Paul's Passing Thoughts

The Gospel-Driven Synthesis of Justification and Sanctification Equals “Without the Law”

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on July 11, 2010

The following is my reply to a discussion with a blogger and regards the title of this post.  The subject of  the  other post (not mine) was “repenting of good works.” I do not care to mention his name at this time (update: it was Tim Keller), but thought my reply in the comment section of the blog site was complete enough to turn into a post:

….So let me be respectful, but blunt: I believe you, Paul Tripp, John Piper, and Michael Horton are on an endeavor to synthesize justification and sanctification into a plenary monergism. This is indicative of your statement above where you talk of justification and sanctification as if they are the same in regard to application of grace and our role accordingly. I will get to the “so what” conclusion of this later.

 

Paul Tripp clearly holds to this complete synthesis as illustrated on pages 64 and 65 of  “How People Change,” where he describes our condition as believers in the same way as pre-salvation. Per the mode of operation that is becoming more and more prevalent in this endeavor to synthesize justification and sanctification, he uses Colossians 1:21 as Scripture that is a present reality for believers, when it clearly refers to our unregenerate state before salvation. Likewise, John Piper does the same thing in one of his ebooks entitled “Treating Delight as Duty is Controversial”:

“Yes, it becomes increasingly evident that the experience of joy in God is beyond what the sinful heart can do. It goes against our nature. We are enslaved to pleasure in other things (Romans 6:17)”.

Note that he cites Romans 6:17  in regard  to why we struggle as Christians presently; Romans 6:17 is clearly a verse that concerns the unregenerate, and he even states that we are still “enslaved” as believers. I disagree.

Michael Horton’s contribution to this endeavor is stated by him in “Christless Christianity” on page 62:

“Where we land on these issues is perhaps the most significant factor in how we approach our own faith and practice and communicate it to the world. If not only the unregenerate but the regenerate are always dependent at every moment on the free grace of God disclosed in the gospel, then nothing can raise those who are spiritually dead or continually give life to Christ’s flock but the Spirit working through the gospel. When this happens (not just once, but every time we encounter the gospel afresh), the Spirit progressively transforms us into Christ’s image. Start with Christ (that is, the gospel) and you get sanctification in the bargain; begin with Christ and move on to something else, and you lose both.”

1. We only find continued life as believers when we partake in the same gospel that gives life to the unregenerate. This is what he is clearly saying.
2. If we move on to anything else, we loose both; in other words, synergistic sanctification is a false gospel because it separates practical aspects of justification and sanctification, which are both supposedly defined by the gospel that saves us. This is what he is clearly saying. Hence, the new reformation that is supposedly on a mission from God to save the evangelical church.

I often get flack from those who say Michael Horton is a sound advocate of biblical obedience to the Law by believers. But in fact, this is not true. Horton believes that the Law serves the same purpose for believers and unbelievers alike. In Modern Reformation, “Creeds And Deeds: How Doctrine leads to Doxological Living,” he says the following:

“Christians are no less obligated to obey God’s commands in the New Testament than they were in the Old Testament”

Sounds good, doesn’t it? But then he goes on to say the following:

“The imperatives drive us to despair of self-righteousness, the indicatives hold up Christ as our only savior….”

In other words, the purpose of the Law is to drive Christians to despair when they try to keep it, and thereby causing them to embrace the Savior who is really the one upholding the law for us (indicatives). If you read the whole paragraph in context, he is saying that the purpose of the Law in the life of believers is to create a perpetual state of guilt in order to keep us dependent on the cross and the righteousness of Christ only. Again, and for all practical purposes, he is saying that the Law has the exact same relationship, and purpose, to unbelievers and believers alike. Additionally, this viewpoint concerning the Law would be efficacious to the synthesizing of justification and sanctification as well.

So, it therefore stands to reason, that your primary focus in sanctification would be the same primary focus of unbelievers (justification) as well for purposes of salvation; repentance. Because your doctrine, by definition, is narrow and limited to repentance, this aspect must be greatly embellished and expanded; hence, all kinds of introspective theories concerning idols of the heart and the need to repent of repenting (or repenting of good works).

