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加爾文基督教要義(57)卷三第十七章 律法的應許與福音的應許之間的一致性

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追求永生 發表於 2010-1-18 08:10 | 只看該作者 回帖獎勵 |倒序瀏覽 |閱讀模式
第十七章 律法的應許與福音的應許之間的一致性
  現在讓我們來探究撒但藉著他的附從者用以摧毀或削弱因信稱義之說的理由。我想我們對於誹謗者把我們當作好像是善工之敵那一點,已經制勝。我們反對藉行為稱義的意見,並不是說不必有善工,也不是說善功不算為善,只是說,我們不可信賴善工,誇耀善工,或把得救歸與善工。因為我們的信賴,我們的光榮,我們的得救的唯一依靠,是在乎上帝的兒子基督是我們的,而我們在基督裡面成為上帝的兒子,天國的承繼者;我們被召並不是由於我們的功德,卻是出於神的仁慈,使我們有永福的盼望,但是他們又運用另一些武器來攻擊我們,我們也當予以還擊。第一,他們援引主對遵守律法的人所作的應許,質問我們是否認這些應許仍然有效。若說這些應許是虛幻的未免失之鹵莽,所以他們就認為是有效的,因此也就主張我們稱義不是僅僅因為信心,因為主說:「你們果然聽從這些典章,謹守遵行,耶和華你上帝就必照他向你列祖所起的誓,守約施慈愛。他必愛你,賜福與你,使你人數增多」(申7:12,13)。又說:「你們若實在改正行動作為;在人和鄰舍中間誠然實行公平;不欺壓寄居的,和孤兒寡婦;在這地方不流無辜人的血,也不隨從別神陷害自己,我就使你在這地方仍然居住」等(耶7:5-7)。我不必引述千百節同一意義的經文,因為這些都可用同一說明。摩西曾總括地宣布說,律法所陳明的是:「祝福與咒詛,生命與死亡」(申11:26)。根據這話他們辯護說,這個祝福若非無效,稱義就不是單靠著信,我們已經指出,若我們拘守律法,我們就毫無恩賜,就得承受那加給一切罪人的咒詛。因為主除了對完全遵守律法的人,沒有應許什麼,而完全遵守律法的人,卻是無處可尋。這樣,全人類在律法之下,都應當承受上帝的忿怒與咒詛。逃避之法便是必須脫離律法的束縛,從它的權柄之下解脫出來,進入自由;不是那屬肉體的,誘惑我們去違背律法,以致招引各種情慾,放縱那不羈之慾念的自由,乃是那靈性的,可以安慰並提高那在患難中灰心喪志的良心,使之知道它已經從律法的束縛中,和一切咒詛與譴責中蒙拯救的自由。這種從律法的壓迫下所獲得的自由與釋放,是靠著信心,並來自領略上帝在基督里的慈愛,而確知罪已蒙赦,這罪的感覺,常使律法剌痛我們,叫我們良心不安。
  二、因為這個緣故,一切律法的應許都歸於虛空無效,除非我們得助於福音所應許的上帝的聖善。因為完全順服津法是那些應許的條件,而只有藉此條件,應許才得以實現,而這是辦不到的。因之,主賜給我們援助,不是說一部分靠著行為的義,另一部分用他的恩典補充起來,而是指定基督來叫我們完全稱義。使徒保羅在說過他和其他的猶太人「知道人稱義,不是因行律法,乃是因信耶穌基督」之後,又補充說,他們並不是因信基督而得著完全稱義的幫助,乃是「因信基督稱義,不因行律法稱義」(加2:16)。若是信徒撇開律法轉向信心,從信找著那他們知道在律法中所沒有的義,他們就必然放棄律法的義。所以,凡要這樣行的,就讓他去誇大那從遵守律法所能得到的賞賜,然而同時讓他注意到,我們的敗壞墮落阻擋了我們從行為上得著好處,除非我們藉著信心,得到了另一個義。因此,大衛既提到上帝為他的僕人所預備的賞賜后,就立刻承認他的罪,而一切賞賜都為這罪所取消。同樣,在詩篇第十九篇,他盛稱律法的好處;但又立即感嘆說:「誰能知道自己的過失呢?願你赦免我隱而未顯的過錯」(詩19:12)。這一節與前面所提到的那一節,完全相符。在那一節中,當他說了,「凡遵守他的約和他的法度的人,耶和華都以慈愛誠實待他」;又補充說,「耶和華啊,求你因你的名赦免我的罪,因為我的罪重大」(詩25:10,11)。所以,我們也當承認,神的恩典也在律法中應許給我們,倘若我們的行為配得領受;但是人的行為是從來不配領受恩典的。
  三、那麼,這些應許都不發生效果了嗎?我已經說過,那不是我的意思。我只說,若是只就行為的功德說,這些應許對我們是無益的;因此,在某種意義上說,也是無效的。所以,對於那偉大的應許——「你們要守我的律例,典章,人若遵守,就必因此活著」(利18:5)——使徒保羅的解釋是:倘若我們單單依靠它,那對我們是無益的,好像未曾有過這應許一樣;因為這應許,即使是上帝最聖潔的僕人,也是不能利用的,因為他們都未曾完全遵行律法,而且為各種罪過所纏繞(參羅10:5)。但是,一旦這些應許為福音的白白免罪的應許所替代,其結果不但是我們的罪身,就連我們的行為,也都蒙上帝悅納;不但是蒙悅納,而且隨著那些福份,就是他所應許給遵行律法的人的,也都歸於我們。所以,我承認信徒善工之蒙賞賜,必按照主在律法中對那些遵行義和聖潔的人所應許的;但是,對於這些賞賜,應當注意那使神的恩惠歸於人的行為的原因。我們認為這原因可從三方面說:第一,上帝雖然不觀看他僕人的行為,因為這些行為都是只值得咎責,不值得稱讚的,他卻在基督裡面,因著我們的「信」,不須依靠行為,使我們與他歸於和好。第二,神以父親的寬洪慈愛,不看我們行為的原有價值,卻提高了它們,給予它們某種程度的價值。第三,他對這些行為加以饒恕,不按照它們的污穢去計算它們,若非如此,則它們只能算為罪,而不是善德。因此當那些詭辯派說,行為足以使人得救的原因,並不在乎行為的內在價值,而是在乎上帝的應許,因為他的慈愛使行為大有價值,他們以為已巧妙地逃避了悖謬之譏,其實他們的錯誤是很嚴重的。他們不曾注意到,他們所認為配蒙賞賜的行為,與應許的條件並不吻合,除非先因信稱義,使罪得赦免,即使是善行,也須先從污穢褻瀆中得潔凈。所以信徒行為蒙神的聖善所悅納的三個原因,他們只注意到一個,而把其它兩個重要的壓下去了。
  四、他們引路加在使徒行傳中所記彼得的話說:「我真看出上帝是不偏待人的,原來各國中,那敬畏主行義的人,都為主所悅納」(徒10:34,35)。因之,他們毫不遲疑地結論說,倘若一個人因行為的正直得與神和好,那麼,得救的原因就不單是神的恩典,而且在神以慈愛幫助罪人,而他總是受他們的善行的影響。但是,我們不能使聖經的意思趨於一致,除非我們承認上帝之悅納人是雙方面的。因為就人的本性來說,上帝在他們身上,除了他們的悲慘以外,找不出有什麼可引起他的慈悲的理由。人既然是如此顯然地毫無善行可言,而且滿有罪惡,那麼,他被神接待時,我們能憑什麼說,他是有資格蒙召呢?因此,讓我們拒絕一切以為人有什麼善工的空想吧;神對人所表彰的無非是寬仁大量。上面所引的那一段話,就是天使對哥尼流所說的,「你的禱告和你的周濟,達到上帝的面前,已蒙記念了」,被他們悖謬地拿來證明人的善工可使人得到上帝的恩典。殊不知哥尼流已經被智慧的靈所光照,因為他敬畏上帝,那就是真智慧,他也必為聖靈所潔凈,因為他已經追隨著義,照使徒保羅所說的,義乃是靈所結最確定的果子(參加5:5)。那麼,他所以能行那些使上帝悅納他的事,正是由於上帝的恩典;而不是靠著他自己的能力,以準備自己來接收恩典。我們不能從聖經上找出任何不與我們所主張的教義相符的話,我們所相信的是:上帝接納人的唯一原因,是在乎他知道人若被他所拋棄,必完全歸於喪亡;只因他的旨意不要叫人滅亡,所以他表彰慈愛來拯救他們。從此我們明白人蒙悅納是與他本身的義無關的,卻是證明了神對可憐的罪人的聖善,因為他們本身是絕對不配蒙受如此大恩的。
  五、主既把人從滅亡的深淵裡救出,由於恩典的選召,使人歸屬於他自己——因他使人重生把人高舉起來,賜他新生命,然後接收他,懷抱他,給以靈的恩賜,使他成為新的被造物。這就是彼得所提到的蒙悅納,這悅納,是指在他們蒙召為信徒后,他們的善工都為上帝所讚許;因為主對於他的聖靈所產生的良好效果,必然喜愛悅納。但是應當記著,他們之因著善工而蒙悅納,乃是由於上帝為了他們的緣故,藉著更進一步的恩眷,要接收一切他仁慈所產生的善工。他們的善行是從哪裡來的呢?豈不是主定意選擇它們來作為光榮的器皿,以聖潔裝飾它們吧?這些的工作又怎能稱為良善,好像是完全沒有缺點呢?豈不是因為天父的慈恩赦免那糾纏著這些工作的罪污呢?總而言之,彼得在上述經文中,除了說上帝悅納且愛他的兒女外,沒有別的意思,因為神在他的兒女身上,仍然看見他自己容貌的痕迹;我們在別的地方表明過,在重生中我們恢復了神的形像。因此,神既然一看到自己的像貌就生喜愛之心,所以他的兒女若專心於聖潔與公義的生活,是必然為他所喜悅的。但是,當信徒仍然為肉體所糾纏時,他們仍是罪人,他們的一切行為,仍玷有肉體的罪污,不能完全,所以他不能以他們的自身與他們的行為當作是善的,除非他把它們包括在基督裡面,而不單單看到工作本身。只有在這個意義上,才可了解那些宣布上帝對追求義的人的慈悲與仁愛的經文。摩西對以色列人說:「主你的上帝是信實的,向愛他守他誡命的人,守約施慈愛,直到千代」(申7:9)。這話以後在以色列人中常被提起。所羅門很嚴肅地祈禱說:「主以色列的上帝啊,你向那盡心行在你面前的人守約施慈愛」(王上8:23)。尼希米也說過同樣的話(參尼1:5)。因為在主一切慈愛的約中,他與他的僕人訂約,叫他們的生活正直,聖潔,好使他的聖善不致於被輕蔑,也不致使人對他的慈愛存虛妄的念頭(參申29:19,20),心中敗壞墮落,而卻仍以自己為是,因此他藉著這種種方法,使那些曾與他立約的人,能夠不逾越本分;然而那所訂立的約,原來是,以後亦永遠是,出於白白的恩賜。為著這個原因,大衛雖然宣稱他的兩手清潔,卻不忽略我所說的那恩典的來源,他說:「他救拔我,因他喜悅我」(撒下22:20,21),他這樣提出那恩典的原因,使不貶損那白白賜予他的恩慈,這乃是其它一切恩賜的來源。
