Sunday, 3 February 2019

“To Fulfill All Righteousness”: The Saving Merit Of Christ’s Obedience

By Richard W. Daniels

To make things as simple as possible in introducing the topic of this article, we will ask a question not altogether unlike that posed by the Philippian jailor who asked Paul, “What must I do to be saved?” “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved” was the apostle’s straightforward answer to this simple question (Acts 16:30-31). Why? Because faith in Christ—which is really a believing into Christ, a closing with Christ, so as to know a union with Him—results in the reception of all things necessary unto salvation. Christ Himself is made by God to be unto us “wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption,” and we “are complete in him” (1 Cor. 1:30; Col. 2:10).

We need have no doubt concerning this in light of the massive case made for it in the book of Romans. The glory of the gospel is that it demonstrates how God has been just in the justification of those who “have sinned, and come short of the glory of God” (Rom. 3:23). The sinner is justified—that is, accounted as righteous, judicially declared righteous so that he is subsequently treated as righteous in the presence of the just and perfect Judge of all men, whose law stops every mouth (Rom. 3). This justification is a decree freely made apart from the law to one who does not work and who is not foreseen to be working, indeed, to one who is, as a matter of fact, ungodly (Rom. 4), yet it does not nullify the law but establishes it (Rom. 3:31). Moreover, this decree of justification is perfect and final, there being nothing admitted between it and the state of being at peace with God, in which the believer rejoices in a sure and certain hope of the glory of God (Rom. 5:1-11). The reason for this is that he has been united with Christ, so that what has been true of Christ in relation to the law, as being once under it and subsequently free of it, has happened to the believer, rendering him also dead to the power of sin (Rom. 5:11-7:6).

As a result of this union with Christ, the sinner has also become the recipient of the Holy Spirit, who dwells in him as a seal, not only guaranteeing the future possession of this glory, but operating unfailingly to bring him at last to a state of entire spiritual and physical sanctification and glorification, perfectly conformed to the image of Christ, the firstborn of many brethren (Rom. 7:6-8:39). Nothing less than this is meant by the phrase “thou shalt be saved.”

The question which we must now address if we are to make sense of this doctrine that God is “just and the justifier” of them that believe on Christ, is not “what must I do to be saved,” but “what must Christ do in order for me to be saved?” What is it that Christ has done in order that God may be just? What is “the redemption that is in Christ Jesus” which enables God to “justify by His grace as a gift?”

What Must The Lord Jesus Christ Do?

All true evangelicals would no doubt answer, “He must die on the cross. We are saved by His atoning death, when He died in our place bearing the wrath of God which was due to us for our sin.” This is, indeed, the testimony of many texts of Scripture: “whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood” (Rom. 3:24). “Being now justified by his blood…” (Rom. 5:9). To this, the redeemed from all nations will eternally proclaim, “Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood, and hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father; to him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen” (Rev. 1:5-6).

Nevertheless, the question remains: does the Lamb’s worthiness to take the scroll, and does the Savior’s ability to justify and sanctify and keep His saints, arise only from His being a victim in their stead, or even from the fact that this victim is the eternal Son incarnate, or is something more necessary? Are they saved by His death, considered in and of itself as a single act, or is it more accurate to understand that the ultimate and task-completing work of one who has been the Servant of Jehovah all His life, fulfilling the terms of a covenant for their salvation is what makes this death saving? If the latter, then what is the relation of the Servant’s service to the Savior’s salvation? Is salvation the result of something done to Christ, or is it also the result of something done by Christ? Does Christ’s life simply qualify Him to be a worthy candidate for the death He died for me, or does that life of righteousness have a more direct application to my life? Does it do something for me, as well as doing something for Himself? These are the kinds of questions in view in the discussion of the role of Christ’s “active obedience” or “active righteousness” in our salvation.

Terms And Background

It would be helpful at this point to clarify some terms that have been employed to describe the obedience of Christ. Questions like the ones just posed were debated even before the Protestant Reformation. Medie­val scholastics spoke of the obedience Christ performed in His life and ministry up to His passion on the cross as His “active obedience.” On the other hand, the obedience of Christ in His death in suffering the pains of crucifixion to make satisfaction for our sin was called His “passive obedience.” Eventually, some theologians taught that Christ’s “active obedience” was for Himself, to qualify Himself for the work of making satisfaction for sin, but was not a part of that satisfaction. Without it, He would not be the spotless Lamb. He must be worthy of making the sacrifice in the end by living obediently before.

