Share This Episode
Renewing Your Mind R.C. Sproul Logo

By Faith Alone

Renewing Your Mind / R.C. Sproul
The Truth Network Radio
October 18, 2024 12:01 am

By Faith Alone

Renewing Your Mind / R.C. Sproul

On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 1783 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


October 18, 2024 12:01 am

What must you do to be saved? Historically, Protestants and Roman Catholics have answered this question differently. Today, R.C. Sproul looks at the one word that makes all the difference in this dispute.

Get the book The Legacy of Luther, plus lifetime digital access to R.C. Sproul’s teaching series Justified by Faith Alone and the accompanying digital style guide, for your donation of any amount: https://gift.renewingyourmind.org/3657/donate
 
Meet Today’s Teacher:
 
R.C. Sproul (1939–2017) was known for his ability to winsomely and clearly communicate deep, practical truths from God’s Word. He was founder of Ligonier Ministries, first minister of preaching and teaching at Saint Andrew’s Chapel, first president of Reformation Bible College, and executive editor of Tabletalk magazine.
 
Meet the Host:
 
Nathan W. Bingham is vice president of ministry engagement for Ligonier Ministries, executive producer and host of Renewing Your Mind, host of the Ask Ligonier podcast, and a graduate of Presbyterian Theological College in Melbourne, Australia. Nathan joined Ligonier in 2012 and lives in Central Florida with his wife and four children.

Renewing Your Mind is a donor-supported outreach of Ligonier Ministries. Explore all of our podcasts: https://www.ligonier.org/podcasts

COVERED TOPICS / TAGS (Click to Search)
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

You've heard it said, it doesn't matter what you believe just as long as you're sincere. Well, Christianity says eternal life matters concerning what you believe. There is a content to the Christian faith. Eternal life does hang in the balance, which is why we must be so clear in our proclamation of the Gospel and vigilant in our defense of it.

Welcome to the Friday edition of Renewing Your Mind, as we conclude a week of R.C. Sproul unpacking for us the theology of the Protestant Reformation and presenting a clear explanation of the Biblical Gospel. This week's series is called Justified by Faith Alone, and today is the final day that you can request lifetime digital access to this series and study guide, along with a hardcover edition of the Legacy of Luther, edited by R.C. Sproul and Stephen Nichols when you give a donation of any amount at renewingyourmind.org. So request these resources today before this offer ends at midnight. We are justified by faith alone, but what is true saving faith?

Here's Dr. Sproul. We've been looking at the Reformation formula justification by faith alone, and I'm going to look briefly now at the question of faith. What is meant in the formula justification by faith alone by the word faith? In the initial stages of the Reformation, the Roman Catholic communion heard Luther teaching a kind of licentious libertinism or antinomianism, the idea that you can just believe in Christ and then live however you want because works were not considered necessary for justification. And so Luther had the task of defining what saving faith really means. And historically, there's a difference among scholars as to how the Reformers expanded their understanding of the elements of saving faith. Tarraton, for example, in the 17th century included six or seven or eight subtle nuanced elements of saving faith. Gordon Clark in the 20th century reduced those elements to two, but the usual customary understanding of the elements of saving faith in historic Reform thought is that saving faith consists of three distinct elements, and those three distinct elements are called notitia, assensus, and fiducia.

Now, the first element, notitia, or sometimes called noti, refers simply to the information or the data. You've heard it said it doesn't matter what you believe just as long as you're sincere. Well, Christianity says eternal life matters concerning what you believe. There is a content to the Christian faith, and we don't have the authority to fill it up with whatever we want to fill it up with. And so to be justified by faith, you had to have the basic information about Christ, about His person, about His work. You had to have the elements of the gospel that are understood, that there is this God-man Jesus who died on the cross for our sins and so on. Those amount to the notitia or the notae, the notes or the information that one has to believe in order to be justified. But in addition to being aware of that data or of that information, you have to assent to the truth of that information.

You have to believe that these ideas of Jesus and His person and His work are realities, not just myths or interesting, imaginative ideas. And so saving faith requires an intellectual, cognitive assent to the truth of the data. Now, so far, the Reformers would say if we have the information, the notitia, and we assent to its truth, assensus, all that qualifies us to be is a demon because the devil knows the information, and he knows that the information is true. The devil could make a hundred on any theological exam you ever gave him.

He's not stupid. He knows the information. But in addition to having the intellectual awareness and the intellectual assent to the data, one must have fiducia, and fiducia has to do with trust. You must not only, again, know the information, believe that it's true, but trust in it personally for your redemption. I've always said that it's very simple intellectually to understand the content of the doctrine of justification by faith alone, but to get it in the bloodstream is a whole other matter to really trust for eternity, the work of Christ for your salvation, and not mix with that trust in Christ a reliance on your own performance or on your own activity or your own works or your own merits, or, and this is crucial, your own profession of faith. One of the great problems that we have in our day is distinguishing faith from the profession of faith. Anyone who has faith is called to profess that faith, but not everybody who professes faith has that faith. Jesus warns frequently that on the last day many will come to him saying, Lord, Lord, didn't we do this in your name? Did we do that in your name?

