Justification and the New Perspective
by Robert Saucy, Alan W. Gomes
Originally published in the Spring 2011 issue of Sundoulos Magazine
The great reformer Martin Luther once declared that the biblical teaching of justification by faith alone âis the doctrine by which the church stands or falls.â Historically, Protestants have understood justification to mean that God declares us ânot guiltyâ for our sins because Christ bore them in our place, and also that God declares us as being positively righteous in his sight because of Christâs righteousness imputed to us, i.e., credited to our accounts.
However, a recent teaching called the âNew Perspective on Paulâ (hereafter NP) has called into question the traditional Protestant understanding of justification. Adherents of the NP claim that the church, both Catholic and Protestant, has misunderstood the biblical teaching of justification for most of its history,1 primarily due to a failure to apprehend the underlying problem that Paul was addressing in his epistles to the Galatians and to the Romans.2 Thus, before we can understand the NPâs revision of the doctrine of justification it is necessary first to identify what they claim is the real issue that Paul was confronting in these epistles.
The Context of Paulâs Polemic According to the NP
According to the NP, Paul was not countering legalistic Jewish individuals who were attempting to earn their salvation through works-righteousness. Indeed, these Jews believed that they were already members of Godâs covenant people by grace alone. Rather, their sin was one of ethnocentric pride. These Jews had erected barriers between themselves and their Gentile brothers and sisters by insisting that, along with faith in Jesus, the Gentiles must also follow such specifically Jewish ceremonial practices as circumcision, the kosher dietary laws, and Sabbath observance, which were to serve as âidentity markersâ that they too belonged to Godâs covenant community. Thus, the sin of these âJudaizersâ was that they were alienating themselves from their fellow believers in a spirit of ethnic exclusivism and pride, not that they were attempting to earn salvation in relation to God through moral effort.
With this as background we can now look at the NPâs retooling of the doctrine of justification.
The NP Understanding of Justification
According to the NP, justification is the declaration that a person is in the covenant family. Accordingly, ârighteousnessâ is simply a statement of that personâs status. He or she is not regarded as morally virtuous (whether through an inherent or an imputed righteousness), but is simply declared to be in the covenant.3
In the NP, justification is not central to salvation or to the gospel as such. That is because justification is not about a person âgetting inâ to the family of God, or âstaying in,â but rather is about âhow you could tell who was [already] in.â4
Therefore, justification is not the gospel itself, nor even a part of the gospel message, but is merely the pronouncement of who is or is not already in the covenant community through faith. Instead, the gospel refers only to the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus. It is by faith in the gospel, and not through justification, that we receive forgiveness of sins and are made members of Godâs covenant people. By the time the declaration known as justification happens, our covenant membership is already a âdone deal,â as it were.
According to Wright, our present justification, which is on the basis of faith, anticipates our future justification that will take place on the day of judgment, which is âon the basis of the entire life.â5 In other words, while our present justification is by faith, our future justification is, in some sense, by works.6 Wright eschews the idea that this final justification by works means that the Christian âearnsâ his or her final salvation, since the works in question are produced in the power of the Holy Spirit (Rom. 8:4).7
We believe that the NP take on justification is fatally defective because it has failed to grasp justificationâs true essence. And we believe that the problems with the NP view are not merely theoretical but have serious practical consequences as well.