As Richard A. Muller points out, this view of Christ’s obedience and sufferings fits right in with the medieval view of sin and punishment that supported their doctrine of penance. Sinners could be forgiven, but since they lacked the righteousness of an obedient person and had not met their obligation of righteousness, they still deserved punishment. [1] Christ’s life of righteousness, being for Himself, could not be applied to them. Hence, men satisfied for this punishment in this present life by penance, or, coming short here, the debt was satisfied in purgatory. [2] Protestant theology argued that both the active and passive obedience of Christ were parts of His whole work as the Mediator, satisfying the obligations of sinners both to obey God and to suffer the penalty for disobedience. Reformed theologians taught that in fact Christ’s total obedience is imputed to believers in justification. Consequently, there was no need or warrant for penance or purgatory. Arminian and Socinian doctrine disagreed with this. Seventeenth-century Arminianism simply equated justification with pardon, denying any real imputation of Christ’s active righteousness, asserting that the idea leads to antinomianism. Socinianism denied the imputation of any alien righteousness. [3]

The Obedience Of Christ

At this point, we ask, what do we mean by the obedience of Christ? In what respect can we speak of God the eternal Son as being obedient: to what, for what purpose, and in what way?

Origin

Having already established the scriptural doctrine of the Trinity with its assertion of ontological equality among the three Persons of the Godhead, it seems reasonable, nevertheless, to believe that the Son’s obedience as demonstrated in the economy of salvation has its origin in that ultimate eternal status of His as the Son of the Father. It is not a work arbitrarily assigned to the Son instead of the Father, but because the person of the Son is “of the Father,” it is the Father who “sends” and the Son who “is sent” in the pre-temporal intertrinitarian compact known as the “Covenant of Redemption.” The Father appointed and the Son accepted the role of Savior within the eternal love and delight of the Son for the Father and of the Father for the Son, the Father’s desire that in all things the Son might have the pre-eminence, the Son’s desire that the Father might be glorified in all things, the love and delight of the triune God in the yet-to-be-created “sons of men,” and the utter impossibility that God’s image should be permitted to exist ingloriously.

What does this mean? The Son took upon Himself the task of restoring the moral uprightness of a creation that would be turned upside down by the defection of God’s image. Adam would disobey. By his disobedience, he, the representative man, would assert that the Creator’s authority and right were not ultimate for the creature, that there was a good greater than God and a wisdom to be had independently of God, and that there was an object other than God more worthy of his love, namely, himself. This is the essence of sin, the very meaning of evil: a creature’s attempt at independence from the God he is by creation bound to love with all his heart, soul, mind, and strength. Surely, the threatened sentence of death must be carried out; punishment must be inflicted or the serpent is vindicated, the greatest vice is no different in its effect from virtue, and the true God is found to be false.

Even if the sentence is carried out, there remains a question: how could, or why would, the “only wise God” have made man so wonderful and entrusted this creature with His glory if the only glory to be gained came by the divine justice of casting him into hell? No, if God is to receive the glory due from man, more than a penalty must be paid. The “principal” must be paid also: man must demonstrate, through obedience, that God is known by him and regarded as worthy of ultimate love, trust, and honor. All creatures owe this to God, but no man, as the psalmist says, has given to Him “the glory due to his name.” Unable, having sinned in his representative, and unwilling, his heart and mind corrupt in his conception, man goes astray even from the womb. This is why there must be a new man. He must be of Adam’s race to represent men, but not partaking of Adam’s guilt or corrupted by Adam’s stain.

There is one further qualification for this representative man: he must be someone who is not by nature under the same obligation as other creatures. That is, if he is to pay the debt of obedience that men and angels owe, he must not be already naturally obligated to pay that debt for himself. This can be none other than the Creator. The Creator must assume the obligations of the creature. He who is in the form of the worshipped and honored God “over all, blessed forever” must assume the form of a worshipping and God-honoring Servant, in the likeness of sinful flesh, under the obligations of the law, in a world under a curse. Even though not formally considered a part of the obedience, the foundation of the obedience of the Mediator is laid here in the covenant of redemption. [4] The Son accepted from His Father the “suretyship,” or responsibility. He would act as Captain and Shepherd, Father and Husband, untold ages before a body would be prepared for Him and He would say, “Lo, I come (in the volume of the book it is written of me,) to do thy will, O God” (Heb. 10:7).

