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demands of the law by taking upon himself, as our vicar, the full weight of God’s punishment. In the words of Murray, he “took care of our guilt and perfectly fulfilled the demand of righteousness.”10 One does, however, need to be careful not to disassociate Christ’s preceptive and penal obedience. As Turretin reminds us: “the two things are not to be separated from each other. We are not to say as some do that the ‘satisfaction’ is by the passive work of Christ alone and the ‘merit’ by his active work alone. The satisfaction and merit are not to be thus viewed in isolation, each by itself because the benefit in each depends upon the total work of Christ.”11 What we can say is that, in the words of Witsius: “from his very infancy, and through the whole course of His life, especially the close thereof, he endured all manner of sufferings, both in soul and body, humbling, nay, emptying himself, and being obedient to the Father unto death, even death of the cross…in time he fully performed for his people all that the law required in order to obtain a right to eternal life.”12 Shedd, again emphasizes the importance of Christ’s active and passive obedience:

      When a criminal has suffered the penalty affixed to his crime, he has done a part, but not all that the law requires of him. He still owes a perfect obedience to the law, in addition to the endurance of the penalty. The law does not say to the transgressor: “If you will suffer the penalty, you need not render the obedience.” But it says: “You must both suffer the penalty and render the obedience.” Sin is under a double obligation; holiness is under only a single one. A guilty man owes both penalty and obedience; a holy angel owes only obedience.

      Though it might appear obvious, it must be clearly stated that Jesus’ work would count for nothing if it remained external to us. In his mercy, not because he sees anything good in us, God chooses at a moment in time to call those for whom Christ died into fellowship with Jesus Christ (1 Cor 1:9). He regenerates the individual, taking away his heart of stone and replacing it with a heart of flesh (Ezek 36:26). Through God’s gift of faith, God justifies the believer and adopts him into his family. This faith is itself the result of God’s work in the heart, it is said to be a gift because it is nothing less than a natural consequence of the new birth in Christ (Eph 2:1–10).

      Luther said that justification by faith alone was a teaching by which the church either stands or falls:

      It is important to bear in mind that the person who is declared justified is still, in himself, sinful; while the guilt of sin has been removed its pollution remains. It is the ungodly who are justified (Rom 4:5). Once justification is accomplished, then starts the process of progressive sanctification; that process by which the sinner is conformed to the very image of the glorified Christ. This will not be accomplished until the resurrection of the physical body on the return of Christ.

      Good works within the old perspective are always the result of salvation and never the cause. The believer was once a slave to unrighteousness, “to impurity and lawlessness” (Rom 6:19), however, following his salvation in Christ, “having been raised with him through faith in the powerful working of God” (Col 2:12), he is now a slave to righteousness that leads to his sanctification (Rom 6:19). The believer now walks in Christ, “rooted and built up in him, and established in the faith” (Col 2:7).

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