  六、這裡值得順便說明的,就是這種說法,與屬律法的應許有什麼不同。所謂屬律法的應許,我的意思並不是指那一切在摩西的律法書上所載的(因為在那些書上也有福音性的應許)而是指那些只屬於律法範圍的。這樣的應許,不管用的是什麼稱呼,其原意是指服從命令乃是得到獎賞的條件。但當說到「主對那些愛他的人保守他所立的約與慈愛」時,其重心卻在指那些信實守約的人的品格,而不指主賜恩的原因。下面的理由可以作為證明:正如主惠賜我們永生的盼望,好使他自己為我們所愛,所敬,所崇拜。同樣,經上所有的一切關於慈愛的應許,都是以我們敬愛與崇拜賜福的主為指歸。所以,當我們聽到關於主賜恩惠給那些遵守他律法的人時,我們即須記得,聖經在這裡把上帝的兒女所應當遵行的本分指定給他們:我們之被選召為兒女為的是要敬他為父。因之,我們若不要放棄我們被選召作兒女的權利,就應當以實現上帝選召我們的計劃為目的。然而,在另一方面,我們必須確信,神的恩慈是不以信徒的作為為條件的;他對那些以正直生活來配他們的選召的人,履行他救恩的應許,因為,在那些蒙聖靈指導而作的善工上,他認識了他的兒女的純全品格。這就是詩篇關於聖教會子民所說的:「主啊,誰能寄居你的帳幕,誰能住在你的聖山,就是行為正直,作事公義的人」(詩15:1,2)。以賽亞書上亦說:「誰能與吞滅的火同住?就是說話公義,行事正直……的人」(賽33:14,15)。這些話所描述的,不是信徒在神面前所能依靠的力量,而是仁慈的天父引導他子民與他契合,而且保守堅固他們在他的團契中的方法。因為他既厭棄罪惡,喜愛公義,對那些他所契合的人,他就用他的靈潔凈他們,使他們和他自己以及他的國度相適合。因此,若問使信徒進入神的國度和叫他們永久繼續在那裡的初因是什麼,答案是現成的:因為主既然以他的慈愛選召了他們,他就永久維護他們。但若問題是涉及方法的,那麼,我們必須談到重生和重生的果子,這些果子在詩篇第十五篇中已經列舉出來了。
  七、但是經上有些地方以善工為義,並宣稱善工可使人稱義,這似乎是頗難解釋的。前一類的說法例子很多,都以遵行命令為義或正直。關於另一類的例子,在摩西的教訓中可以找著:「我們若照這一切誡命,謹守遵行,這就是我們的義了」(申6:25)。倘若我們拒絕這一說法,認為這一個律法的應許是附帶著一個不可能實現的條件,所以沒有什麼意義,那麼,還有別的地方的話,卻不容作同樣的答覆,例如:「你若把當頭還他,這就是你的義了」(申24:13)。與此相似的,詩篇上亦說:「非尼哈站起,刑罰惡人,瘟疫這才止息,那就算為他的義」(詩106:30,31)。因此,當前的法利賽人,即以這些經上的話,作為充分的根據,大聲喧囂,反對我們。當我們說,若是因信稱義的道理成立,因行為稱義的話就落空了的時候,他們同樣的辯稱,若是善行可使人算為義,那唯有信才能稱義的道理就算錯誤了。我承認律法的箴言都稱為義,這並沒有什麼可希奇的,因為它們本來就是。然而讀者應當注意,希伯來語「命令」(choqim)一辭,在七十譯本中譯為希臘語的「義」(dikaiomata)並不是準確的翻譯。但是,我並不擬在這一個辭語上爭執。我們也不否認神的律法包括完全的義。可是,我們有遵行律法所規定的一切事的義務,因此即令我們完全順服,我們仍然是無用的奴僕,然而主既以義的稱呼來尊重那些遵守律法的人,我們自然不當把主所賜予的稱呼取消。因之,我們坦白承認,完全遵行律法為義,而遵行某一特別律法為部分的義,因為完全的義是包括它的一切部分。但是,我們否認這種完全的義可能在任何地方找著。因此,我們拒絕律法的義,不是因為它本身殘廢不全,而是因為我們肉體的軟弱無能,所以無法尋得這樣的義。然而或者有人要說,經上不但稱神的律例教訓為義,且亦以義稱眾聖徒的善工。正如對撒迦利亞和他的妻所稱的,「他們二人在上帝面前都是義人,遵行主的一切誡命禮儀」(路1:6)。誠然,這樣的說法是按照律法估計人的行為,而不是按照人的實際情況。此處仍須把我剛才提過的話再說一次,就是不應以希臘文的不很謹慎的翻譯作為確據。但路加既然認為不可以變更通用的辭語,我也不願爭執。那些為律法所命令的事,是上帝指令人去行的,認為是趨於義所必需的;但是,除非我們遵行全部的律法,我們就算未曾履行,因為我們每一次的犯罪都破壞了律法。因之,律法既然只是規定著義,若光就律法的本身說,它的每一個命令都是一部分的義;那行律法的人不能因為有一義行,而其他部分的生活都是罪,亦得稱為義,尤其因為他的那一義行也不完全,一部分仍是屬於罪的。
  八、我現在要論討那主要的困難所在的第二類經文。保羅認為對因信稱義最有力的證據莫過於關於亞伯拉罕的話:「亞伯拉罕信上帝,這就算為他的義」(羅4:3;加3:6)。既然非尼哈的行為亦被「算為義」(詩106:30),那麼我們豈不是也可以拿保羅所歸給信心的歸給行為?根據這一點,我們的反對者好像是已經建立了理論,肯定地說,我們的稱義雖不能沒有「信」,但也不僅僅是由於「信」;我們的義是靠行為才得以完成的。在這裡我要懇求一切信徒,倘若他們知道義的真實原則只能依靠聖經上所說的話,那麼,就請他們同我一道認真嚴肅地來查考聖經,好使經義不須依靠世俗的言論,可以獲得一致的闡明。保羅既然知道信心的義乃是為一切自己缺乏義的人的保障,所以他勇敢地申明凡因信稱義者,就不再有行為的義了。同樣顯明的,就是這義是一切信徒所同有的,因此他以同一信心結論說,沒有一個人是因行為稱義,稱義是不依靠任何行為的幫助的。但是,行為本身的價值是一件事,而因信稱義后,行為所應有的地位,又是另一件事。我們若按照行為本身的價值加以估價,就必說它在神的面前確是沒有價值的,因此,在神面前,我們的作為是沒有可誇的,那麼,脫去了一切行為的依靠,我們的稱義只是因信而來的。因之,我們採用下列的樣式來說明這個義:一個罪人既被接納進入基督的團契里,就藉著他的恩典與神和好;既然靠他的寶血得以潔凈,他就蒙赦免罪過;他穿上基督的義,好像是他自己的,所以他站在天廷被審時,能夠安然無事。既然預先獲得赦免罪過,跟著而來的善工,其價值 就遠較它本身所值的為高;因為它的一切不完全,都為基督的完全所掩蓋,它的一切褻瀆不潔,都為基督的聖潔所消除,好使它們在神面前不至受審判。因之,所有一切足以阻止人蒙神悅納的罪既被塗抹,而損毀信徒善工的污穢和不完全亦被葬埋了,他們的善工就算為義。
  九、假若有人再拿這個說法來反對因信稱義的道理,我第一就要反問,若有一個人一生的行為都違犯律法,他能夠只因一兩件義行而稱義嗎?如果這樣未免太矛盾了。我再要請問,一個人倘若有任何一件罪行,是否仍可因為他許多的善工而稱為義?我想我的敵對者也不會贊成這種說法,因為律法宣判任何不遵行一切律例的人為有罪,應受咒詛,所以這種說法顯然是與律法的制裁相反的(參申27:26)。我更要請問,是否有什麼行為,可以避免污穢或不完全?在神的眼中連天上的星斗亦不夠晶潔,天使亦不夠完全稱義,所以這如何是可能呢?如此,我的對方必得承認,無論什麼善行,既不完全,也含著有罪的成分,以至於都不配稱為義。因此,如果只是因「因信稱義」,才使那些本來不聖潔,不完全,在上帝眼中不值得稱讚,而應受譴責的行為算為義,那麼,他們為什麼還要藉誇耀行為的義,來損毀「因信稱義」的教義呢?若沒有「因信稱義」,他們的誇耀就落空了。難道他們要像毒蛇一樣,生下了吞滅自己的兒子嗎?他們那種不虔的教義正與這比喻相似。他們不能反對因信稱義為一切行為的義的開端,根基,原因,動力與本體。然而他們卻下斷語說,人的稱義不依靠信仰,因為他的善工也算為義。讓我們拋卻這一切不倫的話,承認事實吧;倘若一切行為的義都是依靠因信稱義而達成的,那麼,因信稱義這一說,非但不因這事實而遭損害,反而更加強了,因為它的影響顯得更擴張了。但是我們不要高舉那由於白白所賜的義來的行為,以為它能使人稱義,或能與 「信」分擔使人稱義的職務。因為,除非因信稱義不受損傷,他們行為的污穢不潔就必被顯露出來。若說人的因信稱義不但叫他本身稱義,而且連他的行為也超出了本身所具有的價值之上,而得歸之於義,是沒有什麼矛盾的。