The Biblical Meaning of Justification
The word âjustifyâ normally translates verb forms based on the Hebrew root sdq and the Greek dik that also are used in forming the adjective ârighteousâ and noun ârighteousness.â âJustifyâ in the Old Testament normally translates the causative form (Hiphil) of sdq with the forensic (judicial) meaning, âto declare righteousâ (e.g., âI will not acquit [declare righteous] the guilty,â Ex 23:7).8
The forensic sense is evident especially when it is contrasted with condemnation (e.g., Deut 25:1; Prov 17:15).9
Where the Old Testament Hebrew word for âjustifyâ clearly has a forensic sense, the Greek translation in the Septuagint is always the verb, »ćŸ±°ìČčŸ±ŽÇĆ, which is also used for âjustifyâ in the New Testament. Again, the declarative meaning is evident when Paul refers to those âjustifiedâ as âjust before Godâ (Rom 2:13; cf. 3:20), and where he contrasts justification with condemnation (Rom 5:16; 8:33-34). While »ćŸ±°ìČčŸ±ŽÇĆ can occasionally have a demonstrative sense, i.e., âto show someone as righteous,â it is generally agreed that in Paulâs letters the word always has the forensic sense, âto declare righteousâ or âacquit.â10
Now, if Godâs justification of us means that he declares us righteous, the important question is, what does ârighteousâ mean in this declaration? Far more profound than NPâs concept of the non-moral status of membership in Godâs people, scriptural righteousness refers to a moral quality that is in radical contrast to all sin, lawlessness, and uncleannessâe.g., âall are under sin . . . there are none righteousnessâ (Rom 3:9-10); one will hardly die for a righteous man, but Christ died for us âwhile we were sinnersâ (Rom 5:7-8); âwhat partnership have righteousness and lawlessnessâ (2 Cor 6:14); believers are no longer to present themselves as âslaves to impurity and to lawlessness,â but âto righteousnessâ (Rom 6:19). Righteousness thus entails doing what is right or what conforms to Godâs laws, i.e., his moral and spiritual order for human life. This order is the expression of his own person and word, or of his own righteousness, which Piper aptly defines as âhis unwavering commitment to preserve the honor of his name and display his glory.â11
The meaning of ârighteousâ in our justification by God is thus similar in that it is a declarative act that we are in conformity with Godâs righteous order for human moral, ethical, and spiritual lifeâwe conform to what people ought to do in relation to God and to our fellow humans. In human courts, the declaration of being righteous is based on the personâs own righteousness. But God in abounding love and grace âjustifies the ungodlyâ (Rom 4:5) and âsinnersâ (5:8-9) by giving them âthe gift of righteousnessâ in Christ (5:17). For this reason, while our justification is ultimately Godâs declaration of our righteousness, the saving work in Christ, or âthe justice enacted in Christâ on our behalf, is rightly seen as an aspect of that justification.12
Scriptureâs longest exposition on justification in Romans 3:21-5:21 is preceded (1:18-3:20) by the apostleâs strong demonstration that âboth Jews [under the Law] and Greeks [Gentiles] are all under sinâ (3:9) and âaccountable to Godâ (v. 19). Biblical justification thus goes beyond the surface problem of Jews in the church demanding that Gentiles take on certain non-moral âbadgesâ of the ceremonial law. Rather, Paul recognized that they were joining law keepingââby which no flesh will be justifiedâ (Gal 2:16)âwith the work of Christ in order to be right with God. In other words, they were attempting to mix the old Mosaic covenant with the new covenant wrought by the work of Christ. The apostle declared this a distortion of the gospel (Gal 1:7) and in fact a âdifferent gospelâ (v. 6). He branded the purveyors of such a gospel âfalse brethrenâ (Gal 2:4).
The demand for Gentile circumcision no doubt revealed a certain Jewish ethnocentric pride in the Law on which the NP focuses. But the apostle saw something much more fundamental: they were denying the gospel of grace. The emphasis on justification by faith apart from any works demonstrates that for Paul the gospel rests on the doctrine of Godâs gracious justification of believers solely through the work of Christ. Because justification levels all humans as sinners and debtors to Godâs gracious salvation, the doctrine obviously has ramifications for any self-aggrandizing behavior among Godâs people. But for the apostle it is first and foremost a part of the gospel of our salvation from sin.
The Need of Righteousness for Life
The doctrine of justification is central to the biblical story of salvation. Scripture repeatedly connects life with righteousness. âThose who receive . . . the gift of righteousness will reign in lifeâ (Rom 5:7). âThrough one act of righteousness [the obedience of Jesus] there resulted justification of lifeâ (Rom 5:18). Grace reigns âthrough righteousness to eternal lifeâ (Rom 5:21). âBeing justified by His grace we would be made heirs according to the hope of eternal lifeâ (Tit 3:7; cf. also Gal 3:21).
Life requires righteousness because life is found only in God (cf. Ps 36:9, âFor with you is the fountain of lifeâ; Prov 8:35, âFor he who finds me finds lifeâ). If we would have fullness of life, therefore, we must live in full communion with God, which entails conformity with his own righteousness and life. As Scripture says, âYou shall be holy, for I am Holyâ(1 Pet 1:15); âFor what partnership have righteousness and lawlessness, or what fellowship has light with darknessâ (2 Cor 6:14; cf. Ps 15:1-2; 24:3-4). Thus, the justification that brings life must be grounded in a perfect righteousness.
The Consequences of the Fall and its Remedy
Sadly, Scripture tells us that human beings did not maintain their original integrity but defected from God in an act of willful rebellion. And this rebellion brought with it horrific consequences.
