I wasn't using a commentary on Reformed anything.
I am not Reformed anything.
Yep. Not that you explained yourself on it.
New thread: Primitive Baptist? How do you see 'salvation', as related to you?
N.T. Wright and Justification
Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by Piper, Dec 8, 2023.
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Alan Gross Well-Known Member
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You asked for a difference between the reformed traditional view and what Wright was saying.
This is one very important difference.
Wright points out that Paul's use of justification is very narrow and specific.
You, however, interchange salvation and justification.
For example, being saved by faith alone is not the same as being justified by faith alone because salvation and justification is not the same thing.
The reason I am going off in this direction is because it is exactly the issue Wright is discussing in regards to an error.
And it is very important in understanding what Paul is talking about with justification.
Yes...only the saved are justified. But this does not negate the significance and meaning of justification. We cannot substitute one word for the other. -
I think the issue here is that we are faced with a logical problem that involves one of two things. Either God declares us "in", as in justified or part of his covenant people and by definition that means the doctrine of imputation is true. Or, it is based on God judging as to whether we have performed some requirement or requirements and this occurs at the end, whether the final judgement or at least the end of our lives. What I am saying is that Wright cannot say that imputation of righteousness is wrong because it isn't real and then turn around and say that a declaration that you are now in a covenant relation is real and done in the exact same way - by God's declaration. If you can have one then why not the other.
Once again, a declaration, whether it's that you are now a covenant member, or a declaration that you have had Christ's righteousness imputed to you involve the same action on the part of God. It's a declaration. And what I think the problem here and what all the people who object to Wright and Baxter or Arminius for that matter - is that if you reject this declaration, which is what the doctrine of imputation is, then you are now faced with some type of thing that must be done, or works, in order to be justified. This is true in all cases where you are not relying upon a "declaration" of justification by God. This is precisely why you have the articles comparing Baxter and Wright and contrasting and comparing them with Jewish legalism.
So my point, and the reason why I keep referring back to post 18 is that I think the Reformers doctrine of how this all works - in that you have justification by declaration, based on the work of Christ - but then you have the absolute necessity of certain conduct as the proof and vindication of the truth of God's declaration - as the best explanation of all this. -
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Wright agrees with McGrath - " The doctrine of justification has come to develop a meaning quite independent of it's biblical origins, and concerns the means by which man's relationship to God is established. The church has chosen to subsume it's discussion of the reconciliation of man under the aegis of justification, thereby giving the concept an emphasis quite absent from the New Testament."
Wright's argument is that justification is a covenant word and a legal word which cannot be understood apart from eschatology.
God declares men justified (legal) based on their position in Christ (covenant) and this points to a final state (eschatological). -
(You changed my word from righteousness to righteous. I'll stick to what I said.)
"God's righteousness consists in his unswerving commitment to do what is right."
Since I a totally agree with John Piper in "The Future of Justification," and since he is my friend, I will quote him.
p63-64
"It is not very satisfying to say that God's righteousness is his commitment to do what is right, because it leaves the term 'right' undefined. We don't feel like we have gained very much in defining 'righteousness' if we use the word 'right' to define it. To be sure, it is not an insignificant thing to say to a child , 'God is the kind of person who always knows and loves and does what is right.' That is a wise and true thing to say. But someday that child is going to become a teenager and ask, 'How does God decide what is right? Who tells God what is right? Is there a book of laws or rules that God has to obey?'
Answering those questions gets at the deeper meaning of righteousness. What is the 'right' to which God is unswervingly committed?
The answer is that there is no book of laws or rules that God consults to know what is right.
He wrote the book. What we find therefore in the Old Testament and in Paul is that God defines 'right' in terms of himself. There is no other standard to consult that his own infinitely worthy being. Thus, what is right, most ultimately, is what upholds the value and honor of God-what esteems and honors God's glory.