  十、這樣,我們可以說,善行不但如對方所說的是有部分的義,而且是為神所悅納,當作是完美無缺的。如果我們記得它所依存的基礎,困難即可解決。行為之蒙悅納,在乎它已蒙饒恕。那麼,饒恕從哪裡來的呢?豈不是因為上帝視我們和我們的一切都是在基督裡面?正如當我們聯繫在基督里,然後我們才在神的面前顯明為義,因為我們的不義都為基督的義所掩蓋,同樣,我們的行為才算為義,因為我們的罪,既經掩埋在基督的聖潔裡面,就不被計算了。所以我們可以直截了當地說,不但我們的罪身,連我們的行為,都是只因著「信」而稱義。那麼,倘若行為的義是因為,而且是依靠著信和白白所賜的義,那麼,不問它的性質如何,它就該包括在,而隸屬於這個因信而白白地賜予我們的義,如同果之隸屬於因一樣;絕不值得高舉它,使它破壞或掩蔽了信心的義。因此,保羅為要表明我們的福澤是靠著神的慈恩,而不是靠著我們的行為,他特別著重大衛的話:「得赦免其過,遮蓋其罪的,這人是有福的。主不算為有罪的,這人是有福的」(羅47:8)。若有人要舉出那些強調靠行為也可以蒙賜福的章節來,例如:「敬畏主的人是有福的」(詩112:1)「憐恤貧窮人的人是有福的」(箴14:21)「不從惡人的計謀是有福的」(詩1:1),「忍受試探的人是有福的」(雅1:12),「凡遵行公平常行公義的便為有福」(詩106:3),「行為完全,遵行主律法的便為有福」(詩119:1),「虛心的人,溫柔的人,和憐恤人的人有福了」(太5:3,5,7)等等,也不足以使保羅所提出來的真理減損效力。因為既然沒有人能達到這些品格,以獲得神的讚許,所以很顯然的,人總是凄慘可憐的,必等到他們的罪得蒙赦免,他們才可以從凄慘中被救拔出來。既然經上所稱許的一切福都無效,既然沒有人能從它們得到什麼好處,除非他的罪蒙赦免,那麼,赦罪不但是最高尚,最主要的福份,也是唯一的福份;除非我們以為那些必依靠它才存在的其他福份能夠減損了它的效力。普通以「義人」這名稱加給信徒這件事,更不能困擾我們。我認為他們之被指為義,是因為他們生活上的聖潔;但是,他們並非自己達到稱義,只不過是專心追求而已,他們所追求的義,應該是隸屬於因信而得的義,因為這一個義是他們所追求的義的根源。
  十一、但是,我們的反對者辯稱,我們在雅各書上將遇著更多的困難,因為他們的話顯然與我們所說的相反。他教訓人說:「我們的祖宗亞伯拉罕是因行為稱義」,所以我們也是「因著行為稱義,不是單因著信心」(參雅2:21-24)。怎麼樣呢?難道他們要拉出保羅來同雅各爭論嗎?若是他們以雅各為基督的僕人,那麼他所主張的就不能與基督藉保羅的口所傳的道相違背。聖靈藉著保羅的口明說,亞伯拉罕的稱義是因著信,不是因著行為;我們也照樣教訓人說,我們是因信稱義,不是依賴屬律法的行為。聖靈又藉雅各來肯定說,亞伯拉罕與我們的義都在於行為,不單單在於信心。聖靈自己是不矛盾的,這是必然的。但是,要怎樣調和上述二說呢?我們的反對者若是能夠完全把我們所要建立「因信稱義」的道理推翻,必感滿意,但是,如何叫我們的良心得到安寧,在他們卻是不甚關切的。因之,我們感覺到他們反對因信稱義的教義,卻同時不規定稱義的原則,使良心感到滿足。讓他們隨己意去獲得他們的勝利吧,他們唯一能誇耀的勝利就是取消了稱義的確切證據。他們這一種可憐的勝利,是當他們把真理的亮光熄滅了后,主讓他們傳播錯誤的陰影才得到的。可是,凡上帝的真理所在的地方,他們必不能勝利。那麼,我不承認他們所高舉作為牢不可破的盾牌的雅各的話會提供他們任何根據。要證明這個,我們須先研究雅各言論的範圍,然後再說明他們在什麼地方蒙受欺騙。因為在那個時候(以後各時代的教會亦然)教會裡有許多疏忽及遺棄信徒本分的人,他們明顯地敗露自己的不信,卻仍繼續誇耀著他們那虛偽的信,所以雅各這裡的話是要暴露這種人的愚妄自信。他並非有意貶損真實的信的任何效力,只不過是要表明那些不認真的人的愚昧,他們以信的影子自滿,卻安心放縱於邪惡中。一看到這種情形,就容易發現反對我們的人的錯誤。他們陷於兩種虛妄中;第一是關於 「信」這個字,第二是關於「稱義」一詞。虛浮的信當然與真實的信大有分別;雅各對前者用這個「信」字,雖然含有包容性,卻未絲毫損傷辯論的理由;從他下面的話可以表明:「我的弟兄們,若有人說,自己有信心,卻沒有行為,有什麼益處呢?」(雅2:14)。他沒有說,若有人有了信心,沒有行為;只是說,若有人自誇說他有信心。往後他說得更明白,譏笑他們的所謂「信心」比魔鬼的還壞;最後,他說這種信是「死」 的。從他往後的解釋,我們可以更充分明了他的意思:他說,「你信上帝只有一位」。誠然,假若這信仰里沒有別的,只是相信神的存在,那麼,它的不足使人稱義是完全不足為奇的。這種說法絕不能減少基督徒「信心」的效力,因為這兩種的「信」是完全不同的。真的信心是怎樣叫人稱義呢?只有人與基督聯合,並因此分享他的義。若他有關於神的存在的知識,而不確實依靠他的慈愛,那種「信」是不能叫人稱義的。
  十二、但是必先暴露第二個虛妄,才能完全確定使徒雅各立言的範圍;因為他把稱義的一部分歸給行為。倘若我們要使雅各的意見和聖經的其他言論,以及他自己的話相符,我們必須把他的「稱義」一辭的意義,與保羅對這同一辭語用法的不同,加以分別。照保羅所說,我們之被稱為義是我們的不義的被遺忘不咎,然後才算我們為義。若是雅各也有同樣說法,那麼他下面所引摩西的話:「亞伯拉罕信上帝,這就算為他的義,」就未免荒謬了。這段經文的上下文如下:「我們的祖宗亞伯拉罕,把他的兒子以撒獻在壇上,豈不是因行為稱義。可見信心是與他的行為并行,而且信心因著行為才得成全,這就應驗經上所說:『亞伯拉罕信上帝,這就算為他的義』。」倘若列在原因前面的效果是荒謬的,那麼,要不是摩西所說,「亞伯拉罕的信就算為他的義」是錯了,就是亞伯拉罕的服從神命,獻上兒子,是不足以叫他稱義的。亞伯拉罕之因信稱義是在以實馬利還沒有成胎,更在以撒還未誕生之前。我們怎麼能把他在好久以後的順服行為,拿來算為他老早以前的稱義的原因呢?所以,若不是雅各顛倒了這故事的次序(這種說法是不可思義的),便是他所說亞伯拉罕稱義的意思,並不指亞伯拉罕是配稱為義的。那麼,他的意思到底是什麼?很顯然的,他所指的是稱義的效果,而不是稱義本身。他好像是說,凡因真實的信而被稱為義的人,必不以虛浮的信仰來證明他的義,卻以順服與善行來證明他的義。總而言之,他並不是辯論稱義的方法,而是要求信徒用善行來表明義。正如保羅爭持稱義不能靠行為;而雅各卻不容許缺乏良好行為的人被稱為義。我們若注意到雅各的用意,就可解除一切困難。我們對方的主要錯誤是以為雅各所說的是稱義的方法,其實雅各所努力的,是要清除那些以虛妄的信仰為口實,而安心輕蔑善工的人的腐敗行為。所以,不問我們對方是如何錯解雅各的話,他們終無法離開下面這兩個真理,即虛浮的信念不能叫人稱義;信徒不能以想像的信為滿足,必須以良好的行為表明他們的義。
  第十三及第十四節、解釋反對派所援引經文的真義——從略
  十五、還有其他同類的章節或者仍將為人所指出,例如,所羅門說:「行為純正的人便算為義」(箴20:7)。又說,「在公義的道上有生命,其路之中,並無死亡」(箴12:28)以西結也說,「行正真與合理的事,……他必定存活」(結33:14,15)。我們並不反對或抹煞這些話。但是,讓亞當的後裔的任何一人來產生這種正真的義行吧。若是沒有人能做到的話,那麼他若不在上帝面前滅亡,就須逃避到神的慈愛的避難所中去。我們並不否認,信徒的正直行為,無論是何等的不完全,仍然是走向永生道路的步驟。但是,這事實的原因豈不是說,神既然容許人進入他恩典的約中,就不再按照他們行為的實在價值去檢查它們,卻憑他的父愛去包容他們。對這一點我們的主張遠超過經院學派的主張,他們以為「一切善工都藉著上帝恩典的悅納才成為有價值的」;意即那按照律法不能達於救恩的善工,將因神的悅納而達成。我卻認為善工既被本身的污點和別的罪行所玷污,甚至除非主的寬赦,是完全無用的。這也就是說,主所賜予的義乃是白白賜予的。他們引用使徒保羅為眾信徒的完全禱告的話,「在我們父神面前,心裡堅固成為聖潔,無可指責」(帖前3:13),是很不合時宜的。這經文曾被色勒士丁派(Coelestini)曲解了,以為是證明今生能有完全的義。這一點我們可引奧古斯丁的話答覆。他說:「一切虔誠的人固然應當熱烈盼望,有一天在主面前能夠完全無可指責;但是,今生所可能有的最高美善既然無非是在於向著完美前進,所以非等到我們解脫了這必死而有罪的軀體,完全與主結合后,那是不能達到的。」然而倘若有人願意以完全品格歸給眾聖徒,我並不反對;只要他同時用奧古斯丁底下的話來加以界說,「當我們指眾聖徒的德行為完全時,那是說,這完全的本身是包含著他們對自己的不完全的又實在又謙卑的認識。」