Well then, other than the fact that none of this stands the test of Scripture; so what? Here is the “so what?”: the complete synthesizing of justification and sanctification together leads to “without the Law” (most often in the Bible: “lawlessness“) in sanctification. We also refer to this as Antinomianism. Why would Christians even attempt to uphold the Law when we are no more able to do so than unbelievers (supposedly)? Again, Horton’s position on this is absolutely clear (I again point to page 62 of Christless Christianity). So then,  are we to relish in our inability to uphold the Law of God? To the contrary, the Bible is saturated with verses that promise happiness and joy through our obedience.

Just this morning, a friend shared an article with me, and several others, from Christianity Today. It was a recent Jennifer Knapp (a contemporary Christian music artist) interview in which she defends her homosexual life style. She stated that she is not obligated to keep the Law because she, or anyone else, is unable to anyway. She (according to her) is only obligated to keep the greatest commandment of loving thy neighbor. Here is what she said:

“But I’ve always struggled as a Christian with various forms of external evidence that we are obligated to show that we are Christians. I’ve found no law that commands me in any way other than to love my neighbor as myself, and that love is the greatest commandment. At a certain point I find myself so handcuffed in my own faith by trying to get it right—to try and look like a Christian, to try to do the things that Christians should do, to be all of these things externally—to fake it until I get myself all handcuffed and tied up in knots as to what I was supposed to be doing there in the first place. If God expects me, in order to be a Christian, to be able to theologically justify every move that I make, I’m sorry. I’m going to be a miserable failure.”

She further poo-poos the Law with this statement:

“…what most people refer to as the ‘clobber verses’ to refer to this loving relationship as an abomination, while they’re eating shellfish and wearing clothes of five different fabrics,”

I find her statement eerily parallel to that of many “gospel-driven”  proponents in regard to their perspective on the Law. Though I know you and others would never condone her behavior, I still find the parallels disquieting. If you care to respond, please don’t cite Reformers or Creeds, I am really looking for a solid biblical argument that I have this all wrong. And really, I hope I do.
Blessings,

Paul Dohse

2 Responses

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  1. 4togo's avatar 4togo said, on July 11, 2010 at 5:02 PM

    Hello, Paul. Charming blog you have going. Very interesting. I think I am agreeing with you, but if it is Biblically supported discussion you like, check out my little blog: Become Like Jesus Now, at tadwyoming.wordpress.com. TW

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  2. tadwyoming's avatar tadwyoming said, on July 11, 2010 at 6:49 PM

    Brother Paul, I have never read Paul Tripp’s book, How People Change. After reading your posts, I intend to get a copy and check it out ASAP.

    I see an equivalence in your posts between what you call Gospel Sanctification, Heart Theology, and the synthesis of justification and sanctification. Very astute observations.

    I want you to know that I am not an adherent of Gospel Sanctification or merging justification and sanctification. But our Lord certainly taught about the heart extensively. Moreover, even though our heart and mind are not depraved after we are born again, I take the position that we are dipsuche (double souled), with impure hearts ala James, Romans 7, Col 3 and Eph 4, which is to say we continue in residual desires rooted in the Flesh, the World and Lies of Satan, even though we have in many ways received a partial renewal of the heart and mind via the regeneration of our spirits. We are part the new man now that we are born again, but we are also part the old man. See my posts, “heart like ananias” and “What it means to become like Jesus now.”

    My point is that whatever you mean by heart theology, if it is unBiblical and pernicious, that term has nothing to do with my echoing the call to purify our hearts, which began in the OT, continued in Jesus, and extended in James, Peter, Paul, Hebrews writer, et al.

    On the other hand, again, without being at all familar with Tripp’s theory, I don’t doubt we have varying levels of conscious commitment to objects of hope that are not of God after we are born again. In my view, sanctification is putting of the old anthropos and putting on the new anthropos, beginning with the heart, which in turn will get the mind and the body under its control. If the heart is then fully sold out to the Spirit, then so will the mind and body. I rely on Roman 8:1-18.

    I’d love to hear what you have to teach me on these subjects. TW

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