And so on. And he will say to them, depart from me, you workers of iniquity. I never knew you.

Please leave. These people had made a profession of faith, but they didn't possess what they professed. Elsewhere he said, these people honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me. And that's why this element of fiducia is so critical to the Reformation biblical doctrine of justification by faith, that you have to have true trust and not a mere profession. This is the danger, for example, that we see practically speaking in methods of evangelism that we encounter through church history. There's that movement or that idea called decisional evangelism where we try to get people to make a decision to believe in Christ and to follow him. When I was first converted to Christianity, the first year I was a Christian, the local church where I was going to college was having an evangelistic series of meetings. And they brought this evangelist from some other city to come and give this series of messages. And I met with him privately, and he said to me, give me any man alone for 15 minutes and I will get a decision for Christ.

And I thought after spending 15 minutes with this guy who was so forbearing, I could understand that people would give a profession of anything just to get away from after 15 minutes. But how arrogant it was to think that you can just manipulate people into the kingdom of God. Now at a philosophical level, there's a different matter. The British empirical philosopher David Hume, in analyzing the substance of belief, how and why people believe what they believe, he made it clear that you can make a decision to do lots of things. You can make a decision to go to the store this afternoon and go to the store.

You can make a decision to read a book tonight and you read the book. You can make a decision to study the things of Jesus and study the things of Jesus. But what you cannot do as an act of the will is to believe something intellectually that you don't really believe. I can't decide to believe that Jesus is the Lord and Savior of my life. I have to be persuaded that I really have to have that assensus, not as a matter of decision, but as a matter of persuasion, that I have been convinced of the truth claims of Christ before I can put my trust in it. So again, we get a lot of problems with the language that we use with respect to faith. Now the fourth word in the formula is alone. Justification is by faith alone.

And what does that mean? It means that there's no admixture of works in our faith that are in any way the foundation or the basis for God's declaring us to be just. If I had a blackboard here and could write on it some little formulae like your math formula is two plus two equals four, I would write three of them on the board for you. The first one would be the Roman Catholic view of justification. Faith plus works equals justification.

I could write the antinomian view, the carnal Christian view that's so popular in our day. Faith equals justification minus works so that you can be a Christian and converted, be carnal. Christ is not the Lord of your life, and so you believe Him as Savior but not as Lord. And so this idea of antinomianism is that you can be a true believer and never have any works. Luther said, on the other hand, a different formula. Faith equals justification plus works.

What does he mean? He means that if you have true faith, you will manifest that true faith by works of obedience after you're justified. Now those works that you manifest after you are justified contribute nothing of merit to your justification.

But if they're not there, it proves that you don't have what? Faith, because true faith will always manifest itself in works. So Luther said it this way, justification is by faith alone but not by a faith that is alone. Saving faith will always accompany itself with works of obedience. But again, when he talks about alone, it means that those works contribute nothing to your justification. That another way of saying this is that we are justified by the righteousness of Christ alone.

I can't add anything to the merit of Christ, nor can I ever subtract anything to the merit of Christ. It's by His merit or His works that we're justified. Another way of turning this upside down is to say we believe in justification by works alone. Well, that would seem to be the exact opposite, diametrically opposed to the idea of justification by faith alone. But what I'm getting at is this, we are justified by works, but they're not our works.

They're His works. And it's because Jesus fulfilled the law perfectly in His perfect act of obedience that we are able to be justified before God, because He earned the blessing, which is then transferred to us. So do you see how we can turn that around and say we're justified by works alone? As long as you understand, it's by the works of Christ alone.

There's nothing that I can add. We will see when we look at Paul's statements in Romans, Paul says, "'By the works of the law shall no man be justified, but nevertheless we're justified by faith in the one who did keep the works of the law.'" Now, I've been saying throughout this discussion the importance of the idea of imputation, and I want to just spend a couple of minutes more on that.

When we distinguish between the Roman Catholic view of justification and the Reformed view of justification, we make this distinction that the Roman Catholic view is analytical and the Reformation view is synthetic. Right? You've heard that a thousand times. You've probably never heard that, have you?

Well, what are we talking about? Well, when we look at propositions, statements, we can distinguish between analytical statements and synthetic statements. An analytical statement is literally a tautology. There is nothing new in the predicate that's not already found in the subject. If we put a mathematical formula on the board that was a copula, we would say two plus two equals four. Now, there's nothing new on the other side of the equal sign from what was already present in the first part, because two plus two are four, and four equals two plus two, so there's no new information added after the equal sign. Do you get that? An analytical statement is a statement that is true by definition.