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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-1-20 13:29 | 只看該作者
第十三及第十四節、解釋反對派所援引經文的真義——從略

13. They gain nothing by quoting from Paul to the same effect, that "not the hearers of the law are just before God, but the doers of the law shall be justified," (Rom. 2:13). I am unwilling to evade the difficulty by the solution of Ambrose, that Paul spoke thus because faith in Christ is the fulfillment of the law. This I regard as a mere subterfuge, and one too for which there is no occasion, as the explanation is perfectly obvious. The Apostle's object is to suppress the absurd confidence of the Jews who gave out that they alone had a knowledge of the law, though at the very time they where its greatest despisers. That they might not plume themselves so much on a bare acquaintance with the law, he reminds them that when justification is sought by the law, the thing required is not the knowledge but the observance of it. We certainly mean not to dispute that the righteousness of the law consists in works, and not only so, but that justification consists in the dignity and merits of works. But this proves not that we are justified by works unless they can produce some one who has fulfilled the law. That Paul had no other meaning is abundantly obvious from the context. After charging Jews and Gentiles in common with unrighteousness, he descends to particulars and says, that "as many as have sinned without law shall also perish without law," referring to the Gentiles, and that "as many as have sinned in the law shall be judged by the law," referring to the Jews. Moreover, as they, winking at their transgressions, boasted merely of the law, he adds most appropriately, that the law was passed with the view of justifying not those who only heard it, but those only who obeyed it; as if he had said, Do you seek righteousness in the law? do not bring forward the mere hearing of it, which is in itself of little weight, but bring works by which you may show that the law has not been given to you in vain. Since in these they were all deficient, it followed that they had no ground of boasting in the law. Paul's meaning, therefore, rather leads to an opposite argument. The righteousness of the law consists in the perfection of works; but no man can boast of fulfilling the law by works, and, therefore, there is no righteousness by the law.

14. They now betake themselves to those passages in which believers boldly submit their righteousness to the judgment of God, and wish to be judged accordingly; as in the following passages: "Judge me, O Lord, according to my righteousness, and according to mine integrity that is in me." Again, "Hear the right, O Lord;" "Thou hast proved mine heart; thou hast visited me in the night; thou hast tried me, and shalt find nothing." Again "The Lord regarded me according to my righteousness; according to the cleanness of my hands has he recompensed me. For I have kept the ways of the Lord, and have not wickedly departed from my God." "I was also upright before him, and I kept myself from mine iniquity." Again, "Judge me, O Lord; for I have walked in mine integrity;" "I have not sat with vain persons; neither will I go in with dissemblers;" "Gather not my soul with sinners, nor my life with bloody men; in whose hands is mischief, and their right hand is full of bribes. But as for me, I will walk in mine integrity."45[2] I have already spoken of the confidence which the saints seem to derive simply from works. The passages now quoted will not occasion much difficulty, if we attend to their perivstasi", their connection, or (as it is commonly called) special circumstances. These are of two kinds; for those who use them have no wish that their whole life should be brought to trial, so that they may be acquitted or condemned according to its tenor; all they wish is, that a decision should be given on the particular case; and even here the righteousness which they claim is not with reference to the divine perfection, but only by comparison with the wicked and profane. When the question relates to justification, the thing required is not that the individual have a good ground of acquittal in regard to some particular matter, but that his whole life be in accordance with righteousness. But when the saints implore the divine justice in vindication of their innocence, they do not present themselves as free from fault, and in every respect blameless but while placing their confidence of salvation in the divine goodness only, and trusting that he will vindicate his poor when they are afflicted contrary to justice and equity, they truly commit to him the cause in which the innocent are oppressed. And when they sist themselves with their adversaries at the tribunal of God, they pretend not to an innocence corresponding to the divine purity were inquiry strictly made, but knowing that in comparison of the malice, dishonesty, craft, and iniquity of their enemies, their sincerity justice, simplicity, and purity, are ascertained and approved by God, they dread not to call upon him to judge between them. Thus when David said to Saul, "The Lord render to every man his righteousness and his faithfulness," (1 Sam. 26:23), he meant not that the Lord should examine and reward every one according to his deserts, but he took the Lord to witness how great his innocence was in comparison of Saul's injustice. Paul, too, when he indulges in the boast, "Our rejoicing is this, the testimony of our conscience, that in simplicity and godly sincerity, not with fleshly wisdom, but by the grace of God, we have had our conversation in the world, and more abundantly to you-ward," (2 Cor. 1:12), means not to call for the scrutiny of God, but compelled by the calumnies of the wicked he appeals, in contradiction of all their slanders, to his faith and probity, which he knew that God had indulgently accepted. For we see how he elsewhere says, "I know nothing by myself; yet am I not hereby justified," (1 Cor. 4:4); in other words, he was aware that the divine judgment far transcended the blind estimate of man. Therefore, however believers may, in defending their integrity against the hypocrisy of the ungodly, appeal to God as their witness and judge, still when the question is with God alone, they all with one mouth exclaim, "If thou, Lord, should mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?" Again, "Enter not into judgment with thy servant; for in thy sight shall no man living be justified." Distrusting their own words, they gladly exclaim, "Thy loving-kindness is better than life," (Ps. 130:3; 143:2; 63:3).
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-1-20 13:29 | 只看該作者
CHAPTER 17.
THE PROMISES OF THE LAW AND THE GOSPEL RECONCILED.
In the following chapter, the arguments of Sophists, who would destroy or impair the doctrine of Justification by Faith, are reduced to two classes. The former is general, the latter special, and contains some arguments peculiar to itself. I. The first class, which is general, and in a manner contains the foundation of all the arguments, draws an argument from the promises of the law. This is considered from sec. 1ñ3. II. The second class following from the former, and containing special proofs. An argument drawn from the history of Cornelius explained, sec. 4, 5. III. A full exposition of those passages of Scripture which represent God as showing mercy and favor to the cultivators of righteousness, sec. 6. IV. A third argument from the passages which distinguish good works by the name of righteousness, and declare that men are justified by them, sec. 7, 8. V. The adversaries of justification by faith placed in a dilemma. Their partial righteousness refuted, sec. 9, 10. VI. A fourth argument, setting the Apostle James in opposition to Paul, considered, sec. 11, 12. VII. Answer to a fifth argument, that, according to Paul, not the hearers but the doors of the law are justified, sec. 13. VIII. Consideration of a sixth argument, drawn from those passages in which believers boldly submit their righteousness to the judgment of God, and ask him to decide according to it, sec. 14. IX. Examination of the last argument, drawn from passages which ascribe righteousness and life to the ways of believers, sec. 15.

Sections.

1. Brief summary of Chapters 15 and 16. Why justification is denied to works. Argument of opponents founded on the promises of the law. The substance of this argument. Answer. Those who would be justified before God must be exempted from the power of the law. How this is done.