The Servant Of The LORD

One of the most important themes in the understanding of the person and work of Christ is His role as the “Servant of the LORD.” [5] He was not only God the eternal Son, but He was God’s incarnate Servant, and God the Father was His God. As such, He was born the paradigmatic, representative Man, the Second Man, the last Adam, and the true Israel, who identified with His people in birth, in name, in circumcision, in His infant exile in Egypt, and in His baptism in the Jordan. The Son is the Servant, living His entire life (as recorded in the Gospels) in self-conscious dependence and delight in obedience to the will of His God. “I delight to do thy will, O my God: yea, thy law is within my heart” (Ps. 40:8).

This obedience to God’s revealed will was inward, deliberate, universal, life-controlling, and progressive. This inward delight in the law of God is an essential quality of obedience. As John Murray correctly observes, “To be an act of obedience, the whole dispositional complex of motive, direction, and purpose must be in conformity to the divine will. It was not otherwise in the case of our Lord. It was in human nature that Christ rendered the obedience required by his commission and office, and so the psychology of human action was applicable to him in all the intensity of the demands arising from his unique and incomparable undertaking as the Lord’s Servant.” [6]

We see it first in His simple, matter-of-fact response to His anxious mother, literally, “Didn’t you know that I must be about my Father’s things?” [7] He was in His element—as is meant to be every man’s, every child’s element: the things of God. Whether in the temple or being subject to His parents, He was obedient, growing in wisdom, and stature, and in the favor of God and men (Luke 2:40).

How could He grow in favor with God? It can only be in the Father’s pleasure in Him as He obediently passes through the progression of increasingly difficult and complex temptations of human life. The perfectly obedient child grows into the perfectly obedient man, learning obedience “by the things which he suffered” (Heb. 5:8) in His pilgrimage through infancy, childhood, puberty, adolescence, and young manhood.

By associating obedience with suffering, we are reminded that His obedience was deliberate; He understood the Father’s will, felt the pressure, counted the cost, and preferred the pleasure of God’s approval to any relief or advantage proffered by sin. He learned and practiced obedience to God at home, in school, in the synagogue, in the marketplace, in the carpenter’s shop, and in the prayer closet until the time came for Him to be manifested to Israel and begin His ministry. He is baptized—not for the remission of sins, for He had none, but, as the Surety of His people, “to fulfill all righteousness.” What was the measure of His life at this time? The Father tells us, “In [him] I am well pleased,” as He would testify again on the Mount of Transfiguration (Matt. 3:15-17; 17:5; 2 Peter 1:17).

Then, the Second Adam is tempted by the Devil, not in a garden but in the desolation of the Judean wilderness. This time, however, He will submit Himself to the trial and provision of His God, await the pleasure of and submit Himself to the method of His God, and receive a kingdom God’s way, even though that way will lead Him to the cross (Matt. 4:1-11). [8] Thus God’s “Holy Servant Jesus,” as Peter calls Him (Acts 3:13, 26; 4:27, 30), enters a ministry absolutely determined by His understanding of and delight in His Father’s will: “For I came down from heaven, not to do mine own will, but the will of him that sent me”; “I do always those things that please him” (John 6:38; 8:29). His Father’s will is His meat, His drink, and the zeal that consumes Him (John 2:17; 4:34).

In this He demonstrates not only that He is the expected Servant of Isaiah, the Messiah who comes bringing the kingdom of God (Luke 4:18-20; Matt. 11:2-6), but the Son who is the model for all God’s sons in faith and love, patience and zeal, consistency and constancy. There is no part of the law of God (moral, ceremonial, or civil) concerning which His enemies can find fault, so He can truly say, “Which one of you convinceth me of sin?” (John 8:46). Rather, He fulfills every jot and tittle (Matt. 5:17-19). The call to discipleship is the call to follow Him—to think and to speak and to work as He does, to please the Father (e.g., John 5:19-47). He is the arch exemplar of all His teachings: He models every beatitude, demonstrates every grace and fruit of the Spirit. Paul’s grand definition of spiritual love in 1 Corinthians 13 is best expounded from the character of Jesus. [9] His life is the archetype of every virtue, spiritual and social, toward God and man. At the beginning of the last week of Jesus’ life, when struck afresh with the sense of the nearness of His death, He prays, “Father, glorify thy name,” and the Father bears Him this testimony from heaven: “I have both glorified it, and will glorify it again” (John 12:28). The Father has upheld Him, and the Servant has not grown faint or discouraged in His mission to establish justice in the earth (Isa. 42:1, 4).

