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Two Ways of Denying God's Law and
One Way of Affirming It
Michael Horton, Ph.D.
First published in Evangelium, Vol.
5, Issue
1.
It hardly needs to be pointed out that
American culture is morally adrift. Newsweek magazine
referred to the question over values as “a deep, vexing national
anxiety…about the nagging sense that unlimited personal freedom
and rampaging materialism yield only greater hungers and
lonelier nights.” Furthermore, “the acting out has been
bipartisan. Self-actualizing liberals have been obsessed with
personal freedom to the point of self-immolation; predatory
conservatives have been obsessed with commercial freedom to the
point of pillage.” One thing is clear, according to Newsweek’s
Joe Klein: “Both these indulgences have run their course. The
30-year spree has caused a monster hang-over. There is a
yearning for something more than the standard political
analgesics." (1) Not to be outdone,
Time’s former editor-in-chief, Henry Grunwald, complains
that everyone is obsessed with freedom and rights when what we
need is more responsibility. He even concludes, “Our view of
man obviously depends on our view of God."
(2)
Yet while evangelicals seem obsessed with
reviving “Judeo-Christian values,” according to surveys most of
them cannot name the Ten Commandments that they want to see
mounted in public courtrooms and classrooms.
(3) Furthermore, the same surveys
reveal that regular church-goers do not differ significantly
from the rest of society in their lifestyle.
(4) What’s more, well-known evangelical
leaders who inveigh against public immorality with more
self-righteous than righteous indignation are all too often
themselves exposed for their deviancy, fueling even greater
cynicism in the service of suppressing the truth in
unrighteousness. In this situation, the first three chapters of
Paul’s letter to the Romans have special relevance.
Denying God's
Law: Gentile Suppression (License)
First, he aims the guns at the Gentiles: the Newsweek
and Time audience (Rom. 1:18-32). Everyone knows the
law, Paul says. No one can say that he or she never had a chance
to respond to God’s revelation. Written on the conscience in
creation, the law is natural to us. Reformed theology has
identified this natural law with the covenant of creation (also
known as the covenant of works). No one has an excuse, because
everyone knows God’s moral will. This general revelation
includes God’s existence, his creation of the world, and even
“his eternal power and divine nature, invisible though they
are,” by means of “the things he has made.” “So,” says Paul,
“they are without excuse, for though they knew God, they did not
honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile
in their thinking, and their senseless minds were darkened” (vv
20-21).
Nevertheless, the ungodly willfully
suppress the truth in unrighteousness (v 18). As Grunwald
observed above, it all starts with God. To justify their immoral
behavior, Gentiles invent a god who will not bring them into
judgment. Attempting to eradicate every vestige of God’s
revelation and his image in humanity, Gentiles transgress even
the bounds of nature. Paul alludes to examples in verses 24-27,
especially homosexuality. While the gospel—the good news of the
righteousness that comes through faith in Christ—is utterly
foreign to the natural person, the law is the most obvious and
universally known fact of human existence. Nothing runs more
against the grain of the way we were made—even against our
biological design—than homosexual behavior. The most obvious
dictates of reason must be suppressed, erased, ignored, and
silenced. So when a people get to the place where their idolatry
has run its course, not even natural, common-sense moral
sensibilities hold sway. It’s not belief in God that is
irrational; naturalism—worshiping the creation rather than the
Creator—leads us finally to deny reason altogether.
Although homosexuality is a singular
example of suppressing the truth that we know, Paul doesn’t
necessarily single this out as the worst sin. In fact, he begins
with idolatry (vv 22-23), which leads to ethical license (vv
24-25). Furthermore, along with homosexuality he mentions, “They
were filled with every kind of wickedness, evil, covetousness,
malice. Full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, craftiness, they
are gossips, slanderers, God-haters, insolent, haughty,
boastful, inventors of evil, rebellious toward parents, foolish,
faithless, heartless, ruthless” (vv 29-31). Gentiles should be
able to recognize themselves somewhere (probably several times)
on the list. In the current culture wars, however, Paul’s
argument gets lost as one side focuses on the one sin that
religious people find most offensive in others (at least
publicly), while the other side either simply dismisses or
twists these clear declarations.
Denying God's
Law: Jewish Legalism (Hypocrisy)
But while the Jews in Paul’s audience were undoubtedly
relishing the apostle’s description of Gentile immorality, the
guns turn toward them next in Romans 2:1-29. The only thing
worse than denying Judeo-Christian values, he says, is touting
them while breaking them (vv 1-16). The Jews boast in being “a
guide to the blind” while actually walking in darkness
themselves, so Paul demands, “If you are sure that you are…a
corrector of the foolish, a teacher of children, having in the
law the embodiment of knowledge and truth, you, then, who teach
others, why do you not teach yourself? While you preach against
stealing, do you steal? You who forbid adultery, do you commit
adultery?” The questions are obviously rhetorical: “For, as it
is written, ‘The name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles
because of you’” (vv 17-24). Their circumcision in which they
boast has simply made them more accountable even than the
Gentiles to keep the whole law (vv 25-29). The Jews are no
better than the Gentiles before the searching judgment of the
law. Everyone, “both Jews and Greeks, are under the power of
sin” and no one is righteous before God (vv 9-18).