First of all, humans became subject to death as the wages of their sin (Rom 3:23). As early as Genesis 2:17, God warned Adam that if he disobeyed and ate of the forbidden fruit he would âsurely die.â God, the righteous judge, thus made it clear that his commandments must be obeyed. This death, both spiritual and physical, is the penalty for sin and must be exacted because God, being just, will in no wise let sin go unpunished (Ex 34:7; Nah 1:3). It was therefore necessary for Jesus to propitiate (i.e., satisfy) the wrath of God in our place if we are to be saved (Rom 3:25-26). Christ bore our sins in our place, i.e., as our substitute (Isa 53:6, 10; Matt 20:28; 1 Pet 2:24, etc.), tasting death for every man (Heb 2:9). Another way of expressing this same truth is to say that our sins were imputed to him, i.e., our sins were reckoned to him as if he himself had committed them.
But Christâs work for us does not stop there. As we observed previously, we need more than mere exemption from punishment: we also need to have perfect moral righteousness as a condition for life. Jesus furnishes this perfect moral righteousness through his own immaculately holy life, just as he furnishes the required payment for our sins through his death on the cross.
It is at this latter point in particular that the NP runs afoul of the biblical (and classic Protestant) position. According to Wright, it is nonsensical to speak of moral righteousness as something that can be âimputedâ or otherwise bestowed as a gift. Wright states:
If we use the language of the law court, it makes no sense whatever to say that the judge imputes, imparts, bequeaths, conveys or otherwise transfers his righteousness to either the plaintiff or the defendant. Righteousness is not an object, a substance or a gas which can be passed across the courtroom.13
According to Wright, when God vindicates his people they have a righteous status, i.e., of the court having found in their favor. But this verdict is not based either on the defendantâs own moral righteousness or on the righteousness of another imputed to him.14 It is merely the judgeâs decision to vindicate the defendant on the basis of faith in Christ.
However, if, as we have seen, a perfect moral righteousness is needed, the question becomes, from where must this righteousness come? It must either be (1) our own inherent righteousnessâwhether wrought in us purely through our own moral exertions, or through the Spirit working in us, or through some combination of theseâor (2) imputed to us as a gift from a source outside of ourselves, i.e., what the reformers called an âalien righteousnessâ (iustitia aliena). These are the only two possibilities, logically speaking.
The first possibilityâattaining life through our own inherent moral righteousnessâis a non-starter. It is clear from Scripture that even the holiest and most spiritual of Christians attain only an imperfect moral righteousness (1 Jn 1:8).15
What about the second option, i.e., that of a moral righteousness reckoned to us from without? Although Wright regards this as nonsense, Scripture teaches otherwise.
The Scriptural Teaching on the Imputation of Christâs Righteousness
While Scripture does not state in so many words that Christâs righteousness is imputed to us, we are not contending here for the specific wording but for the thing itself. The Bible does not say directly that our sins were imputed to Christ, either, but this is certainly the meaning of passages that say that Christ was made a curse for us (Gal 3:13; cf. 2 Cor 5:21), that our iniquities were laid on him (Isa 53:6), and the myriad of texts that teach that he made satisfaction for our sins as a substitute (e.g., Matt 20:28; 1 Pet 2:24, etc.).
So let us now examine just three of the many biblical passages that teach the fact of imputation: that Christâs righteousness is our own.
1 Corinthians 1:30 â âBut by His doing you are in Christ Jesus, who became to us wisdom from God, and righteousness and sanctification, and redemption.â Though this verse does not use the language of imputation it does state that Christ âbecame to usâŠrighteousness.â From this we conclude that because we are âin Christ Jesusâ (more on that later), he is our righteousness, which is as much as to say that his righteousness is imputed to us.
Wright disputes this conclusion, stating that such an interpretation proves too much. He avers that if we are to take this verse as teaching imputed righteousness then âwe must also be prepared to talk of the imputed wisdom of Christ; the imputed sanctification of Christ; and the imputed redemption of ChristâŠ.â16 But as John Piper counters, Wrightâs reasoning is fallacious. âThere is no reason to think,â Piper states, âthat Christ must âbecomeâ for us righteousness exactly the same way he becomes wisdom and sanctification and redemption. This is not said or impliedâŠ.He may become each of these things for us as each reality requires.â17 For example, Christ âbecomes sanctification to usâââChrist is formed in youâ (Gal 4:19)ânot by imputation but through the Holy Spirit working in and with us âboth to will and to do his good pleasureâ (Phil 2:12-13).