Finally, He comes to Gethsemane to face the ultimate test. Will He trust, love, and honor God with the giving of His very life? Will He obey in that which none other will ever be called upon to do: to drink into His holy soul the full cup of divine vengeance against the sins of others? Men foolishly talk of being willing to be condemned for the glory of God, but here was one man who knew exactly what that meant. He looked into the gaping mouth of hell, and all within Him recoiled from it in horror. Nevertheless, exceedingly sorrowful, even unto death, sweating blood at the prospect of it, He prays, “O my Father, if this cup may not pass away from me, except I drink it, thy will be done”; “The cup which my Father hath given me, shall I not drink it?” (Matt. 26:42; John 18:11). Nevertheless, even this is not passive. It is a continuation of that lifelong active doing. He chooses to obey God through all the utter and unparalleled self-denial of the trial and the patience of enduring the scorn, beating, and abuse of sinners, opening not His mouth in contempt but in prayer for their forgiveness. He perseveres, caring for His mother, preaching good news to the perishing, announcing the triumphant completion of His obedience—“τετέλεσται” (“It is finished”)—until in one last God-glorifying act of faith, staying upon His God against a frowning providence, He commits His soul into His Father’s hands.

How profound and high is the pleasure of God in this life of obedience! How inestimable is the honor given to God by this Last Adam! What glory now crowns the divine righteousness, wisdom, and grace! Here, indeed, is a treasury of merit sufficient to justify a million worlds of sinners.

For His People And Imputed To Them

From His coming into the world, His passive obedience of the sufferings of circumcision, His virtuous conduct under the common lot of a man “born unto trouble,” His faithfulness under the uncommon temptations He suffered from Satan as the Messiah, and His willing acceptance and patient bearing of His solitary agonies while bruised and crushed and damned on Calvary, the whole obedience of Christ’s life constitutes the righteousness of His life. However, all this obedience was not for Himself but for His elect, for whom He made satisfaction to the demands of the law: satisfying its requirements by obedience, satisfying its penalties for disobedience by His death. That He was “made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons” (Gal. 4:4-5) clearly points to the connection between His obedience in life and the privileges of the believer.

Opponents of this doctrine have often raised the objection, noted earlier, that as a true man He must obey for Himself; hence, His obedience is not imputable to others. The reply, made by many since the Reformation, is succinctly summarized by George Smeaton:
The answer to this, as it was uniformly given by the Lutheran, and also by the best Reformed divines, on the ground of such passages as the present, was that humanity was assumed by the Son of God into the unity of His person, to be an instrument or organ in His work; that it existed only in the person of the Son, and never apart from Him; that the law as such had no competent authority over the Son of God, who was Himself the lawgiver; that His human nature, also called the Son of God, was not under the law but exempt from it in any covenant form; and therefore that He was made under the law, not because He had a human nature, but because He willed to be under it, to finish a work of obedience which might be given away to those who had none. This was meritorious obedience, and given to us as a donation. [10]
It is important also to stress that the active obedience of Christ was not only for His people but is also imputed to them. [11] As John Owen argued, “If it were necessary that the Lord Christ, as our surety, should undergo the penalty of the law for us, or in our stead, because we have all sinned, then it was necessary also that, as our surety, he should yield obedience unto the preceptive part of the law for us also; and if the imputation of the former”—that is, the penalty—“be needful for us unto our justification before God, then is the imputation of the latter, [the preceptive part] also necessary unto the same end and purpose” (5:251). Wilhelmus à Brakel agrees with this when expounding Romans 5:19: “For as by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous.” He says, “One can only be conformed to the law by fulfilling its demands—by perfect internal and external holiness. The law does not demand either punishment or holiness, but both. Therefore, by removal of guilt the Surety cannot make anyone righteous unless the law has also actually been fulfilled. ‘He that doeth righteousness is righteous’ (1 John 3:7). Since Christ makes His elect righteous, He of necessity must subject Himself to the law on their behalf, fulfilling it in obedience. Thus, by His obedience He makes His elect righteous.” After providing a good, succinct summary of general Reformed exposition of the topic, à Brakel concludes, “Suffering is not righteousness. Christ’s suffering was not His righteousness (that is, when considering the definition of suffering), but His righteousness is His perfect fulfillment and performance of the law. If therefore Christ’s righteousness is imputed to us and we are the righteousness of God in Him, then His being subject to and His performance of the law is imputed to us.” [12]

