Justification
By Faith,Out of Date?
by
B. B. Warfield
Professor of Didactic and
Polemic Theology Princeton Theological Seminary,
1887-1921NB: This essay was originally published in
The
Christian Irishman, Dublin, (May 1911), 71. It was
reprinted in John E. Meeter, ed., Selected Shorter
Writings of Benjamin B. Warfield, 2 vol. (Nutley,
NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1970),
1.283-284.
Sometimes we are told that Justification by Faith is
"out of date." That would be a pity, if it were true.
What it would mean would be that the way of salvation
was closed and "no thoroughfare" nailed up over the
barriers. There is no justification for sinful men
except by faith. The works of a sinful man will, of
course, be as sinful as he is, and nothing but
condemnation can be built on them. Where can he get
works upon which he can found his hope of justification,
except from Another? His hope of Justification,
remember-- that is, of being pronounced righteous by
God. Can God pronounce him righteous except on the
ground of works that are righteous? Where can a sinful
man get works that are righteous? Surely, not from
himself; for, is he not a sinner, and all his works as
sinful as he is? He must go out of himself, then, to
find works which he can offer to God as righteous. And
where will he find such works except in Christ? Or how
will he make them his own except by faith in Christ
Justification by Faith, we see, is not to be set in
contradiction to justification by Works. It is set in
contradiction only to justification by our Own Works. It
is justification by Christ's Works. The whole question,
accordingly, is whether we can hope to be received into
God's favor on the ground of what we do ourselves, or
only on the ground of what Christ does for us. If we
expect to be received on the ground of what we do
ourselves--that is what is called Justification by
Works. If on the ground of what Christ has done for us
-- that is what is meant by Justification by Faith.
Justification by Faith means, that it to say, that we
look to Christ and to him alone for salvation, and come
to God pleading Christ's death and righteousness as the
ground of our hope to be received into his favor. If
Justification by Faith is out of date, that means, then,
that salvation by Christ is out of date. There is
nothing, in that case, left to us but that each man must
just do the best he can to save himself.
Justification by Faith does not mean, then, that
salvation by believing things instead of by doing right.
It means pleading the merits of Christ before the throne
of grace instead of our own merits. It may be doing
right to believe things, and doing right is certainly
right. The trouble with pleading our own merits before
God is not that merits of our own would not be
acceptable to God. The trouble is that we haven't any
merits of our own to plead before God. Adam, before his
fall, had merits of his own, and because he had merits
of his own he was, in his own person acceptable to God.
He didn't need Another to stand between him and God,
whose merits he could plead. And, therefore, there was
not talk of his being Justified by Faith. But we are not
like Adam before the fall; we are sinners and have no
merits of our own. If we are to be justified at all, it
must be on the ground of the merits of Another, whose
merits can be made ours by faith. And this is the reason
why God sent his Only Begotten Son, that whosoever
believeth on him should not perish but have everlasting
life. If we do not believe in him, obviously we must
perish. But if we believe in him we shall not perish but
have everlasting life. That is Justification by Faith.
Justification by believing in Christ. If Justification
by Faith is out of date, then salvation by Christ is out
of date. And as there is none other name under heaven,
given among men, wherein we must be saved, if salvation
through Christ is out of date then is salvation itself
out of date. Surely, in a world of sinful men, needing
salvation, this would be a great pity. |