|
November 25, 2001 |
Bethlehem Baptist Church |
HOW TO USE THE LAW FRUITFULLY
TO BEAR FRUIT FOR GOD
(1 Timothy 1:5-11)
But the goal of our instruction is love from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith. 6 For some men, straying from these things, have turned aside to fruitless discussion, 7 wanting to be teachers of the Law, even though they do not understand either what they are saying or the matters about which they make confident assertions. 8 But we know that the Law is good, if one uses it lawfully, 9 realizing the fact that law is not made for a righteous person, but for those who are lawless and rebellious, for the ungodly and sinners, for the unholy and profane, for those who kill their fathers or mothers, for murderers 10 and immoral men and homosexuals and kidnappers and liars and perjurers, and whatever else is contrary to sound teaching, 11 according to the glorious gospel of the blessed God, with which I have been entrusted.
The question crying for an answer after the
recent messages on Romans 7 and 8 is how
Christians should use the law of God revealed
in the Old Testament. The reason this question
is crying for an answer is that Paul has
said things about the law that show its weakness
and powerlessness to justify us and sanctify
us. Romans 8:3, "What the law could
not do, weak as it was through the flesh
. . ."
Review: Law-Keeping Cannot Justify You
I have argued in the most recent messages
that law-keeping can’t justify us in the
courtroom of God: If his verdict changes
from guilty to not guilty, it will be because
we trust in Christ’s righteousness and death,
not in our law-keeping. And if our hearts
are changed from rebellious to submissive
it will not be owing to law, but to the Spirit
of Christ at work in our hearts. Again and
again I have directed your attention to Romans
7:4, "Therefore, my brethren, you also
were made to die to the Law through the body
of Christ, so that you might be joined to
another, to Him who was raised from the dead,
in order that we might bear fruit for God."
In other words, if we want to bear the fruit
of love in our lives – and we will bear this
fruit, if we are children of God – then we
must pursue at it in a way that does not
treat the law as our first or chief or decisive
means of change.
What Then Shall We Do with the Law?
But this continual reference to dying to
the law has raised the question for many
of you: What then shall we do with the law?
Are we to read the books of Moses? Are we
to read the Ten Commandments and the other
laws in the Old Testament? What are we to
make of the saints of the Old Testament who
said things like, "But his delight is
in the law of the Lord, And in His law he
meditates day and night" (Psalm 1:2).
"The law of the Lord is perfect, restoring
the soul; The testimony of the Lord is sure,
making wise the simple. . . . They are more
desirable than gold, yes, than much fine
gold; Sweeter also than honey and the drippings
of the honeycomb" (Psalm 19:7, 10).
"O how I love Your law! It is my meditation
all the day" (Psalm 119:97).
And even here in Romans we have the same
spirit. In Romans 7:22 Paul says, "For
I joyfully concur with the law of God in
the inner man." And in Romans 7:25 he
says, "I myself serve the law of God
with my mind, but with my flesh I serve the
law of sin." This delight in the law
and this "serving the law of God"
does not sound as absolute as "death
to the law."
Not only that, look with me at Romans 3:20-22.
Paul makes clear first (in v. 20) that "by
the works of the Law no flesh will be justified
in His sight; for through the Law comes the
knowledge of sin." In other words, "law-keeping"
will never change our verdict from guilty
to not-guilty and will not be the ground
of our acceptance in the last judgment. My
one plea now and then for acceptance with
God is that I have trusted not in my own
law-keeping or my own imperfect, blood-bought,
Spirit-wrought sanctification, but in Christ’s
blood and righteousness. That is my one perfect
plea in the courtroom of heaven now and always.
"By works of the law no flesh will be
justified."
That is Paul’s conclusion so far: There is
none righteous, no not one. But now what
is our hope? Where does it come from? He
says in verse 21, "But now apart from
the Law the righteousness of God has been
manifested, being witnessed by the Law and
the Prophets, (22) even the righteousness
of God through faith in Jesus Christ for
all those who believe." The hope of
unrighteous people like us and all our friends
and enemies is that God has brought about
a righteousness that is possible for us to
have that is not based on works of the law
but based on Jesus Christ. He calls it "the
righteousness of God through faith in Jesus
Christ." We can be reckoned righteous
because of Christ’s life and death if we
will trust in him as our Savior and Lord
and Treasure.