The Importance Of This Doctrine

Negatively

Without this doctrine, there is not a real foundation for justification at all; there may be a foundation for passing over Adam’s debt that we should die, but there is no foundation for imputing to us any righteousness, eternal life, or any of the fruits of justification. At best, we simply return to a kind of moral and spiritual neutrality with no positive righteousness imputed to us. We are immediately struck with the inadequacy of it, for without a covenant that establishes Christ as His people’s representative, even His death would be ineffectual to undo what Adam’s disobedience had done. On the other hand, granting the existence of the covenant, we see that through the representative’s obedience without qualification that “the many will be made righteous.”

Furthermore, without this doctrine, there is no basis for any other gift of God attributed in Scripture to Christ’s obedience. It is not because Christ obeyed by dying, but that He obeyed in “the form of a servant…even unto death” that He receives the mediatorial glorification and its attendant benefits for His people, the principal of these being the shedding forth of the Holy Spirit from heaven. Without this, there is no union with Christ, no regeneration, no faith, and hence no personal entrance into the justified condition. In short, all the benefits of salvation from election in Christ before the creation of the world to establishment in a state of infallible and perfect glorification hang upon the successful accomplishing of His appointment as the God-glorifying Man who as man and for men fulfills all righteousness.

Consequently, without it there is absolutely no basis for full assurance. Indeed, there is no basis for any assurance at all, except the groundless assurance of those who ignorantly assume that all they need is forgiveness and the opportunity to make a fresh start.

Positively

Objectively, here is the basis of justification: God has been obeyed by a perfect, chosen, non-obligated Man for other men. Therefore, be they ever so ungodly in themselves, in union with Him they may be regarded and treated as having fulfilled all righteousness.

Subjectively, the active righteousness of Christ affords the soul the very highest ground of assurance at the throne of grace, in the hour of temptation, and, as J. Gresham Machen bore witness, in the hour of death. Here is Joshua, clothed in filthy garments before the Lord. His filthy garments are taken away and he is clothed in other garments. Where do those other garments come from? Has Joshua spun them out of his own grace-assisted works? No, he is not given another filthy loin cloth, but dressed in the glorious regalia of a priest.

As Ludwig von Zinzendorf wrote:

Jesus! Thy blood and righteousness, my beauty are, my glorious dress.
Midst flaming worlds in these arrayed, with joy shall I lift up my head.

Augustus Toplady wrote:

A debtor to mercy alone! Of covenant mercy I sing!
Nor fear with Thy righteousness on, my person and offering to bring.

Charles Wesley said:

No condemnation now I dread: Jesus, and all in Him, is mine!
Alive in Him, my living Head, and clothed in righteousness divine,
Bold I approach the eternal throne, and claim the crown through Christ my own.

In temptation, as Satan presses hard to persuade the believer that he may as well give up, the Christian may assure himself that he, in his Savior, has already fought and prevailed against this foe and, thus encouraging himself, may carry out his part of the battle, “strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might” (Eph. 6:10) with this on his breastplate: “THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS” (Jer. 23:6).

What righteousness clothes and arms the Christian? It is that full life of obedience, that well-pleasing life from the obedience of incarnation to the obedience of death. We have a high priest who has prayed, “I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do”; “for their sake I consecrate myself” (John 17:4, 19). As Christ’s five bleeding wounds plead and the blood that speaks better things than the blood of Abel speaks, it is not death only that is pleaded, but a covenant fully satisfied by such a life. All that God could want from sinners, Jesus has given in their stead. Consequently, we insist that there is nothing to be added by men to their justification before God, and the fruits of that justification are guaranteed.

Concluding Personal Applications

Finally, this is the source of the highest delight and praise in the child of God, as is clear from the joyous song of Isaac Watts:

Awake, my heart; arise, my tongue,
Prepare a tuneful voice;
In God, the life of all my joys,
Aloud will I rejoice.

’Tis he adorned my naked soul,
And made salvation mine;
Upon a poor polluted worm
He makes his graces shine.

And lest the shadow of a spot
Should on my soul be found,
He took the robe the Savior wrought,
And cast it all around.