2 Corinthians 5:21 â âHe made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.â The juxtaposition of Christ being âmade sinâ on our behalf clarifies what it means for us to have âbecome the righteousness of God in him.â Certainly the part of the verse that says that he was âmade sin on our behalfâ can only mean that our sins were reckoned to Christ, who had no sin of his own. Accordingly, when the text says that we have become the righteousness of God in him, the meaning is that the righteousness which is inherent to him and not to us becomes ours by being reckoned to us. As Charles Hodge succinctly put it, âHis being made sin is consistent with his being in himself free from sin; and our being made righteous is consistent with our being in ourselves ungodly.â18
This text is one of the clearest passages teaching the imputed righteousness of Christ. Therefore, it is quite illuminating to see what Wright does with it. Repeatedly insisting that âthe righteousness of Godâ means âcovenant faithfulnessâ rather than something like Piperâs more fundamental definition mentioned earlier (i.e., âhis unwavering commitment to preserve the honor and display of his gloryâ), Wright concludes that Paul himself becomes the âcovenant faithfulnessâ of God in the sense that he is âthe covenant ambassador, who represents the one for whom he speaks in such a full and thorough way that he actually becomes the living embodiment of his sovereign.â19 We are not surprised that this idiosyncratic interpretation is altogether novel in the history of the exegesis of this passage.
Philippians 3:9 â This text reads, â[that I] may be found in Him, not having a righteousness of my own derived from the Law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which comes from God on the basis of faith.â Here Paul speaks explicitly about having a righteousness that comes to us through faith in Christ. What we have here is clearly, by definition, an alien righteousness (i.e., a righteousness ânot of my ownâ).
Wright takes the expression ârighteousness from Godâ (Greek: ek theou dikaisoune) in this verse as different in meaning from the expression ârighteousness of Godâ (dikaiosoune theou). The latter he says refers to Godâs âcovenant faithfulness,â whereas the former is strictly a status that God bestows on the believer through justification.20 This present status, granted on the basis of faith,21 looks forward to the final day when we will see âthe outworking of actual holiness and then in final vindication, of the status already given.â22
In response, it seems to us that there is no biblical warrant for shifting the meaning of ârighteousnessâ in these various expressions. That is, righteousness means the same thing whether we are applying it to God, or from God and to ourselves; in either case it refers to true moral uprightness and conformity to a moral norm. To see it in the first instance as merely a status without an underlying basis for that status is to distort seriously the meaning of righteousness in Scripture. And even to understand righteousness as Godâs âcovenant faithfulness,â as in the second instance, still fails to do justice to the concept of righteousness, because it confounds what righteousness is with what righteousness does.23
Now, adherents of the NP might object that it is unfair to characterize their understanding of justification as lacking a real, substantive basis in actual moral righteousness. After all, the recognition of our covenant membership in the present (as indicated by our faith) points forward to âthe outworking of actual holiness and then in final vindication, of the status already given.â24 To such an argument we would reply that such a basis, whether present or future, would be wholly inadequate. The point is not whether the holiness in us is actuated through the power of the Holy Spirit (as Wright stresses) or whether it arises purely through Pelagian self-effort. No, the point is that our inherent righteousness is imperfect, as we have already shown, and this is not good enough.
Verses that speak of us as being âin Christ,ââjoined to Christ,â etc.
There are many verses in the Bible that speak of us being âin Christ,â including all three of the verses listed above. The same idea is also expressed through such language as having âput onâ or being âclothedâ with Christ (Gal 3:27), being âjoined to Christâ (1 Cor 6:17), etc. We believe that the relationship of this truth in connection with justification merits special attention.
Long before the NP arose, some assailed the traditional doctrine of justification by faith as âa legal fiction.â That is because, its detractors say, God has to pretend, contrary to all reality, that we are something we are not: morally righteous. But this is to misunderstand the historic doctrine. The reality is, we really are righteous, and that righteousness is due to the fact that we are truly in Christ. It is a union so intimate that there is an actual sharing with Christ of all that he is and does for us. Luther, a favorite target of NP adherents, stated it as well as anyone. According to Luther, justifying faith is âa certain sure confidence in the heart, and a firm consent by which Christ is apprehended; so that Christ is the object of faith, yea, rather even in faith Christ himself is present.â25 The believer is âcementedâ to Christ on the basis of faith, so that the two are made, as it were, one person. The believer can say, âI am now one with Christ, that is to say, Christâs righteousness, victory, and life are mine. And again, Christ may say, I am that sinner, that is, his sins and his death are mine, because he is united and joined unto me, and I unto him. For by faith we are so joined together, âthat we are become one flesh and one boneâ (Eph 5:30).â26
If anything, it is the NP reformulation of the doctrine that involves a legal fiction. Piper pinpoints this defect when he states that