The Testimony of the Law
But notice one crucial phrase at the end
of verse 21: "being witnessed by the
Law and the Prophets." This other righteousness
that is not by works of the law is witnessed
to by the law. The law testifies to it. That
is one clear reason why Paul can delight
in the law and why we do not want to throw
the law away. The law itself told us that
law-keeping cannot justify and pointed us
to another "righteousness" that
would one day be revealed.
So when Paul gets down to Romans 3:28, he
says, "For we maintain that a man is
justified by faith apart from works of the
Law" – just like verse 20. But then
again in verse 31 he asks, "Do we then
nullify the Law through faith?" And
he answers, "May it never be! On the
contrary, we establish the Law." So
the law itself was pointing to a goal that
it could not accomplish for us or in us,
but when we attained this goal (of justification
and sanctification!) through faith in Christ,
the law itself would be fulfilled and established.
"The goal of the law is Christ for righteousness
for all who believe" (Romans 10:4, own
translation).
So it’s plain that we do not die to the law
in every conceivable way. We rejoice in the
law in some ways (Romans 7:22), and in the
law we see a witness to the "righteousness
of God through faith in Christ" (Romans
3:21), and we establish the law through faith
in Christ (Romans 3:31); the goal of the
law is Christ.
So to clarify how we should lawfully use
the law, let’s go to another passage in one
of Paul’s letters where he addresses this
question directly, 1 Timothy 1:5-11.
1 Timothy 1:5-11: The Lawful & Unlawful
Uses of the Law
Notice first the key sentence in verse 8:
"But we know that the Law is good, if
one uses it lawfully." So here Paul
alerts us to the fact that you can use the
law lawfully or unlawfully. My guess is that
failing to die to the law will result in
an unlawful use of the law. But let’s see
what the context says here.
In verses 5-7 Paul says what his goal is
in all his preaching and ministry and why
certain people have failed in reaching this
goal by the way they are using the law. He
says, starting in verse 5, "The goal
of our instruction is love from a pure heart
and a good conscience and a sincere faith."
There’s the goal, and how to get there. Notice
the path to love is not works of law. In
other words the way to pursue love is by
focusing on the transformation of the heart
and the conscience and the awakening and
strengthening of faith. Love is not pursued
first or decisively by focusing on a list
of behavioral commandments and striving to
conform to them. That is what we must die
to.
Law Teachers Who Do not Lawfully Use the
Law
Then Paul introduces us to some men who are
making a mess of the law, and not arriving
at the goal of love either! Verse 6: "For
some men, straying from these things [that
is, "a pure heart and a good conscience
and a sincere faith"], have turned aside
to fruitless discussion, (7) wanting to be
teachers of the Law, even though they do
not understand either what they are saying
or the matters about which they make confident
assertions."
These "law-teachers" do not understand
that the goal of the law, which is love,
is pursued not by "works of law"
but by inner spiritual transformation which
the law itself cannot bring about. They don’t
get it. Paul says they do not know what they
are talking about. They are trying to teach
the law, but they are turning aside from
matters of the heart and conscience and faith.
And that means they are not using the law
lawfully. And that is why they are not arriving
at the goal of love.
Oh, how we need to take heed here! There
are hundreds of people today who put themselves
forward in America as teachers of the law
– marriage law, child-rearing law, financial-planning
law, church-growth law, leadership law, evangelism
law, missions law, racial-justice law. But
here’s the key question: do they understand
the gospel dynamic for bringing about the
change they seek? I say this only to alert
you.
Are the radio programs you are learning from
and the articles and books you are reading
permeated by a lawful use of the law? Do
the speakers and writers understand the dynamic
of dying to the law and belonging to Christ
by faith alone as the essential means of
becoming the people of love that we ought
to be? Who today would Paul speak these words
over: "[They want] to be teachers of
the Law, even though they do not understand
either what they are saying or the matters
about which they make confident assertions"?