2. Confirmation of the answer ab impossibili, and from the testimony of an Apostle and of David.

3. Answer to the objection, by showing why these promises were given. Refutation of the sophistical distinction between the intrinsic value of works, and their value er parts.

4. Argument from the history of Cornelius. Answer, by distinguishing between two kinds of acceptance. Former kind. Sophistical objection refuted.

5. Latter kind. Plain from this distinction that Cornelius was accepted freely before his good works could be accepted. Similar explanations to be given of the passage in which God is represented as merciful and propitious to the cultivators of righteousness.

6. Exposition of these passages. Necessary to observe whether the promise is legal or evangelical. The legal promise always made under the condition that we "do," the evangelical under the condition that we "believe."

7. Argument from the passages which distinguish good works by the name of righteousness, and declare that man is justified by them. Answer to the former part of the argument respecting the name. Why the works of the saints called works of righteousness. Distinction to be observed.

8. Answer to the second part of the argument--viz. that man is justified by works. Works of no avail by themselves; we are justified by faith only. This kind of righteousness defined. Whence the value set on good works.

9. Answer confirmed and fortified by a dilemma.

10. In what sense the partial imperfect righteousness of believers accepted. Conclusion of the refutation.

11. Argument founded on the Epistle of James. First answer. One Apostle cannot be opposed to another. Second answer. Third answer, from the scope of James. A double paralogism in the term Faith. In James the faith said not to justify is a mere empty opinion; in Paul it is the instrument by which we apprehend Christ our righteousness.

12. Another paralogism on the word justify. Paul speaks of the cause, James of the effects, of justification. Sum of the discussion.

13. Argument founded on Rom. 2:13. Answer, explaining the Apostles meaning. Another argument, containing a reduction ad impossibili. Why Paul used the argument.

14. An argument founded on the passages in which believers confidently appeal to their righteousness. Answer, founded on a consideration of two circumstances. 1. They refer only to a special cause. 2. They claim righteousness in comparison with the wicked.

15. Last argument from those passages which ascribe righteousness and life to the ways of believers. Answer. This proceeds from the paternal kindness of God. What meant by the perfection of saints.

1. LET us now consider the other arguments which Satan by his satellites invents to destroy or impair the doctrine of Justification by Faith. I think we have already put it out of the power of our calumniators to treat us as if we were the enemies of good works--justification being denied to works not in order that no good works may be done or that those which are done may be denied to be good; but only that we may not trust or glory in them, or ascribe salvation to them. Our only confidence and boasting, our only anchor of salvation is, that Christ the Son of God is ours, and that we are in him sons of God and heirs of the heavenly kingdom, being called, not by our worth, but the kindness of God, to the hope of eternal blessedness. But since, as has been said, they assail us with other engines, let us now proceed to demolish them also. First, they recur to the legal promises which the Lord proclaimed to the observers of the law, and they ask us whether we hold them to be null or effectual. Since it were absurd and ridiculous to say they are null, they take it for granted that they have some efficacy. Hence they infer that we are not justified by faith only. For the Lord thus speaks: "Wherefore it shall come to pass, if ye hearken to these judgments, and keep and do them, that the Lord thy God shall keep unto thee the covenant and the mercy which he sware unto thy fathers; and he will love thee, and bless thee and multiply thee," (Deut. 7:12, 13). Again, "If ye thoroughly amend your ways and your doings; if ye thoroughly execute judgment between a man and his neighbor; if ye oppress not the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow, and shed not innocent blood in this place, neither walk after other gods to your hurt: then will I cause you to dwell in this place, in the land that I gave to your fathers, for ever and ever," (Jer. 7:5ñ7). It were to no purpose to quote a thousand similar passages, which, as they are not different in meaning, are to be explained on the same principle. In substance, Moses declares that in the law is set down "a blessing and a curse," life and death (Deut. 11:26); and hence they argue, either that that blessing is become inactive and unfruitful, or that justification is not by faith only. We have already shown,44[3] that if we cleave to the law we are devoid of every blessing, and have nothing but the curse denounced on all transgressors. The Lord does not promise any thing except to the perfect observers of the law; and none such are any where to be found. The results therefore is that the whole human race is convicted by the law, and exposed to the wrath and curse of God: to be saved from this they must escape from the power of the law, and be as it were brought out of bondage into freedom,--not that carnal freedom which indisposes us for the observance of the law, tends to licentiousness, and allows our passions to wanton unrestrained with loosened reins; but that spiritual freedom which consoles and raises up the alarmed and smitten conscience, proclaiming its freedom from the curse and condemnation under which it was formerly held bound. This freedom from subjection to the law, this manumission, if I may so express it, we obtain when by faith we apprehend the mercy of God in Christ, and are thereby assured of the pardon of sins, with a consciousness of which the law stung and tortured us.

2. For this reason, the promises offered in the law would all be null and ineffectual, did not God in his goodness send the gospel to our aid, since the condition on which they depend, and under which only they are to be performed--viz. the fulfillment of the law, will never be accomplished. Still, however the aid which the Lord gives consists not in leaving part of justification to be obtained by works, and in supplying part out of his indulgence, but in giving us Christ as in himself alone the fulfillment of righteousness. For the Apostle, after premising that he and the other Jews, aware that "a man is not justified by the works of the law," had "believed in Jesus Christ," adds as the reason, not that they might be assisted to make up the sum of righteousness by faith in Christ, but that they "might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the law," (Gal. 2:16). If believers withdraw from the law to faith, that in the latter they may find the justification which they see is not in the former, they certainly disclaim justification by the law. Therefore, whose will, let him amplify the rewards which are said to await the observer of the law, provided he at the same time understand, that owing to our depravity, we derive no benefit from them until we have obtained another righteousness by faith. Thus David after making mention of the reward which the Lord has prepared for his servants (Ps. 25 almost throughout), immediately descends to an acknowledgment of sins, by which the reward is made void. In Psalm 19, also, he loudly extols the benefits of the law; but immediately exclaims, "Who can understand his errors? cleanse thou me from secret faults," (Ps. 19:12). This passage perfectly accords with the former, when, after saying, "the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his covenant and his testimonies," he adds, "For thy name's sake, O Lord, pardon mine iniquity: for it is great," (Ps. 25:10, 11). Thus, too, we ought to acknowledge that the favor of God is offered to us in the law, provided by our works we can deserve it; but that it never actually reaches us through any such desert.

3. What then? Were the promises given that they might vanish away without fruit? I lately declared that this is not my opinion. I say, indeed, that their efficacy does not extend to us so long as they have respect to the merit of works, and, therefore, that, considered in themselves, they are in some sense abolished. Hence the Apostle shows, that the celebrated promise, "Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgments: which if a man do, he shall live in them," (Lev. 18:5; Ezek. 20:10), will, if we stop at it, be of no avail, and will profit us not a whit more than if it were not given, being inaccessible even to the holiest servants of God, who are all far from fulfilling the law, being encompassed with many infirmities. But when the gospel promises are substituted, promises which announce the free pardon of sins, the result is not only that our persons are accepted of God, but his favor also is shown to our works, and that not only in respect that the Lord is pleased with them, but also because he visits them with the blessings which were due by agreement to the observance of his law. I admit, therefore, that the works of the faithful are rewarded with the promises which God gave in his law to the cultivators of righteousness and holiness; but in this reward we should always attend to the cause which procures favor to works. This cause, then, appears to be threefold. First, God turning his eye away from the works of his servants which merit reproach more than praise, embraces them in Christ, and by the intervention of faith alone reconciles them to himself without the aid of works. Secondly the works not being estimated by their own worth, he, by his fatherly kindness and indulgence, honors so far as to give them some degree of value. Thirdly, he extends his pardon to them, not imputing the imperfection by which they are all polluted, and would deserve to be regarded as vices rather than virtues. Hence it appears how much Sophists44[4] were deluded in thinking they admirably escaped all absurdities when they said, that works are able to merit salvation, not from their intrinsic worth, but according to agreement, the Lord having, in his liberality, set this high value upon them. But, meanwhile, they observed not how far the works which they insisted on regarding as meritorious must be from fulfilling the condition of the promises, were they not preceded by a justification founded on faith alone, and on forgiveness of sins--a forgiveness necessary to cleanse even good works from their stains. Accordingly, of the three causes of divine liberality to which it is owing that good works are accepted, they attended only to one: the other two, though the principal causes, they suppressed.

4. They quote the saying of Peter as given by Luke in the Acts, "Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons: but in every nation he that feareth him, and worketh righteousness, is accepted with him" (Acts 10:34, 35). And hence they infer, as a thing which seems to them beyond a doubt, that if man by right conduct procures the favor of God, his obtaining salvation is not entirely the gift of God. Nay, that when God in his mercy assists the sinner, he is inclined to mercy by works. There is no way of reconciling the passages of Scripture, unless you observe that man's acceptance with God is twofold. As man is by nature, God finds nothing in him which can incline him to mercy, except merely big wretchedness. If it is clear then that man, when God first interposes for him, is naked and destitute of all good, and, on the other hand, loaded and filled with all kinds of evil,--for what quality, pray, shall we say that he is worthy of the heavenly kingdom? Where God thus clearly displays free mercy, have done with that empty imagination of merit. Another passage in the same book--viz. where Cornelius hears from the lips of an angel, "Thy prayer and thine alms are come up for a memorial before God," (Acts 10:4), is miserably wrested to prove that man is prepared by the study of good works to receive the favor of God. Cornelius being endued with true wisdom, in other words, with the fear of God, must have been enlightened by the Spirit of wisdom, and being an observer of righteousness, must have been sanctified by the same Spirit; righteousness being, as the Apostle testifies, one of the most certain fruits of the Spirit (Gal. 5:5). Therefore, all those qualities by which he is said to have pleased God he owed to divine grace: so far was he from preparing himself by his own strength to receive it. Indeed, not a syllable of Scripture can be produced which does not accord with the doctrine, that the only reason why God receives man into his favor is, because he sees that he is in every respect lost when left to himself; lost, if he does not display his mercy in delivering him. We now see that in thus accepting, God looks not to the righteousness of the individual, but merely manifests the divine goodness towards miserable sinners, who are altogether undeserving of this great mercy.