The reasoning goes like this: The ultimate value in the universe is God- the whole panorama of all his perfections. Another name for this is God's holiness (viewed as the intrinsic and infinite worth of his perfect beauty) or God's glory (viewed as the out-streaming manifestation of that beauty). Therefore, 'right' must be ultimately defines in relation to the ultimate value, the holiness or the glory of God - this is the highest standard for 'right' in the universe. Therefore, what is right is what upholds in proper proportion the value of what is infinitely valuable, namely, God. 'Right' actions are those that flow from a proper esteem for God's glory and that uphold his glory as the most valuable reality there is. That means that the essence of the righteousness of God is his unwavering faithfulness to uphold the glory of his name. And human righteousness is the same: the unwavering faithfulness to uphold the glory of God." -
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@JonC. The way you have described it there I would have no problem with. The trouble is what people do with it. What initially attracted me to reformed theology was that I felt that our non-Calv baptist church so emphasized our declaration of righteousness at the expense of everything else that a Christian life being lived became totally optional. So I found the Puritans with their rigorous pursuit of holiness, Baxter and also Wesley very attractive. Wright may fit there too but I just haven't read as much of him If that is what Wright is doing I have no argument with him. But my caution would be to others that a complete view of reformed theology does not have those deficiencies as one can see if they carefully look at post 18 above, which is Traill, or read the whole of any other reformed literature. In addition, it is in my opinion, worth taking the effort to make the careful distinction that requires the work of Christ to be the only cause of our justification in the sense of actual merit.
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The reason justification came to be understood in the context of reconciliation and establishing man's relationship with God is Augustine combating the Pelagian heresy. This issue bled into and influenced the traditional reformed (and evangelical) view of justification. -
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How do you believe that God's righteousness is manifested by the law and apart from the law? -
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Reading your post I can understand how God's law was a manifestation of His righteousness.
But I am not sure how you view God's righteousness manifested apart from the law. -
The other question that occurs is if obeying God and living a holy life is essential, then are the reformed ideas that you are truly justified by faith alone really valid or is that just a matter of semantics. And whether you believe that way or not, do you want to condemn a Baxter or a Wright or even a Catholic for mistaking the exact theological meaning of justification - if then you turn around and insist that living a life in pursuit of holiness and endeavoring to do good works is essential, but you will go to hell if you mistakenly label that as part of justification.
For myself, I am inclined to be willing to defend the Reformed explanation as closest to protecting the definition of justification and at the same time not neglecting the importance of good works. But I am not willing to send someone to hell for being wrong on a theological definition. -
21 But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the Law and the Prophets bear witness to it— 22 the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe. For there is no distinction: 23 for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, 24 and are justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, 25 whom God put forward as a propitiation by his blood, to be received by faith. This was to show God's righteousness, because in his divine forbearance he had passed over former sins. 26 It was to show his righteousness at the present time, so that he might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus. -
I think we know what the righteousness of God is manifested in the law (it was one of perfect obedience, and it ended up demonstrating not only a requirement but also that we couldn't meet that requirement).
Given your definition of justification, I am curious how you think God's righteousness is manifested apart from the law. -
Here Piper helps me again.
"Look at Romans 3:21, “But now apart from the law the righteousness of God has been manifested, being witnessed by the law and the Prophets.” Here Paul makes a major turn in his letter. Since Romans 1:18 he has been showing how we don’t have righteousness, and therefore we are under sin and judgment and destined for final wrath and fury. The mouth of the whole world is stopped and everyone is accountable and without excuse.
The law of God has met with the rebellion of man; and the result is condemnation, not justification. Nobody gets right with God through the performances of the law. That’s what verse 20 says: “By the works of the law no flesh will be justified in his sight.” So that’s the end of moral boldness — it seems. No one is righteous — no mothers, no fathers, no teenagers, no children. And no one can get right with God by the works of the law.
But now comes this major turn in the letter. Verses 21–22: “But now apart from the law the righteousness of God has been manifested, being witnessed by the law and the Prophets, even the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all those who believe.” Aha! So there is a divine righteousness — a God-sent, God-given righteousness, that is not through the works of the law, but (verse 22 says) through faith in Jesus Christ, for all who believe.
In other words, God’s solution to the problem of sin and condemnation in Romans 1:18–3:20 is for God to send his Son Jesus to die for sin (verse 24 ) and to give us his own righteousness if we will trust in his Son. This is called justification by faith: God’s reckoning his righteousness as our righteousness if we will trust in his Son."
The Demonstration of God’s Righteousness -
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It turns out that when you read what everyone else says about Wright about half the writers say he's dangerous. But as you know, 5 minutes on the internet and you can find someone saying Piper is dangerous, MacArthur is dangerous, Doug Wilson is dangerous and so on. So you are going to have to decide for yourself whether he's dangerous, or even maybe correct.
And another question for you. If a reformed person says that one is justified by a declaration based on Christ's work alone, and received by faith. And that a change occurs in such a person that will be evidenced by works, and this for sure will happen. What exactly is your problem with that. I'm not asking you to comment on your perception of my emotional state, or how I view your honesty, but I am asking you to actually engage in a discussion of doctrine. -
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