In other words, they just don’t get it. They
don’t understand the gospel way that human
beings are changed in a way that glorifies
Christ. We need to be prepared and able to
assess these things. That’s why Paul wrote
this to Timothy.
The Lawful Use of the Law: Realize It Is
not Made for the Righteous
Well, what then is the lawful use of the
law in this text? Follow his thought from
verse 8: "But we know that the Law is
good, if one uses it lawfully." What
is that? Verse 9 explains. First it involves
"realizing the fact that law is not
made for a righteous person, but for those
who are lawless and rebellious . . ."
etc. He lists fourteen examples of law-breaking
(following the outline of the ten commandments,
the first three pairs summing up the first
table of the Decalogue and the rest summing
up the second table).
So the law, Paul says, is not made for a
righteous person, but for the lawless and
rebellious. This sounds very much like Galatians
3:19. Paul asks, "Why the Law then?"
Why was it added 430 years after Abraham
was justified by faith? He answers, "It
was added because of transgressions."
He does not say that it was added because
of righteousness. It was added because of
these kinds of things we read in this list
in 1 Timothy 1:9-10. The law had a special
role to play in setting a rigorous, detailed
standard of behavior which functioned, Paul
said, to hold people imprisoned (Galatians
3:22) or under a guardian or tutor (Galatians
3:24) until Christ came and justification
by faith could be focused on him. The law
commanded and condemned, and pointed to a
Redeemer who was to come. Then Paul says,
in Galatians 3:25, "But now that faith
has come, we are no longer under a tutor."
This, it seems to me, is what Paul is saying
in 1 Timothy 1:9, the "law is not made
for a righteous person, but for those who
are lawless." In other words, if the
law has done its condemning and convicting
work to bring you to Christ for justification
and transformation, then it is not made for
you any more – in that sense. There may be
other uses you can make of it, but that’s
not what this text is about. The main point
here is that the law has a convicting, condemning,
restraining work to do for unrighteous people.
But for the righteous – for people who have
come to Christ for justification and come
to Christ for the inner spiritual power to
love, this role of the law is past. From
now on, the place where we seek the power
to love is not the law of commandments but
the gospel of Christ.
I think we see this powerfully in verses
10b-11. Notice how Paul sums up all that
the law must be against and restrain: "whatever
is contrary to sound teaching, according
to the glorious gospel of the blessed God."
So where does behavior come from that is
not "contrary to sound teaching,"
and is "in accord with the gospel of
the glory of the blessed God?" Answer:
it comes from that gospel. It comes from
the clean heart and the good conscience and
the sincere faith that this gospel calls
into being. The law does not produce a life
of love that accords with the gospel. The
gospel produces a life of love that accords
with the gospel.
Justification by faith alone apart from works
of the law, and sanctification by faith through
the power of the Spirit – these produce a
life of love that accords with the gospel
of the glory of the blessed God. And woe
to those who try to fix your personality
or your marriage or your children or your
finances or your vocation or your church
or your mission or your commitment to justice,
but do not understand this gospel dynamic,
and turn counsel in to new law.
What Then Shall Those Who Are Justified Do
with the Law of Moses?
Read it and meditate on it as those who are
dead to it as the ground of your justification
and the power of your sanctification. Read
it and meditate on it as those for whom Christ
is your righteousness and Christ is your
sanctification. Which means read and mediate
on it to know Christ better and to treasure
him more. Christ and the Father are one (John
10:30; 14:9). So to know the God of the Old
Testament is to know Christ. The more you
see his glory and treasure his worth, the
more you will be changed into his likeness
(2 Corinthians 3:17-18), and love the way
he loved – which is the fulfilling of the
law (Romans 13:10).
I say it again. What shall you do with the
law – you who are justified by faith alone
apart from works of the law? Read it and
meditate on it to know more deeply than you
have ever known, the justice and mercy of
God in Christ, your righteousness and your
life.
Copyright 2001 John Piper