All of this is meant to shut the mouths of
the whole world as Jews and Gentiles together are made to hear
the terrible sentence of condemnation (3:19). Only then can they
hear together the good news that God has accomplished salvation
for all who have faith in Christ. “For no human being will be
justified in his sight by deeds prescribed by the law, for
through the law comes the knowledge of sin” (v 20).
If we do not understand the law, we cannot
understand the gospel; nor are we trained in the wisdom that God
has decreed for lives of gratitude in view of his
grace. Thinking, like the rich young ruler, that we have
actually followed God’s precepts from our youth, we look for
other laws to fulfill and often these rules devised by human
wisdom, without divine authority, become the genuine marks of
Christian discipleship. Yet legalism is just another way of
suppressing the truth in unrighteousness, of setting the bar
lower for ourselves, putting ourselves in the position of
authority and power over our lives and the lives of others. We
need to be freed not only from license but from legalism. This
can only come when we have been taken into the custody of our
Redeemer-King: liberated by his gospel and ruled by his law
alone.
Affirming God's
Law
Many of us were raised with the view that the law belongs
to the Old Testament. While it is true that the Mosaic covenant,
which included the moral law (Ten Commandments), civil laws, and
ceremonial laws, dominates much of the first half of the Bible,
the Abrahamic covenant—the covenant of grace—actually precedes
it (Gen 15 with Gal 3:17-18). In fact, the gospel promise was
given to Adam and Eve after the fall (Gen 3:15). The new
covenant, in fulfillment of the Abrahamic blessing, does not
exclude the law. Rather, precisely because its blessings are
given to us based on Christ’s performance of its stipulations
rather than our own and its curses are borne by Christ rather
than by us, the law can actually be embraced now out of
gratitude rather than out of fear or self-righteousness. Through
Jeremiah, God announces that the “new covenant…will not be like
the covenant I made with their forefathers” at Sinai, “because
they broke my covenant.” Rather, the new covenant will bring
forgiveness of sin and, on that basis, “I will put my law in
their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God
and they will be my people” (Jer 31:31-33). Already in the Old
Testament, the law is upheld as the way in which the saved are
to walk, not as the way of salvation. Only if we are justified
by grace alone, through faith alone, by Christ alone are we able
to see the law as a friend rather than as our judge and
executioner.
The Ten Commandments are preceded by the
brief historical prologue that justifies God’s authority in this
treaty: “I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of Egypt,
out of the land of slavery” (Ex 20:2). God is represented here
as the Great King who has just rescued a tiny, helpless people
from the clutches of an oppressive regime. But this rescue does
not leave them to themselves, to be invaded and tyrannized again
sometime in the future. Instead, God himself assumes the reign
of Israel as Redeemer-King. Israel didn’t “make Yahweh Lord”;
rather, as Israel’s Lord he redeemed his people and now rules
them for his glory and their good. The covenant relationship
originates not with “We the people,” as in the U. S.
Constitution, but with “I, the LORD your God who brought you up
out of Egypt.”
This law that was written on the conscience
in creation and on tablets of stone at Sinai first of all
condemns every person, Jew and Gentile, “God-fearing American”
and godless pagan. That which we know by nature we suppress in
unrighteousness, in an effort to ignore the inevitable judgment
upon our lives. Even as believers, we discover in Paul’s
description both of Gentiles and Jews all too familiar remnants
of the old Adam. Yet in Christ, that fear is removed. The law
can no longer condemn those who are clothed in Christ’s
righteousness. He has kept the law perfectly for us, in our
place. However, the Lord who redeems is also the Lord who
rules. The same salvation that removes the curse of the law in
justification liberates us from the tyranny of sin and
death. The Covenant Lord saves his sinful people from predators
not to leave them on their own, but to take them under his care
for the rest of their lives. Although we make only imperfect
beginnings in holiness during our pilgrimage, it is all of our
being (mind, heart, will, and body) that approves and even
delights in all of God’s commands—for this too is the gift of
God’s grace in the gospel of Christ. Having the law written on
our hearts and having our stony hearts turned to flesh—all for
the sake of Christ alone who bore our sins—we are finally able
to rejoice in God’s commandments as the rule for loving God and
our neighbors.
Conclusion
From this perspective, we can resist the Gentile
enterprise of twisting, suppressing, and denying God’s moral
will for humanity. We can offer explicit witness to the truth
that God has made known to everyone. Yet because we are
recipients of that other word—the gospel that reveals not only
God’s eternal power and divine nature but his grace and mercy in
Jesus Christ—we can no longer offer this witness from a position
of moral superiority (which Paul identifies as hypocrisy). We
speak the truth now, whether the law or the gospel, as fellow
sinners who have been justified and renewed and are being
conformed daily to the image of the only one who ever perfectly
satisfied his Father’s will for his life and did so in our
place. Who wouldn’t want to be ruled by this King!
Ó2008
Westminster Seminary California All rights reserved
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S. M. Baugh
R. Scott Clark
Iain M. Duguid
Bryan D. Estelle
W. Robert Godfrey
Michael S. Horton
Dennis E. Johnson
Hywel R. Jones
Peter R. Jones
Joel E. Kim
Julius J. Kim
George C. Scipione
Robert B. Strimple
David M. VanDrunen
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