How far the heav’nly robe exceeds
What earthly princes wear;
These ornaments, how bright they shine!
How white the garments are!

The Spirit wrought my faith, and love,
And hope, and every grace;
But Jesus spent his life to work
The robe of righteousness.

Strangely, my soul, art thou arrayed
By the great Sacred Three!
In sweetest harmony of praise
Let all thy powers agree. [13]

There is only One in all the world on whose face God can look and say, “He is altogether lovely.” Jesus is that One.

Now God is willing that you and I should hide in Jesus. I feel at this moment that He is my righteousness. “This is his name whereby he shall be called, THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS” (Jer. 23:6). I feel that the love of God shines upon my guilty soul through Jesus. This is all my peace.

Your tears will not blot out sin. They do nothing but weep in hell; but that does not justify them. Your right views of the gospel will not justify you; you must be covered with a spotless righteousness. Your change of heart and of life will not justify you; it cannot cover past sins—neither is it perfect. Your amended life is still fearfully sinful in Jehovah’s sight, and yet nothing but perfect righteousness can stand before Him. Jesus offers you this perfect righteousness; in Him you may stand and hear God say, “Thou art all fair, my love.”

Remember, you cannot be fair in yourself before God. Song of Solomon 1:6 must be your prayer: “Look not upon me.” Take yourself at your best moments, you are but a vile worm in Jehovah’s sight, and so am I. Remember, you may be “perfect in Christ Jesus.” Allow yourself to be found in Christ. Oh, what will come of you if you are found in yourself? Where will you appear? You will shrink back, and call on rocks and mountains to fall upon you and cover you. But if you are hiding in Jesus—if your eye and heart are fixed upon His wounds made by our sins—if you are willing to be righteous in His righteousness, to lie down under the stream of His blood, and to be clothed upon with the snowy fleece of the Lamb of God—then God will love you with His whole soul exceedingly. The pure, full love of God streams through the blood and obedience of Jesus to every soul that is lying under them, however vile and wretched in themselves.

If you were lying at the bottom of the sea, no eye could see your deformities: so when the infinite ocean of Immanuel’s righteousness flows over the soul, you are swallowed up as it were in Christ’s righteousness. Your blackness is never seen, only His fairness; and thus a God of truth can say, “Behold thou art fair; behold thou art fair, my love. Thou art all fair, my love; there is no spot in thee” (Song 4:1-7). Keep this always in memory; and when guilt penetrates your conscience, as it will, lie down again beneath the righteousness of Jesus. Never lose sight of this. [14] As Isaac Watts wrote:

The Sufferings of Christ for Our Salvation

Save me, O God, the swelling floods
Break in upon my soul;
I sink, and sorrows o’er my head
Like mighty waters roll.

I cry till all my voice be gone,
In tears I waste the day:
My God, behold my longing eyes,
And shorten thy delay.

They hate my soul without a cause,
And still their number grows
More than the hairs around my head,
And mighty are my foes.

’Twas then I paid that dreadful debt
That men could never pay,
And gave those honors to thy law
Which sinners took away.

Thus in the great Messiah’s name,
The royal prophet mourns;
Thus he awakes our hearts to grief,
And gives us joy by turns.

Now shall the saints rejoice, and find
Salvation in my name;
For I have borne their heavy load
Of sorrow, pain, and shame.

Grief, like a garment, clothed me round,
And sackcloth was my dress,
While I procured for naked souls
A robe of righteousness.

Amongst my brethren and the Jews
I like a stranger stood,
And bore their vile reproach, to bring
The Gentiles near to God.

I came in sinful mortals’ stead,
To do my Father’s will;
Yet when I cleansed my Father’s house,
They scandalized my zeal.

My fasting and my holy groans
Were made the drunkard’s song;
But God, from his celestial throne,
Heard my complaining tongue.

He saved me from the dreadful deep,
Nor let my soul be drowned;
He raised and fixed my sinking feet
On well-established ground.