5. But after the Lord has withdrawn the sinner from the abyss of perdition, and set him apart for himself by means of adoption, having begotten him again and formed him to newness of life, he embraces him as a new creature, and bestows the gifts of his Spirit. This is the acceptance to which Peter refers, and by which believers after their calling are approved by God even in respect of works; for the Lord cannot but love and delight in the good qualities which he produces in them by means of his Spirit. But we must always bear in mind, that the only way in which men are accepted of God in respect of works is, that whatever good works he has conferred upon those whom he admits to favor, he by an increase of liberality honors with his acceptance. For whence their good works, but just that the Lord having chosen them as vessels of honor, is pleased to adorn them with true purity? And how are their actions deemed good as if there was no deficiency in them, but just that their merciful Father indulgently pardons the spots and blemishes which adhere to them? In one word, the only meaning of acceptance in this passage is, that God accepts and takes pleasure in his children, in whom he sees the traces and lineaments of his own countenance. We have else here said, that regeneration is a renewal of the divine image in us. Since God, therefore, whenever he beholds his own face, justly loves it and holds it in honor, the life of believers, when formed to holiness and justice, is said, not without cause, to be pleasing to him. But because believers, while encompassed with mortal flesh, are still sinners, and their good works only begun savor of the corruption of the flesh, God cannot be propitious either to their persons or their works, unless he embraces them more in Christ than in themselves. In this way are we to understand the passages in which God declares that he is clement and merciful to the cultivators of righteousness. Moses said to the Israelites, "Know, therefore, that the Lord thy God, he is God, the faithful God, which keepeth covenant and mercy with them that love him and keep his commandments, to a thousand generations." These words afterwards became a common form of expression among the people. Thus Solomon in his prayer at the dedication says, "Lord God of Israel, there is no God like thee, in heaven above, or on earth beneath, who keepest covenant and mercy with thy servants that walk before thee with all their heart," (1 Kings 8:23). The same words are repeated by Nehemiah (Neh. 1:5). As the Lord in all covenants of mercy stipulates on his part for integrity and holiness of life in his servants (Deut. 29:18), lest his goodness might be held in derision, or any one, puffed up with exultation in it, might speak flatteringly to his soul while walking in the depravity of his heart, so he is pleased that in this way those whom he admits to communion in the covenant should be kept to their duty. Still, however, the covenant was gratuitous at first, and such it ever remains. Accordingly, while David declares, "according to the cleanness of my hands has he recompensed me," yet does he not omit the fountain to which I have referred; "he delivered me, because he delighted in me," (2 Sam. 22:20, 21). In commending the goodness of his cause, he derogates in no respect from the free mercy which takes precedence of all the gifts of which it is the origin.

6. Here, by the way, it is of importance to observe how those forms of expression differ from legal promises. By legal promises, I mean not those which lie scattered in the books of Moses (for there many Evangelical promises occur), but those which properly belong to the legal dispensation. All such promises, by whatever name they may be called, are made under the condition that the reward is to be paid on the things commanded being done. But when it is said that the Lord keeps a covenant of mercy with those who love him, the words rather demonstrate what kind of servants those are who have sincerely entered into the covenant, than express the reason why the Lord blesses them. The nature of the demonstration is this: As the end for which God bestows upon us the gift of eternal life is, that he may be loved, feared, and worshipped by us, so the end of all the promises of mercy contained in Scripture justly is that we may reverence and serve their author. Therefore, whenever we hear that he does good to those that observe his law, let us remember that the sons of God are designated by the duty which they ought perpetually to observe, that his reason for adopting us is, that we may reverence him as a father. Hence, if we would not deprive ourselves of the privilege of adoption, we must always strive in the direction of our calling. On the other hand, however, let us remember, that the completion of the Divine mercy depends not on the works of believers, but that God himself fulfill the promise of salvation to those who by right conduct correspond to their calling, because he recognizes the true badges of sons in those only who are directed to good by his Spirit. To this we may refer what is said of the members of the Church, "Lord, who shall abide in thy tabernacle? who shall dwell in thy holy hill? He that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his heart," &c. (Ps. 15:1, 2). Again, in Isaiah, "Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings? He that walketh righteously," &c. (Isa. 33:14, 15). For the thing described is not the strength with which believers can stand before the Lord, but the manner in which our most merciful Father introduces them into his fellowship, and defends and confirms them therein. For as he detests sin and loves righteousness, so those whom he unites to himself he purifies by his Spirit, that he may render them conformable to himself and to his kingdom. Therefore, if it be asked, What is the first cause which gives the saints free access to the kingdom of God, and a firm and permanent footing in it? the answer is easy. The Lord in his mercy once adopted and ever defends them. But if the question relates to the manner, we must descend to regeneration, and the fruits of it, as enumerated in the fifteenth Psalm.

7. There seems much more difficulty in those passages which distinguish good works by the name of righteousness, and declare that man is justified by them. The passages of the former class are very numerous, as when the observance of the commandments is termed justification or righteousness. Of the other classes we have a description in the words of Moses, "It shall be our righteousness, if we observe to do all these commandments," (Deut. 6:25). But if you object, that it is a legal promise, which, having an impossible condition annexed to it, proves nothing, there are other passages to which the same answer cannot be made; for instance, "If the man be poor," "thou shalt deliver him the pledge again when the sun goes down:" "and it shall be righteousness unto thee before the Lord thy God," (Deut. 24:13). Likewise the words of the prophet, "Then stood up Phinehas, and executed judgment: and so the plague was stayed. And that was counted unto him for righteousness unto all generations for evermore," (Psal. 106:30, 31). Accordingly the Pharisees of our day think they have here full scope for exultation.44[5] For, as we say, that when justification by faith is established, justification by works falls; they argue on the same principle, If there is a justification by works, it is false to say that we are justified by faith only. When I grant that the precepts of the law are termed righteousness, I do nothing strange: for they are so in reality. I must, however, inform the reader, that the Hebrew word !yqj

has been rendered by the Septuagint, not very appropriately, dikaiwvmata, justifications, instead of edicts.44[6] But I readily give up any dispute as to the word. Nor do I deny that the Law of God contains a perfect righteousness. For although we are debtors to do all the things which it enjoins, and, therefore, even after a full obedience, are unprofitable servants; yet, as the Lord has deigned to give it the name of righteousness, it is not ours to take from it what he has given. We readily admit, therefore, that the perfect obedience of the law is righteousness, and the observance of any precept a part of righteousness, the whole substance of righteousness being contained in the remaining parts. But we deny that any such righteousness ever exists. Hence we discard the righteousness of the law, not as being in itself maimed and defective, but because of the weakness of our flesh it nowhere appears. But then Scripture does not merely call the precepts of the law righteousness, it also gives this name to the works of the saints: as when it states that Zacharias and his wife "were both righteous before God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless," (Luke 1:6). Surely when it thus speaks, it estimates works more according to the nature of the law than their own proper character. And here, again, I must repeat the observation which I lately made, that the law is not to be ascertained from a careless translation of the Greek interpreter. Still, as Luke chose not to make any change on the received version, I will not contend for this. The things contained in the law God enjoined upon man for righteousness but that righteousness we attain not unless by observing the whole law: every transgression whatever destroys it. While, therefore, the law commands nothing but righteousness, if we look to itself, every one of its precepts is righteousness: if we look to the men by whom they are performed, being transgressors in many things, they by no means merit the praise of righteousness for one work, and that a work which, through the imperfection adhering to it, is always in some respect vicious.44[7]

8. I come to the second class (sec. 1, 7, ad init.), in which the chief difficulty lies. Paul finds nothing stronger to prove justification by faith than that which is written of Abraham, he "believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness," (Rom. 4:3; Gal. 3:6). Therefore, when it is said that the achievement of Phinehas "was counted unto him for righteousness," (Psal. 106:30, 31), we may argue that what Paul contends for respecting faith applies also to works. Our opponents, accordingly, as if the point were proved, set it down that though we are not justified without faith, it is not by faith only; that our justification is completed by works. Here I beseech believers, as they know that the true standard of righteousness must be derived from Scripture alone, to consider with me seriously and religiously, how Scripture can be fairly reconciled with that view. Paul, knowing that justification by faith was the refuge of those who wanted righteousness of their own, confidently infers, that all who are justified by faith are excluded from the righteousness of works. But as it is clear that this justification is common to all believers, he with equal confidence infers that no man is justified by works; nay, more, that justification is without any help from works. But it is one thing to determine what power works have in themselves, and another to determine what place they are to hold after justification by faith has been established. If a price is to be put upon works according to their own worth, we hold that they are unfit to appear in the presence of God: that man, accordingly, has no works in which he can glory before God, and that hence, deprived of all aid from works, he is justified by faith alone. Justification, moreover, we thus define: The sinner being admitted into communion with Christ is, for his sake, reconciled to God; when purged by his blood he obtains the remission of sins, and clothed with righteousness, just as if it were his own, stands secure before the judgment-seat of heaven. Forgiveness of sins being previously given, the good works which follow have a value different from their merit, because whatever is imperfect in them is covered by the perfection of Christ, and all their blemishes and pollutions are wiped away by his purity, so as never to come under the cognizance of the divine tribunal. The guilt of all transgressions, by which men are prevented from offering God an acceptable service, being thus effaced, and the imperfection which is wont to sully even good works being buried, the good works which are done by believers are deemed righteous, or; which is the same thing, are imputed for righteousness.

9. Now, should any one state this to me as an objection to justification by faith, I would first ask him, Whether a man is deemed righteous for one holy work or two, while in all the other acts of his life lie is a transgressor of the law? This were, indeed, more than absurd. I would next ask, Whether he is deemed righteous on account of many good works if he is guilty of transgression in some one part? Even this he will not venture to maintain in opposition to the authority of the law, which pronounces, "Cursed be he that confirmeth not all the words of this law to do them," (Deut. 27:26). I would go still farther and ask, Whether there be any work which may not justly be convicted of impurity or imperfection? How, then, will it appear to that eye before which even the heavens are not clean, and angels are chargeable with folly? (Job 4:18). Thus he will be forced to confess that no good work exists that is not defiled, both by contrary transgression and also by its own corruption, so that it cannot be honored as righteousness. But if it is certainly owing to justification by faith that works, otherwise impure, unclean, defective, unworthy of the sight, not to say of the love of God, are imputed for righteousness, why do they by boasting of this imputation aim at the destruction of that justification, but for which the boast were vain? Are they desirous of having a viper's birth?44[8] To this their ungodly language tends. They cannot deny that justification by faith is the beginning, the foundation, the cause, the subject, the substance, of works of righteousness, and yet they conclude that justification is not by faith, because good works are counted for righteousness. Let us have done then with this frivolity, and confess the fact as it stands; if any righteousness which works are supposed to possess depends on justification by faith, this doctrine is not only not impaired, but on the contrary confirmed, its power being thereby more brightly displayed. Nor let us suppose, that after free justification works are commended, as if they afterwards succeeded to the office of justifying, or shared the office with faith. For did not justification by faith always remain entire, the impurity of works would be disclosed. There is nothing absurd in the doctrine, that though man is justified by faith, he is himself not only not righteous, but the righteousness attributed to his works is beyond their own deserts.

10. In this way we can admit not only that there is a partial righteousness in works (as our adversaries maintain), but that they are approved by God as if they were absolutely perfect. If we remember on what foundation this is rested, every difficulty will be solved. The first time when a work begins to be acceptable is when it is received with pardon. And whence pardon, but just because God looks upon us and all that belongs to us as in Christ? Therefore, as we ourselves when ingrafted into Christ appear righteous before God, because our iniquities are covered with his innocence; so our works are, and are deemed righteous, because every thing otherwise defective in them being buried by the purity of Christ is not imputed. Thus we may justly say, that not only ourselves, but our works also, are justified by faith alone. Now, if that righteousness of works, whatever it be, depends on faith and free justification, and is produced by it, it ought to be included under it and, so to speak, made subordinate to it, as the effect to its cause; so far is it from being entitled to be set up to impair or destroy the doctrine of justification.44[9] Thus Paul, to prove that our blessedness depends not on our works, but on the mercy of God, makes special use of the words of David, "Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered;" "Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity." Should any one here obtrude the numberless passages in which blessedness seems to be attributed to works, as, "Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord;" "He that has mercy on the poor, happy is he;" "Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly," and "that endureth temptation;" "Blessed are they that keep judgment," that are "pure in heart," "meek," "merciful," &c.,45[0] they cannot make out that Paul's doctrine is not true. For seeing that the qualities thus extolled never all so exist in man as to obtain for him the approbation of God, it follows, that man is always miserable until he is exempted from misery by the pardon of his sins. Since, then, all the kinds of blessedness extolled in the Scripture are vain so that man derives no benefit from them until he obtains blessedness by the forgiveness of sins, a forgiveness which makes way for them, it follows that this is not only the chief and highest, but the only blessedness, unless you are prepared to maintain that it is impaired by things which owe their entire existence to it. There is much less to trouble us in the name of righteous which is usually given to believers. I admit that they are so called from the holiness of their lives, but as they rather exert themselves in the study of righteousness than fulfill righteousness itself, any degree of it which they possess must yield to justification by faith, to which it is owing that it is what it is.

11. But they say that we have a still more serious business with James, who in express terms opposes us. For he asks, "Was not Abraham our father justified by works?" and adds "You see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only," (James 2:21, 24). What then? Will they engage Paul in a quarrel with James? If they hold James to be a servant of Christ, his sentiments must be understood as not dissenting from Christ speaking by the mouth of Paul. By the mouth of Paul the Spirit declares that Abraham obtained justification by faith, not by works; we also teach that all are justified by faith without the works of the law. By James the same Spirit declares that both Abraham's justification and ours consists of works, and not of faith only. It is certain that the Spirit cannot be at variance with himself. Where, then, will be the agreement? It is enough for our opponents, provided they can tear up that justification by faith which we regard as fixed by the deepest roots:45[1] to restore peace to the conscience is to them a matter of no great concern. Hence you may see, that though they indeed carp at the doctrine of justification by faith, they meanwhile point out no goal of righteousness at which the conscience may rest. Let them triumph then as they will, so long as the only victory they can boast of is, that they have deprived righteousness of all its certainty. This miserable victory they will indeed obtain when the light of truth is extinguished, and the Lord permits them to darken it with their lies. But wherever the truth of God stands they cannot prevail. I deny, then, that the passage of James which they are constantly holding up before us as if it were the shield of Achilles, gives them the slightest countenance. To make this plain, let us first attend to the scope of the Apostle, and then show wherein their hallucination consists. As at that time (and the evil has existed in the Church ever since) there were many who, while they gave manifest proof of their infidelity, by neglecting and omitting all the works peculiar to believers, ceased not falsely to glory in the name of faith, James here dissipates their vain confidence. His intention therefore is, not to derogate in any degree from the power of true faith, but to show how absurdly these triflers laid claim only to the empty name, and resting satisfied with it, felt secure in unrestrained indulgence in vice. This state of matters being understood, it will be easy to see where the error of our opponents lies. They fall into a double paralogism, the one in the term faith, the other in the term justifying. The Apostle, in giving the name of faith to an empty opinion altogether differing from true faith, makes a concession which derogates in no respect from his case. This he demonstrates at the outset by the words, "What does it profit, my brethren, though a man say he has faith, and have not works?" (James 2:14). He says not, "If a man have faith without works," but "if he say that he has." This becomes still clearer when a little after he derides this faith as worse than that of devils, and at last when he calls it "dead." You may easily ascertain his meaning by the explanation, "Thou believest that there is one God." Surely if all which is contained in that faith is a belief in the existence of God, there is no wonder that it does not justify. The denial of such a power to it cannot be supposed to derogate in any degree from Christian faith, which is of a very different description. For how does true faith justify unless by uniting us to Christ, so that being made one with him, we may be admitted to a participation in his righteousness? It does not justify because it forms an idea of the divine existence, but because it reclines with confidence on the divine mercy.

12. We have not made good our point until we dispose of the other paralogism: since James places a part of justification in works. If you would make James consistent with the other Scriptures and with himself, you must give the word justify, as used by him, a different meaning from what it has with Paul. In the sense of Paul we are said to be justified when the remembrance of our unrighteousness is obliterated and we are counted righteous. Had James had the same meaning it would have been absurd for him to quote the words of Moses, "Abraham believed God," &c. The context runs thus: "Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he had offered Isaac his son upon the altar? Seest thou how faith wrought with his works, and by works was faith made perfect? And the Scripture was fulfilled which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness." If it is absurd to say that the effect was prior to its cause, either Moses falsely declares in that passage that Abraham's faith was imputed for righteousness or Abraham, by his obedience in offering up Isaac, did not merit righteousness. Before the existence of Ishmael, who was a grown youth at the birth of Isaac, Abraham was justified by his faith. How thee can we say that he obtained justification by an obedience which followed long after? Wherefore, either James erroneously inverts the proper order (this it were impious to suppose), or he meant not to say that he was justified, as if he deserved to be deemed just. What then? It appears certain that he is speaking of the manifestation, not of the imputation of righteousness, as if he had said, Those who are justified by true faith prove their justification by obedience and good works, not by a bare and imaginary semblance of faith. In one word, he is not discussing the mode of justification, but requiring that the justification of believers shall be operative. And as Paul contends that men are justified without the aid of works, so James will not allow any to be regarded as justified who are destitute of good works. Due attention to the scope will thus disentangle every doubt; for the error of our opponents lies chiefly in this, that they think James is defining the mode of justification, whereas his only object is to destroy the depraved security of those who vainly pretended faith as an excuse for their contempt of good works. Therefore, let them twist the words of James as they may, they will never extract out of them more than the two propositions: That an empty phantom of faith does not justify, and that the believer, not contented with such an imagination, manifests his justification by good works.

