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RIGHTEOUSNESS
The Righteousness of the Law:
Audio:
by Fred R. Coulter
The Righteousness of the Law
God is both Creator and Lawgiver. When God created
mankind, He also established righteous laws which govern man's relationship with Him and
with his fellowman. The laws of God draw a clear line between actions that are good and
righteous in God's eyes as opposed to acts that are evil and sinful. Without God's laws,
there would be no sin. The Scriptures declare that "where there is no law there is no
sin....for by the law is the knowledge of sin." The Biblical record of the sins of
Adam and Eve, and the nations which descended from them, makes it clear that God's laws
have been obligatory upon mankind from the beginning.
In Old Testament times, a man or woman who kept
the commandments of God, fulfilling His requirements in the letter of the law, was counted
as righteous before God. This type of righteousness, which was earned by doing the works
of the law, brought many physical and material blessings from God--health and prosperity,
deliverance from enemies, peace and long life. When God covenanted with Israel, He
proclaimed through Moses that those who kept His laws and commandments "shall live in
them" because they would be spared the punishment and curses that were appointed for
lawbreakers--including death by capital punishment.
Although the righteousness of the law resulted in
many blessings to the obedient, fulfilling the letter of the law did not and could not
earn eternal salvation. The promise of salvation and eternal life is God's free and
undeserved gift and is offered only through the righteousness of faith. It cannot be
earned by fulfilling the letter of the law. The required righteousness of the letter of
the law was a "schoolmaster" or tutor to reveal the sinfulness and weakness of
human nature and to point to the need for a better righteousness--the righteousness of
faith.
Scriptural References:
| Gen. 3:11-13; 4:7-11 |
Gen. 6:5-13; 15:16 |
Lev. 18:5 |
| Jer. 18:7-10 |
Ezk. 20:11, 13, 21 |
Pro. 4:4 |
| Deut. 28:1-13 |
Deut. 4:1-13; 6:1-4 |
Gal. 3:11 |
| Rom. 10:5 |
Rom. 3:9-22; 4:13-16 |
Rom. 2:11-13 |
The Righteousness of Faith:
Audio:
by Fred R. Coulter
The Righteousness of Faith
The righteousness of faith is the gift of
righteousness which the believer receives through the abundance of the Father's grace. It
is called "the righteousness of faith" because only through faith in Jesus
Christ is it possible to partake of this righteousness. When a believer is justified by
faith in Jesus Christ and receives the gift of the Holy Spirit as a begettal from God the
Father, then the Father imputes to the believer the very righteousness of Jesus Christ,
that "grace might reign through righteousness into eternal life, through Jesus
Christ." This imputed righteousness is the gift of God through faith in Jesus Christ
and cannot be earned by doing works of law. The righteousness of Jesus Christ, which is
imputed to the believer by God the Father, far exceeds the righteousness required by the
letter of the law. In His perfect righteousness, Jesus Christ not only observed the letter
of the law but fulfilled every one of His Father's commandments in the full spirit of the
law. His spiritual obedience was so perfect, pure and wholehearted that He always did
those things which pleased God the Father. This perfect righteousness was accomplished
through the power of the Holy Spirit, which He received without measure from the Father.
By His personal example and His teachings, Jesus
magnified the laws and commandments of God and revealed the fullness of their intent and
meaning. He showed that the spirit of the law does not nullify the letter of the law but
requires a fuller, spiritual obedience. This spiritual obedience is beyond the capability
of the natural mind and human will and can only be accomplished through Jesus Christ. The
Scriptures reveal that when the believer is begotten with the Holy Spirit of God the
Father, he or she begins to receive the very mind of Christ. With Christ's mind, the
believer is strengthened to live by every word of God in the full spirit of the law, not
just in the letter. With "Christ in you, the hope of glory," the believer begins
to have the laws and commandments of God written upon his or her mind. Thus the laws and
commandments of God are established with their full, true spiritual meaning through grace
and the gift of the righteousness of faith. This gift of spiritual righteousness which God
grants to the believer gives him or her the power to bring forth the fruits of the Spirit
unto eternal life. Through the righteousness of faith, the believer is truly fulfilling
the Scripture, "The just shall live by faith."
Scriptural References:
| Rom. 4:3-8,
13-24 |
Rom. 5:17-21 |
Rom. 3:20-31 |
| Rom. 6:1-19 |
Gal. 2:20-21 |
Gal. 5:16, 18,
22-25 |
| Col. 1:27-28 |
Rom. 7:6 |
Heb. 8:10 |
| Heb. 10:16 |
Phil. 2:5, 13 |
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