The Bible teaches that we are righteous people but many of us struggle with that reality. There are also many common misunderstandings about this concept. Those who fail to understand that righteousness is received entirely as a gift (see Romans 5:17) often wrongly think that it can be achieved through various things we do.
If you think that you can become righteous by your own efforts, I remind you that self-effort produces only one kind of righteousness — self-righteousness. The righteousness which is of God comes by faith and it is a gift to us in the person of Jesus Christ. Self righteousness will prevent us from ever experiencing the grace walk.
The biggest misunderstanding about our righteousness is that it's a progressive growth into righteousness Some people believe that we become more and more righteous as we walk with the Lord. But, it’s not by what we do that we become righteous. The Scripture tells us in 1 Corinthians 1:30 that Jesus is your righteousness. “But by His doing you are in Christ Jesus, who became to us wisdom from God, and righteousness and sanctification, and redemption, so that, just as it is written, ‘Let him who boasts boast in the Lord.'" So, how righteous are you? Look at it this way: on a scale of 1 to 100, how righteous is Jesus Christ? One hundred.
Now, using that same scale, what was the level of righteousness possessed by the Apostle Paul? How about you? How righteous would you say you are? The answer is 100%. You are as righteous as Jesus Christ because Jesus Christ is our righteousness. We may not always act righteous, but that fact doesn’t change the reality of who we are. Don’t allow your feelings to dictate what you believe about this matter. Let what God has said have the final say about it. That is our ultimate authority, right?
Let me illustrate the point this way: Imagine if I found a ring at church and brought the ring in and showed it to everybody and asked whose it was, but no one claimed it. Someone might say, “You found the ring. No one has claimed it, so it’s yours to keep.” I look at the ring and it looks like about a one carat diamond. Immediately I think, “I wonder what that’s worth.”
So I take it to a friend and I ask him what he thinks the diamond is worth and he tells me it’s worth about six or seven thousand dollars. Then I take it to another friend and he says, “No, that’s not a real diamond. That is cubic zirconia. I think it is only worth about three hundred dollars.” I then take it to yet another friend who looks at it and says, “That came out of a toy machine. That’s just plastic. Why, that’s not worth more than about three dollars.”
At this point I have opinions that range from three dollars to seven thousand dollars. How do I know the value of the ring? I take the ring to an appraiser and he would set a value on it based on the price that someone was willing to pay for it. So if someone was willing to pay five thousand dollars for the ring, then the value of the ring is five thousand dollars. I could look at the ring and say, “This ring equals five thousand dollars.” The ring and the five thousand dollars have the same value.
When you and I came into the world, we were born with a big question mark over our heads. The question was, “What is my value? What am I worth?” Unless you know your identity in Christ, you are always asking one way or another, “What is my value? What am I worth?” We try to establish in our own minds what our value is based on what other people tell us (We will probably get varying appraisals, depending on whether we ask our mother or our employer).
But there is a way that you can know your value. Bring yourself before the expert. Come to God and say, “Can you tell me my value?” God will answer, “Yes, I can.” He will determine your value the same way the appraiser determines the value of the ring. It hinges on what price is someone willing to pay for you.
God could say, “You have been bought with a price. And I am the One who bought you. What I paid for you is Jesus.” Isn’t that response biblical? Then would it be accurate to say that to God, you are of equal value to Jesus. It almost sounds blasphemous, doesn’t it? But I want to assure you that your heavenly Father treasures you like He treasures His own Son because Christ is your life. You are now one with Him. You are 100% righteous because He is 100% righteous.
In fact, you will be no more righteous in heaven than you are right now. I’m not talking about your behavior. I’m talking about your nature. I’m talking about who you are. Righteousness by progression is a legalistic lie that implies you make your own way toward greater righteousness by doing the right things.
We don't need to live in self-righteousness. The one Man's Gift is not like the trespass of the one man. Where sin abounds, grace and the Great Physician's one cleansing does much more abound. We aren't righteous progressively true because Christ is our Righteousness period. Let him who boasts boast in the Lord. Knowing our value can help us lean with humility on the Lord, being the righteousness of God in Him and not found in our own which would be self-righteousness II Cor 5:21.
ReplyDeleteWell said David:
ReplyDeleteWe did not make ourselves sinners - Adam did, we did not make ourselves righteous - Christ did.
Progressive righteousness is postponed righteousness which is no righteousness at all, We are what God says we are, anything less is calling God a liar.
1 John 4:17 says "....as He is so are we in this world". So as you say, is Jesus 100% Rightious; then so are we.
ReplyDeleteWow. Thank you for posting this. When I first met Christ I ended up joining a church that taught this "progressive righteousness" lie. They taught that "sanctification is the work of a lifetime" and that "holiness" was a matter of "obedience", and "obedience" was a matter of progressively "getting victory over sin" and that until you had some mysterious & elusive "repentance that is not to be repented of" which made you STOP SINNING ENTIRELY, you were not actually saved; you were only "on probation" so to speak. Needless to say this kind of teaching conveys absolutely no power over sin or way out of the flesh except through "will power" and the whole notion of "free will" is one of infinite regression (i.e., like the wizard of Oz, a "man behind the curtain" only it's an infinite regression of men behind curtains each operating the "man behind the curtain" ahead of him, etc.) or, "what wills the will to will what it wills?" because anyone either honest with himself or intelligent enough to read Romans 7 will realize there is an agency there present in "volition" which is NOT entirely conscious or volitional ... this church also taught that Romans 7 represented the "unconverted" man while Romans 8 represented the "converted" one ... so basically if you were struggling with your flesh (don't we all?) it meant you were never really converted (but isn't it the other way around? because the unconverted DON'T struggle with their flesh -- they enjoy it!)
ReplyDeleteAnyway this very toxic and very subtle legalism was touted as an improvement over the gospel of grace, as the "real" gospel, whereas grace was denounced as "cheap grace" and "easy believism" and other disparaging garbage words. What really stinks is that this church probably has one of the most comprehensive and accurate oeuvres in Christendom today where eschatology is concerned. Anyway, thanks for posting this, it sets a lot of things straight. And if you are ever of a mind to do so it would be cool to read a treatment from you of these toxic lies I've shared above.
Thank you John. I admire your knowledge of the mystery of the faith and concise understanding in grace and your ability to articulate it.
ReplyDeleteGreat posting and very enlightening responses!
ReplyDeleteGreat post. The Good news is so awesome!!
ReplyDeleteHeres a thoughts:
Holiness can not be defined in relation to sin.
God is holy (sanctified, wholly otherly and set apart).
God was Holy for "negative eternity", ever before the creation and the Fall of man through which sin came into existence. So is it crazy to define Holiness as a lack or presence of sin because God was holy for eternity before sin existed.
When ministers still stuck in legalism stand and say "You must live Holy", the first thing that comes into the mind of most is, "I need to be careful to stop any sin i can find in my life so I can be "more" holy"
But, Holiness is a position of being "set apart" and "otherly", it is our position that we are now in IN CHRIST, so to live Holy is simply to live from our position of being "seated with Christ in heavenly places".
When we believe what God said about us, we are empowered to live holy just as He is. We are NEW (Kinos) Creations and too have become "otherly" and "set apart". Thank you Jesus!!!