RIGHTEOUSNESS ESTABLISHED BY DEATH
A
robe or garment is often used in Scripture to portray righteousness.
"He hath covered me with the robe of righteousness"
[ISAIAH
61:10]. "And
to her (the church) was granted that she should
be arrayed in fine linen, clean and white: the fine linen is the
righteousness of saints" [REVELATION
19:8]. When Adam
and Eve sinned and "knew they were naked" [GENESIS
3:7],
they tried to cover their shame by making fig-leaf aprons. Their
actions pictured man’s vain attempts to establish a righteousness
for himself, but righteousness can only be established by the Lord,
otherwise the sinner will remain "naked." Nakedness
sets forth man’s unrighteousness and his exposure to wrath. The
Laodiceans were "wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and
naked," and were told they needed "white raiment,
that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear" [REVELATION
3:17-18].
Thankfully, the Lord came to the rescue of our fallen parents. He
provided for their acceptance, but what did that require? In order
for them to be covered, animals had to DIE and be skinned and then
God robed Adam and Eve with those skins.
We read that Christ is made of God to be the righteousness of His elect [I CORINTHIANS 1:30]. A perfect standing before divine justice has already been established by the Savior for all of His people, but how was that accomplished? Was it by His life of exemplary obedience? Certainly our Lord lived perfectly in this world, but His life did not bring in righteousness any more than the life of the animals provided garments for Adam and Eve. That which was necessary in both cases was DEATH. Daniel said Messiah would "finish the transgression, make an end of sins, make reconciliation for iniquity, and bring in everlasting righteousness" [9:24] and He would accomplish those things by being "cut off" [vs. 26], that is, put to DEATH. The Apostle Paul believed righteousness was established by the substitutionary, justice-satisfying cross-death of Christ, and so He wrote these words. "I do not frustrate the grace of God: for if righteousness come by the law then Christ is DEAD in vain" [GALATIANS 2:21].
We read that Christ is made of God to be the righteousness of His elect [I CORINTHIANS 1:30]. A perfect standing before divine justice has already been established by the Savior for all of His people, but how was that accomplished? Was it by His life of exemplary obedience? Certainly our Lord lived perfectly in this world, but His life did not bring in righteousness any more than the life of the animals provided garments for Adam and Eve. That which was necessary in both cases was DEATH. Daniel said Messiah would "finish the transgression, make an end of sins, make reconciliation for iniquity, and bring in everlasting righteousness" [9:24] and He would accomplish those things by being "cut off" [vs. 26], that is, put to DEATH. The Apostle Paul believed righteousness was established by the substitutionary, justice-satisfying cross-death of Christ, and so He wrote these words. "I do not frustrate the grace of God: for if righteousness come by the law then Christ is DEAD in vain" [GALATIANS 2:21].
-Gospel report by preacher Jim Byrd
Thirteenth
Street Baptist church of Ashland, Kentucky USA
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