’Twas in a most accepted hour
My prayer arose on high;
And for my sake my God shall hear
The dying sinner’s cry. [15]

Notes
  1. “Obedientia Christi” in Dictionary of Latin and Greek Theological Terms (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1985), 205-6.
  2. It was a great incongruity of medieval theology that a perfect divine Christ had to be obedient for Himself, while the saints were able to build up a “treasury of merit” which could be applied to others.
  3. The preceding paragraph is a very cursory comment on a much more complex issue and its history. The reader is urged to examine the issues and their development in the following works: Heinrich Heppe, Reformed Dogmatics (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1978), 458-65; Charles Hodge, Systematic Theology (London: Thomas Nelson and Sons, 1873), 3:141-95.
  4. The expression “covenant of redemption” has received some criticism in recent times. The essential points, however, are succinctly summarized by Charles Hodge: “It is plain…that Christ came to execute a work, that He was sent of the Father to fulfill a plan, or preconceived design. It is no less plain that special promises were made by the Father to the Son, suspended upon the accomplishment of the work assigned Him. This may appear as an anthropological mode of representing a transaction between the persons of the adorable Trinity. But it must be received as substantial truth. The Father did give the Son a work to do, and He did promise to Him a reward upon its accomplishment. The transaction was, therefore, of the nature of a covenant. An obligation was assumed by the Son to accomplish the work assigned Him; and an obligation was assumed by the Father to grant Him the stipulated reward. The infinitude of God does not prevent these things being possible.” Systematic Theology (Oak Harbor, Wash.: Logos Research Systems, Inc., 1997), 360.
  5. John Murray writes, “In delineating the Savior’s expiatory accomplishment, no one passage in Scripture is more instructive than Isaiah 52:13-53:12. It is in the capacity of Servant that the personage is introduced (cf. Isa. 42:1; 49:6) and it is in this capacity he executes his expiatory work (cf. Isa. 52:13; 53:11)…. This office implies commission by the Father, subjection to, and fulfillment of, the Father’s will. All of this involves obedience. So already we are advised that no category could more significantly express the execution of his vicarious work than obedience.” Collected Writings of John Murray (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth Trust, 1976), 2:151.
  6. Murray, Collected Writings, 2:152.
  7. οὐκ ᾔδειτε ὅτι ἐν τοῖς τοῦ πατρός μου δεῖ εἶναί με (Luke 2:49).
  8. See Thomas Manton’s exposition of the Temptations of Christ in volume 1 of his Works.
  9. See Jonathan Edwards’s sermons entitled Charity and Its Fruits for a brilliant demonstration of this.
  10. George Smeaton, “Paul’s Doctrine of the Atonement,” The Doctrine of the Atonement According to the Apostles. (Index created by Christian Classics Foundation. electronic ed. based on Hendrickson reprint of 1870 ed. Simpsonville, S.C.: Christian Classics Foundation, 1996.)
  11. On justification and the obedience of Christ, see also Anthony Burgess’s sermons “On The Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ Both Active and Passive,” in The True Doctrine (1654), 284-456; John Bunyan’s Justification by an Imputed Righteousness (1853), 1:301-34; and John Brown of Wamphrey, The Life of Justification Opened (1695). John Owen’s best discussion of the obedience of Christ and its place in the justification of sinners is found in his treatise “The Doctrine of Justification by Faith,” in Works, 5:5-400. With regard to this question, Owen says, “The obedience whereof we treat, being not the obedience of the human nature abstractedly, however performed in and by the human nature; but the obedience of the person of the Son of God, however the human nature was subject to the law…it was not for himself, nor could be for himself; because his whole person was not obliged thereunto. It is therefore a fond thing, to compare the obedience of Christ with that of any other man, whose whole person is under the law. For although that may not be for himself and others…yet this may, yea, must be for others, and not for himself” (5:255-56). See also Francis Turretin, Institutes of Elenctic Theology (Phillipsburg, N.J.: Presbyterian and Reformed, 1994), 445-55, and especially chapters 5-8 of Herman Witsius, The Economy of the Covenants Between God and Man (Grand Rapids: Reformation Heritage Books, 2008), 1:202-55.
  12. Wilhelmus à Brakel. The Christian’s Reasonable Service, trans. Bartel Elshout, ed. Joel R. Beeke (Grand Rapids: Reformation Heritage Books, 1999), 1:611.
  13. Isaac Watts, The Psalms and Hymns of Isaac Watts (Morgan, Pa.: Soli Deo Gloria, 1997), 304.
  14. Andrew A. Bonar and R. M. M‘Cheyne, Memoir and Remains of R.M. M‘Cheyne. Electronic form, by Christian Classics Foundation (Chicago: Moody Press, 1996).
  15. Watts, The Psalms and Hymns, 118-19.

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