's judgment in the most comprehensive terms
or in others that speak more particularly of the judgment of believers, it is
clear that this judgment will be "according to" works. When defending
his own apostolic ministry, Paul is not con- tent to appeal to his own judgment
concerning himself. Rather, he appeals to the judgment of the Lord who will
either vindicate or condemn his ministry. In the face of opposition and
division within the Corinthian church, he notes that it is the "lord who
judges me" (and, by implication, all believers). There is a day coming, he
adds, that will not be a day in a human court but in the court of the Lord.
"Therefore," he warns, "do not pronounce judgment before the
time, before the Lord comes, who will bring to light the things now hidden in
darkness and will disclose the purposes of the heart. Then each one will
receive his commendation from God" (II Corinthians 4:5). The clearest
statement of a final judgment of believers, however, is found in II Corinthians
5: 10: "For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that
each one may receive what is due for what he has done in the body, whether good
or evil."
If
we consider the features of the apostle Paul's teaching that we have considered
thus far, the general pattern seems fully consonant with what we have
summarized as the view of the Reformation. Be- cause justification is always accompanied
by sanctification in the lives of those who are in union with Christ by faith,
the apostle insists that only those whose lives confirm the indwelling presence
of the Spirit of Christ will be saved. Salvation, in its fullest and
comprehensive meaning, includes the consummation of that saving work in the
lives of believers that begins in this life but that is only perfected in the
life to come. Justification, which is a principal benefit of the gospel, does
not encompass the whole of the believer's salvation. Those whom God justifies
He also sanctifies. Consequently, no one will be saved who does not exhibit the
fruits of the Spirit's working in his or her life, and who does not persist in
the way of new obedience. This is the context for Paul's clear teaching that
all will be judged in the future and that this final judgment will be according
to works. The final vindication or acquittal of believers will be according to
their works, which confirm and evidence the genuineness of their faith and
participation in Christ. However, despite this clear emphasis upon a final
judgment and vindication that will be according to works, nowhere in Paul's
writings is this final judgment described as a kind of completion or final
chapter in the believer's justification. The grace of free justification
remains the basis for the believer's confidence of acceptance with God.
Dr.
Cornelis P. Venema is the President of Mid- America Reformed
Seminary where he also teaches Doctrinal Studies. Dr. Venema is also a contributing
editor for The Outlook.
[This
article is posted through the gracious permission of Dr. Venema and The
Outlook.]