Let me give you another one. A bachelor is an unmarried man. Now, what have you learned after the verb to be about the fellow? A bachelor by definition is an unmarried man. A bachelor can't be anything else but an unmarried man. Now, you don't turn it around and say the unmarried man is a bachelor because he could be a widower and so on, but we know by analysis that a bachelor is an unmarried man, so it's true by analysis. And so an analytical view of justification, according to Rome, God declares a person to be just only if and when that person under analysis is just.

Right? God analyzes the person. He sees that that person possesses inherent righteousness.

He knows that that inherent righteousness came through the aid of grace and faith and Christ and all of that, but in the final analysis, God will not make the declaration that he is just unless under analysis he is just. A synthetic statement is a statement where there is something added in the information in the predicate that's not found in the subject. If I told you that the bachelor is a wealthy man, I would be predicating of the subject of the bachelor something that's not inherent in the term bachelor, namely the possession of wealth.

Okay? So now a synthetic statement is something that adds something that's not automatically found in the subject. Now why is the Protestant view called synthetic? It's because I am declared to be righteous by God, not because he looks at me and finds righteousness, but something has been added to me. That foreign righteousness, that righteousness that is extra nos, that righteousness that is not my own has been added to me. So when he looks at me, he sees me covered by the righteousness of Christ and declares me to be just. Now when we talk about God's declaring people to be just who are not just, we frequently use the term forensic justification because justification is a legal judgment whereby God declares someone to be just. And you understand what forensic medicine is and forensic psychology, you watch enough trials to know forensic evidence has to do with evidence that is applicable to a legal consideration or to a trial. And so when we say that justification is forensic, we mean that God judicially declares us to be just.

Now there's a little hitch here. Forensic justification historically has been used as shorthand for the Protestant view. But if you look at the Roman Catholic view, you will see that justification takes place in the Roman view when God declares a person just. So even in Rome, justification is a forensic judgment made by God.

It's a legal statement about our status before Him. But the difference is, of course, in the Catholic view it's analytical forensics and in the Reformed view it's synthetic forensics. I can remember when the first document of evangelicals and Catholics together was put out and created a firestorm and then the second document came out much more detailed, trying to show that there's been great rapprochement accomplished between Roman evangelicals. And I had a very distinguished historian, evangelical historian, who signed a document call me on the phone and he was so excited. He said, R.C., in this document, this is the first time that the Roman Catholic Church has declared that justification is forensic. And I said, I hate to burst your bubble, but they've always taught that it was forensic in the sense that God is the one who makes the legal declaration of those who are to be justified. Also in that particular document they said, we've been able to come together on so many issues regarding justification and they think that they have a substantive agreement between evangelicals and Roman Catholics. And then it ends up by saying, of course, imputation is still on the table. And they had said earlier in the document that all the elements of justification have been handled there, except for imputation. Mike Horton made the point. He says, you can take flour and you can take sugar and you can bake cookies and you can have all the elements of chocolate chip cookies, but if you don't have the chocolate chips in there, you don't have chocolate chip cookies. You've got cookies, but you don't have chocolate chip cookies. And so as again, this issue of imputation remains the sticking point and it is an either or. We either are justified by our righteousness or by somebody else's righteousness. There's no tertium quid here.

There's no way that you can slice and dice that to get rid of the word alone. That's why Luther kept coming back to that all line alone idea that you can't mix it with anything else because it's only Jesus and His righteousness that justifies us. That was R.C. Sproul from his series Justified by Faith Alone, helping prepare us for Reformation Day on October 31st. As Protestants, it's important to remember what it was we were protesting in the 16th century reformation.

Because as you heard today, if you get the gospel wrong, eternal life hangs in the balance. You heard five messages this week from this series, but the complete study is actually 10 messages. You can own the entire series and study guide when you give a donation of any amount at renewingyourmind.org or when you call us at 800 435 4343. In addition to lifetime digital access to the series, we'll send you the hardcover edition of the Legacy of Luther. It's edited by R.C.

Sproul and Stephen Nichols. So whether you prefer to read or listen, there's a resource here for you in this Reformation bundle. This is the final day for the offer. So visit renewingyourmind.org or use the link in the podcast show notes while there's still time. Beginning Monday, Michael Reeves will join us as we continue to reflect on the Reformation truths that were rediscovered and reaffirmed during the 16th century reformation. So be sure to listen Monday here on Renewing Your Mind. Thank you.
Whisper: medium.en / 2024-10-18 02:29:11 / 2024-10-18 02:36:48 / 8

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime