Thursday, January 7, 2016

Covenant and Justification


Especially since E.P. Sanders published his book “Paul and Palestinian Judaism: A Comparison of Patterns of religion” (Philadelphia, 1977), some theologians insist that (all) the first-century Jews held to a theology called ‘covenantal nomism’. 
Earlier many churches and theologians believed that first-Century Jews held to some form of legalism as if they could (by doing righteous deeds) contribute to their own salvation.  Sanders, however, argued that this constituted a misunderstanding of Paul’s letters and a caricature of Jewish thought as if it constituted a form of legalism (whereby justification does not come by grace but by human efforts). 

“Covenantal nomism”, according to Sanders, includes the following points:
·       God has graciously chosen a people to make a covenant with them, and He has given them his law.
·       God has promised to maintain this covenant, and He requires of them a response in obedience.
·       God rewards obedience, and He punishes willful transgression.
·       Through atonement God provides a means to forgive sins committed, thereby maintaining the covenant relationship in spite of sins committed.
·       All who are maintained in the covenant through obedience, atonement, and God’s mercy will be saved in the end.

In the final analysis the impression is given that the Christian view is not so different from the view of the Jews in the time that Paul wrote his letters.  Although we were first chosen by grace, we still need to show obedience in order to continue in the covenant. Nobody can perfectly keep the obligations of the covenant, but such shortcomings are graciously forgiven by the mercy of our covenant God.
This reasoning, then, gives the impression that we are first unconditionally accepted and justified by God, while at the last judgment our works (of obedience) will be taken into consideration for our final justification.

To many Christians, this seems to be quite in line with the thinking of most Christians!  In fact, it seems to be an attractive way of explaining what must happen if we stress our covenant heritage without creating the false impression that every one who (in baptism) receives God’s (unconditional) promises will be saved regardless of their later lifestyle. It appeared attractive to me when I wrestled with these issues in the nineties, and apparently it seemed attractive to a number of reformed leaders at the time, such as Steve Schlissel, Norm Shepherd, and John Barach.  Tom Wright, who used to be well known for his rigorous academics and staunch orthodoxy, holds to similar ideas.

When I talked this over with my wife, we agreed that we used to think along very similar lines. God has graciously saved us (essentially by allowing us to be born into a Christian community). As lambs of the Good Shepherd, we were justified by the love of God and the sacrifice of Christ.  And then, as we got older it was our obligation to live within the covenant. We were to live like good Christian folk, faithfully attending the church services, refrain from gambling, stealing, drunkenness, and shopping on Sundays.  Of course, we knew that we could never perfectly please God, and the good things we did we could only do by the grace of God.  Yet, God would remain faithful to his covenant promises, so if we would continue living by the basic rules of our church culture and say daily “sorry” for our sins, then we could rest assured that we could count on God’s forgiveness that He secured for us on Golgotha.
Perhaps this was not the official theology of our church, but it seems to have been some a popular folk-theology for the people in the pews.
We knew that “all people are wretched sinners in the face of a Holy God” and we learned about “total depravity”, but these were mantras that had not effectively changed our personal convictions that we (as faithful members of a true church) held at the time. Or, they were only true for those outside the covenant of grace.  So, if someone would confront us with a sin, we would not hesitate to defend ourselves and to deny our state of sinfulness, which we were supposed to embrace.

If nothing else, this should make the topic relevant for us today!  What, if anything, is wrong with this theological theory? If it is the right approach, and if this was held by (all) first-Century Jews, what then was Paul’s problem?  Are Jews so different in their beliefs from Christians, or are Catholics (in their theologizing) so different from the Reformed?

Here are a few important considerations:

1               First-Century Jews had a different concept of sin and grace than Paul.

Don Carson challenges Sanders’ claim that first-Century Jews all adhere to covenantal nomism.                 Looking at the writings of Flavius Josephus, a well-known first-Century Jewish author, he examined all the instances where Josephus used the word  χαρις” (grace).  Josephus acknowledges that God pours out his grace… yet not on undeserving sinners but on those who try to follow the law.[1]  Westerholm points out that the Jewish thought claimed that “Israel’s willingness to obey (God) made them worthy recipients of what was nonetheless a divine gift, out of all proportion to their merits”[2]  So, when first-Century Jews, like Josephus, wrote about people being saved by grace, they meant something quite different from Paul’s teachings.  Paul insists that there are no worthy recipients of God’s grace, so God’s gift of salvation cannot include any role of humans doing “God-pleasing works”.[3]  Sanders agrees that “a concept of original or even universal sin is missing in most forms of Judaism.”[4]

So, first-Century Jews seem to have had a much less serious view of their own sinfulness and consequently a much weaker view of God’s grace. Consequently, they could not imagine the desperate need for a divine substitute, offered in the crucifixion of the Messiah.

2               Jewish history (in the biblical record) would suggest that Israel was not “a worthy recipient of God’s grace”.  Reading the record of the Old Testament, or the summary in Stephen’s speech, it is impossible to see Israel as “worthy recipient of God’s grace”.  Throughout history humans have tried hard to destroy what God had built, and at best there have been short periods of blessed harmony with God and at best there has been a “small, righteous remnant”.  Yet, if we were to quickly respond that this must be where we fit in, then –in our self-righteous pride- we still miss the point! Paul’s insisted that there is nobody who does good, and (keeping) the law can only condemn somebody, for nobody can perfectly keep it. 

3               Paul challenges contemporary Jews in their (partial) reliance on their own works of obedience. He will have nothing of combining human’s good attitudes and efforts with the grace of God. Even for Christians (who have God’s indwelling Spirit) there can be no credit whatsoever for their good deeds. Paul makes it very clear, what the Reformers later affirmed, that our only credit comes from Christ’s sacrifice and that we can only receive its benefits through living faith. Those who were truly predestined and justified will produce fruit of faith- not as condition for their final justification but as proof of true faith and justification.
As maturing Christians realize, even our best efforts are affected by efforts to please others and to get public support or praise. Most things we do are done to boost our image and status; our comfort and our confidence are at best secondary objectives.  We will not be able to have God squarely and always at the center of our lives!

4               The views of Tom Wright are more complicated as he also insists on “Jesus as the one who ends the exile status for the Jews.” Although this is an important aspect, Wright insists that this is the dominating perspective for Paul, whereby Christ redeemed the children of Abraham and where Paul’s (primary) concern was how the gentile believers could be incorporated into this covenant community of the redeemed.  He then redefines the term ‘justification’ as “God’s declaration that we are in that covenant.” 
As Piper[5] paraphrases Wright, “The gospel is the message of … the death and resurrection and lord- ship of Christ over the world. The Holy Spirit uses this news to awaken faith in the heart. This is God’s divine call through the gospel. By this (effectual!) call and faith, we are made partakers of Christ’s victory and become part of God’s family. Then … justification comes in and declares to us what has happened to us. It thus gives assurance—but does not save, or convert, or make us part of God’s family.”
This is how Wright describes the process as Paul sees it: Calling, faith, and justification come to the elect almost simultaneously, yet in that order. This invites all kinds of questions and concerns. Does Wright not confuse covenant with election? Are not all in baptism told that they belong to the covenant community? Yet, how does this come after true faith exists, which will not even be the case in all who are in the covenant.  When Peter on Pentecost declares that “The promise is for you (Jews) and to all (gentiles) who will still be called”, does he not pronounce that his audience is in the covenant- prior to their actual conversion and faith?
One problem is that men like Tom Wright are very academic and very clever, and most people would feel intimidated even attempting to contradict his genius. Most critics of Wright point out that he uses dikaioo (the Greek term for justification) in a very unnatural way.  Is it not God’s declaration that we are reconciled to Him the crucial aspect of our salvation? How then could it be a message of assurance only, after the fact of (effective) calling and the existence of true faith?
 Like other followers of Sanders, Wright distinguishes between this (first) justification and a later justification. In Piper’s[6] words, It seems that, even though Wright says dikaioo is ‘a declarative word, declaring that something is the case’, rather than a word for making something happen or changing the way something is,”21 nevertheless, he wants to clarify that God’s future act of justification is more than a declaration ‘that something is the case.’ It is an event that accomplishes final deliverance.”  In Piper’s[7] words, “In the future at the final court scene, God the Judge will find in our favor on the basis of the works we have done—the life we have lived—and in the present he anticipates that verdict and declares it to be already true on the basis of our faith in Jesus.”
Both Carson and Piper carefully examine Romans 2, 3 in their evaluation of Wright’s theories. This is then how John Piper[8] gives his view:
“I believe in the necessity of a transformed life of obedience to Jesus by the power of the Spirit through faith as a public evidence and confirmation of faith at the Last Day for all who will finally be saved. In other words, I believe it is actually true, not just hypothetically true, that God “will render to each one according to his works to those who by patience in well- doing seek for glory and honor and immortality, he will give eternal life”(Rom.2:6–7). I take the phrase “according to”(kata) in a sense different from “based on.” I think the best way to bring together the various threads of Paul’s teaching on justification by faith apart from works (Rom. 3:28; 4:4–6; 11:6; Eph. 2:8) is to treat the necessity of obedience not as any part of the basis of our justification, but strictly as the evidence and confirmation of our faith in Christ whose blood and righteousness is the sole basis of our justification. How this is the case, while justification is by faith alone apart from any basis in that very obedience, has been one of the main themes of my preaching and writing for the last thirty years.”
I thank God for gifted godly men, who have studied these complicated issues in great depth and found the suggested solutions wanting. I have benefited most from the teachings and writings of Don Carson, John Piper, and Stephen Westerholm.  While some leaders in reformed churches have embraced this new view of covenant and justification, it is amazing that Baptist scholars (who, according to some reformed leaders are by their affiliation by definition Arminian) are among the leading theologians to preserve the Reformed doctrine of grace.

Resources used:

·       D.A. Carson, “The New Perspective on Paul”, a series of three lectures, free downloads on i-tunes.
·       John Piper, “The future of justification, a response to N.T. Wright” (Crossway Books, 2007). (available as pdf file on the Desiring God website)
·       Stephen Westerholm, “Justification by faith is the answer. What is the question?”, CTQ 70 (2006):197-217 (available as pdf file on the Internet)
·       Stephen Westerholm, “Justification Reconsidered: rethinking a Pauline theme” (Eerdmans, 2013)

For further study:
·       Douglas J. Moo, “The Epistle to the Romans”, NICNT commentary. Eerdmans, 1996
·       D.A. Carson, Peter T. O’Brien, and Mark A. Seifrid, editors: “Justification and Variegated Nomism”, Volume 1: The Complexities of Second Temple Judaism, Volume 2: The Paradoxes of Paul


[1] D.A. Carson, “The New Perspective on Paul”, a series of three lectures, free downloads on i-tunes.
[2] Stephen Westerholm, “Justification Reconsidered: rethinking a Pauline theme”, page 32.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid., page 33.
[5] John Piper, “The future of justification, a response to N.T. Wright”, chapter 6: Justification and the Gospel: Does justification determine our standing with God?
[6] John Piper, “The future of justification, a response to N.T. Wright”, page 100
[7] John Piper, “The future of justification, a response to N.T. Wright”, chapter 7: The place of works in our justification.
[8] John Piper, “The future of justification, a response to N.T. Wright”, page 110

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