13. They gain nothing by quoting from Paul to the same effect, that "not the hearers of the law are just before God, but the doers of the law shall be justified," (Rom. 2:13). I am unwilling to evade the difficulty by the solution of Ambrose, that Paul spoke thus because faith in Christ is the fulfillment of the law. This I regard as a mere subterfuge, and one too for which there is no occasion, as the explanation is perfectly obvious. The Apostle's object is to suppress the absurd confidence of the Jews who gave out that they alone had a knowledge of the law, though at the very time they where its greatest despisers. That they might not plume themselves so much on a bare acquaintance with the law, he reminds them that when justification is sought by the law, the thing required is not the knowledge but the observance of it. We certainly mean not to dispute that the righteousness of the law consists in works, and not only so, but that justification consists in the dignity and merits of works. But this proves not that we are justified by works unless they can produce some one who has fulfilled the law. That Paul had no other meaning is abundantly obvious from the context. After charging Jews and Gentiles in common with unrighteousness, he descends to particulars and says, that "as many as have sinned without law shall also perish without law," referring to the Gentiles, and that "as many as have sinned in the law shall be judged by the law," referring to the Jews. Moreover, as they, winking at their transgressions, boasted merely of the law, he adds most appropriately, that the law was passed with the view of justifying not those who only heard it, but those only who obeyed it; as if he had said, Do you seek righteousness in the law? do not bring forward the mere hearing of it, which is in itself of little weight, but bring works by which you may show that the law has not been given to you in vain. Since in these they were all deficient, it followed that they had no ground of boasting in the law. Paul's meaning, therefore, rather leads to an opposite argument. The righteousness of the law consists in the perfection of works; but no man can boast of fulfilling the law by works, and, therefore, there is no righteousness by the law.

14. They now betake themselves to those passages in which believers boldly submit their righteousness to the judgment of God, and wish to be judged accordingly; as in the following passages: "Judge me, O Lord, according to my righteousness, and according to mine integrity that is in me." Again, "Hear the right, O Lord;" "Thou hast proved mine heart; thou hast visited me in the night; thou hast tried me, and shalt find nothing." Again "The Lord regarded me according to my righteousness; according to the cleanness of my hands has he recompensed me. For I have kept the ways of the Lord, and have not wickedly departed from my God." "I was also upright before him, and I kept myself from mine iniquity." Again, "Judge me, O Lord; for I have walked in mine integrity;" "I have not sat with vain persons; neither will I go in with dissemblers;" "Gather not my soul with sinners, nor my life with bloody men; in whose hands is mischief, and their right hand is full of bribes. But as for me, I will walk in mine integrity."45[2] I have already spoken of the confidence which the saints seem to derive simply from works. The passages now quoted will not occasion much difficulty, if we attend to their perivstasi", their connection, or (as it is commonly called) special circumstances. These are of two kinds; for those who use them have no wish that their whole life should be brought to trial, so that they may be acquitted or condemned according to its tenor; all they wish is, that a decision should be given on the particular case; and even here the righteousness which they claim is not with reference to the divine perfection, but only by comparison with the wicked and profane. When the question relates to justification, the thing required is not that the individual have a good ground of acquittal in regard to some particular matter, but that his whole life be in accordance with righteousness. But when the saints implore the divine justice in vindication of their innocence, they do not present themselves as free from fault, and in every respect blameless but while placing their confidence of salvation in the divine goodness only, and trusting that he will vindicate his poor when they are afflicted contrary to justice and equity, they truly commit to him the cause in which the innocent are oppressed. And when they sist themselves with their adversaries at the tribunal of God, they pretend not to an innocence corresponding to the divine purity were inquiry strictly made, but knowing that in comparison of the malice, dishonesty, craft, and iniquity of their enemies, their sincerity justice, simplicity, and purity, are ascertained and approved by God, they dread not to call upon him to judge between them. Thus when David said to Saul, "The Lord render to every man his righteousness and his faithfulness," (1 Sam. 26:23), he meant not that the Lord should examine and reward every one according to his deserts, but he took the Lord to witness how great his innocence was in comparison of Saul's injustice. Paul, too, when he indulges in the boast, "Our rejoicing is this, the testimony of our conscience, that in simplicity and godly sincerity, not with fleshly wisdom, but by the grace of God, we have had our conversation in the world, and more abundantly to you-ward," (2 Cor. 1:12), means not to call for the scrutiny of God, but compelled by the calumnies of the wicked he appeals, in contradiction of all their slanders, to his faith and probity, which he knew that God had indulgently accepted. For we see how he elsewhere says, "I know nothing by myself; yet am I not hereby justified," (1 Cor. 4:4); in other words, he was aware that the divine judgment far transcended the blind estimate of man. Therefore, however believers may, in defending their integrity against the hypocrisy of the ungodly, appeal to God as their witness and judge, still when the question is with God alone, they all with one mouth exclaim, "If thou, Lord, should mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?" Again, "Enter not into judgment with thy servant; for in thy sight shall no man living be justified." Distrusting their own words, they gladly exclaim, "Thy loving-kindness is better than life," (Ps. 130:3; 143:2; 63:3).

15. There are other passages not unlike those quoted above, at which some may still demur. Solomon says, "The just man walketh in his integrity," (Prov. 20:7). Again, "In the way of righteousness is life; and in the pathway thereof there is no death," (Prov. 12:28). For this reason Ezekiel says, He that "has walked in my statutes, and has kept my judgments, to deal truly; he is just, he shall surely live," (Ezek. 18:9, 21; 23:15). None of these declarations do we deny or obscure. But let one of the sons of Adam come forward with such integrity. If there is none, they must perish from the presence of God, or retake themselves to the asylum of mercy. Still we deny not that the integrity of believers, though partial and imperfect, is a step to immortality. How so, but just that the works of those whom the Lord has assumed into the covenant of grace, he tries not by their merit, but embraces with paternal indulgence. By this we understand not with the Schoolmen, that works derive their value from accepting grace. For their meaning is, that works otherwise unfit to obtain salvation in terms of law, are made fit for such a purpose by the divine acceptance. On the other hand, I maintain that these works being sullied both by other transgressions and by their own deficiencies, have no other value than this, that the Lord indulgently pardons them; in other words, that the righteousness which he bestows on man is gratuitous. Here they unseasonably obtrude those passages in which the Apostle prays for all perfection to believers, "To the end he may establish your hearts unblamable in holiness before God, even our Father," (1 Thess. 3:13, and elsewhere). These words were strongly urged by the Celestines of old, in maintaining the perfection of holiness in the present life. To this we deem it sufficient briefly to reply with Augustine, that the goal to which all the pious ought to aspire is, to appear in the presence of God without spot and blemish; but as the course of the present life is at best nothing more than progress, we shall never reach the goal until we have laid aside the body of sin, and been completely united to the Lord. If any one choose to give the name of perfection to the saints, I shall not obstinately quarrel with him, provided he defines this perfection in the words of Augustine, "When we speak of the perfect virtue of the saints, part of this perfection consists in the recognition of our imperfection both in truth and in humility," (August. ad Bonif. lib. 3, c. 7).

[4]43 443 See Book 2 chap. 7: sec. 2ñ8, 15; chap. 8 sec 3; chap 11 sec. 8; Book 3 chap 19. sec 2.

[4]44 444 French, "Les Sophistes de Sorbonne;"--the Sophists of Sorbonne.

[4]45 445 French, "de crier contre nous en cest endroit;"--here to raise an outcry against us.

[4]46 446 French, "Edits ou Statuts;"--Edicts or Statutes.

[4]47 447 The French here adds the two following sentences:--"Nostre response done est, merites: mais entant qu'elles tendent [yacute] la justice que Dieu nous a commandee, laquelle est nulle, si elle n'est parfaite. Or elle ne se trouve parfaite en nul homme de monde; pourtant faut conclure, q'une bonne úuvre de soy ne merite pas le nom de justice."--Our reply then is, that when the works of the saints are called righteousness, it is not owing to their merits, but is in so far as they tend to the righteousness which God has commanded, and which is null if it be not perfect. Now it is not found perfect in any man in the world. Hence we must conclude, that no good work merits in itself the name of righteousness.

[4]48 448 French "Voudrions nous faire une lignee serpentine, que les enfans meutrissent leur mere?"--Would we have a viperish progeny, where the children murder the parent?

[4]49 449 The whole sentence in French stnads thus:--"Or si cette justice des úvres telle quelle procede de la foy et de la justification gratuite, il ne faut pas qu'on la prenne pour destruire ou obscurcir la grace dont elle depend; mais plustost doit estre enclose en icelle, comme le fruict [yacute] arbre."--Now, if this righteousness of works, such as it is, proceeds from faith and free justification, it must not be employed to destroy or obscure the grace on which it depends, but should rather be included in it, like the fruit in the tree.

[4]50 450 Rom. 4:7; Ps 32:1, 2; 112:1; Prov. 14:21; Ps. 1:1; 106:3; 119:11; Mt. 5:3.

[4]51 451 French, "Il suffit [yacute] nos adversaires s'ils peuvent deraciner la justice de foy, laquelle nous voulons estre plantee au profond du cúur."--It is enough for our opponents if they can root up justification by faith, which we desire to be planted at the bottom of the heart.

[4]52 452 Ps. 7:9; 17:1; 18:20; 26:1, 9, 10. Farther on , see Chap 14 s18; Chap. 20 s10.
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