it leaves the gift of the status of vindication without foundation in real perfect imputed obedience. We have no perfect obedience to offer, and, Wright would say, Christâs obedience is not imputed to me, nor does it need to beâŠ.So we have no perfect obedience as the foundation of our status of vindication (i.e., justification).27
Justification All of God through Christ and Therefore by Faith Alone
From the foregoing discussion it should be evident that our justification, and in fact every facet of salvation, is all of Christ. There is nothing we can add. We are âjustified as a gift by His graceâ (Rom 3:24). âIn Christâ we are free from the condemnation due our sinsâfuture as well as past (Rom 8:1). Our âlife is hidden with Christ in Godâ (Col 3:3). In fact, Christ is our life (Col 4; cf. Gal 2:20). Attempting to add to Godâs grace by keeping regulations of the law (or any other work) is to make Christ of âno benefit to usâ and to leave us âsevered from Christâ (Gal 5:2, 4). In the words of J. Gresham Machen, âChrist has done nothing for us or He has done everything; to depend even in smallest measure upon our own merit is the very essence of unbelief; we must trust Christ for nothing or we must trust Him for all. Such is the teaching of the Epistle to the Galatians.â28
Jamesâs statement that âa man is justified by works and not by faith aloneâ (2:24) does not contradict this. Scripture says again and again that at the end we will adjudicated âaccording toâ our works (e.g., Matt 12:36-37; 25:31-46; Rom 2:5-8; 1 Cor 4:5; 2 Cor 5:9). This is because our works will reveal the gracious work of God in our lives (Phil 2:13). They are thus the evidence of Godâs genuine saving faith that works in our life, or what the apostle calls a âfaith working through loveâ (Gal 5:6). As Stott cogently explains, âWorks are never the ground or means of salvation, but they are the evidence of it, and therefore they constitute an excellent basis for judgment.â29 To use Jesusâ illustration of recognizing the tree by its fruit (Matt.7:17-18), our works are the fruit, but the source of that fruit is the life of Christ in us through faith alone. Ultimately, âthe ground of our justification lies not in works, nor in faith, but âin the revelation of Godâs grace in Christ embraced by faith.ââ30
Justification and Salvation
Contrary to Wright, we have seen that the doctrine of justification is a vital aspect of our salvation and of the gospel. Paul clearly connects the three as follows: âwith the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness [justification], and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvationâ (Rom 10:10). This message is the âgood newsâ or gospel (vv. 15, 16). But where does justification stand in relation to other aspects of our salvation, e.g. sanctification, adoption, glorification, etc.?
Concluding his indictment of all humans before salvation, Paul sets up our situation. All are âunder sin,â âthere is no one righteous,â âno fear of God [is] before their eyes,â and âno one will be declared righteous in his sight by observing the lawâ (Rom 3:9-20, NIV). Enter justification: âBut now a righteousness from God, apart from the Law, has been made knownâ (3:21). J. I. Packer rightly calls the doctrine of justification by faith the âbackboneâ of Paulâs gospel, âGodâs fundamental act of blessing, for it both saves from the past and secures for the future.â31 It is the foundation from which other blessings of salvation flow because it sets us in a right relationship with God. As the order of both Romans and Galatians demonstrates, the truth of justification not only precedes, but lays the basis for instruction on living the Christian life.
âHaving been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom also we have obtained our introduction by faith into this grace in which we standâ (Rom 5:1-2, emphasis added; cf. Gal 5:4). Justification by faith apart from works places us in the realm of grace for all of life. Without a justification that places one absolutely righteous before God through faith alone we will never know the peace of security. Moreover, only a constant awareness of our right relationship with God through justification by faith alone guards against our ever present temptation to insert our own works as a condition or contribution to our salvation. And when our works become part of our justification they easily become a source of boasting (cf. Eph 2:9).
We are designed by our Creator to live a life of loveâmotivated by love in response to his love. Only a justification by grace through faith alone apart from our works provides the foundation for such life.
Conclusion
The doctrine of justification by faith alone is both the foundation of life for Godâs people and the heart of the gospel proclamation to a dying and sin-ravaged world. Godâs justification of sinners is indeed the reality by which the church stands or falls, for it is only through the gospel, with justification by faith as its core, that Christ through his Spirit forms his church and communicates his vital presence in and through it. If we are to discharge our office as ministers of the gospel we must not be trumpets that blow an indistinct sound. As his ambassadors we must powerfully convey this glorious truth with all of the clarity and cogency that God may grant us. May we see the precious reality of justification by faith as the dynamic living reality captured so well in Charles Wesleyâs great hymn And Can It Be?
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
Amazing love! how can it be
That Thou, my God, shouldst die for me.
(Note: Though thoughtful and courteous engagement with the material is encouraged in the comments field, the authors are not available to respond to comments or questions regarding this post).