2. The Obligation of Grace
The greatness of the deliverance provided by grace
creates a grave responsibility on the part of those receiving the
benefits. With this new obligation the apostle deals by the use of two
figures, that of the bond-slave, and that of marriage.
a. Introductory Question and Answer
So complete is the provision of grace that it is
possible that some one may say, that seeing we are no longer under law,
our responsibility about sin is at an end. That possibility is
recognized in the introductory question and answer. It is stated in the
form of the inquiry, "What then? shall we sin, because we are not under
law, but under grace?" and is at once emphatically, comprehensively, and
finally answered in the apostolic exclamation, "God forbid."
b. The Figure of the Bond-slave
The new obligation is then first set forth under the
familiar figure of the bond-slave. In the statement of principle with
which the argument opens, the apostle both suggested the illustration
and applied it. Bond-slaves are responsible to their masters. The
freedom of the will is recognized in the matter of the choice of
masters, but when the choice is made, it must be remembered that the
service rendered depends entirely upon the master chosen.
Proceeding to make application of his figure, he did
so with great care as he showed the two positions, the two practices,
and the two products possible, by contrasting the past life of believers
with their present life. As to the two positions, they were servants of
sin; they became servants of righteousness. As to the two practices,
they depended entirely upon the two positions. When servants of sin,
they presented their members to uncleanness and to iniquity; now that
they are the servants of righteousness they are to present their bodies
to righteousness unto sanctification. The two products result by a
necessary sequence from the practices. When they presented their members
as servants of uncleanness their fruit was that they were "free in
regard of righteousness"; that is, they had no righteousness, and
consequently death was the issue. Now, being made free from that
service, and having become the servants of God, their fruit is unto
sanctification, and the end eternal life.
Or to state the argument in other words. The servant
of sin is the slave of sin. The servant of righteousness is the
bond-servant of righteousness. The past experience of the service of sin
was that of yielding themselves thereto, with the issue that they were
mastered thereby. The present experience of the servants of
righteousness must be that of the yielding of themselves thereto, with
the issue of being mastered thereby. Sin is no longer to be the master,
for from it those are made free who have a new master, to whom service
is to be rendered. The old fruit of unrighteousness and death is
destroyed, but the new fruit of sanctification and life must result.
At the close of this statement we have the
declaration so often quoted, and so full of glorious meaning, "the wages
of sin is death; but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ
Jesus our Lord.'' Sin as the master of the life pays the wage of death
in every department thereof. God as the Master of life bestows the gift
of eternal life in Christ Jesus the Lord, in every department of the
life. The contrast is not merely that of ultimate issues. It has
reference to the whole process. Death now and for ever is the issue of
sin. Eternal life now and for ever is the issue of that obedience which
results from faith. God begins with life bestowed as a free gift, and
that life is at once a root principle, an impelling force, and a final
fruitage; for it is not merely life, but age-abiding life, which He thus
freely bestows.
Thus the believer is seen to be no longer in the
place of bondage to sin, and no longer needing to yield to every demand
of the lusts of the flesh; but now henceforth as the bondservant of God
yields to the call of righteousness, and thus using the whole body as
the instrument of the will of God, makes it the medium for the
manifestation of the sanctified life.
c. The Figure of Marriage
The relation of the justified believer to the law is
not merely that of a bond-slave to a master. There are elements in the
union which are closer, and the apostle now adopted a new and perhaps
more delicate figure, that namely of the marriage relationship and
obligation. He uses it as an illustration of changed relationship. The
whole argument may be summarized by the declaration that the believer is
freed from the covenant of law by death, and brought into a covenant
with Christ by life.
The underlying principle of the illustration is that
death puts an end to all responsibility resulting from a covenant. A
woman is bound by covenant to her husband. Nothing can end the
responsibilities of such a covenant except death. If however the first
husband die, then she is free from that covenant, and may enter into a
new one with a second husband. An examination of this passage compels us
to recognize the apparent breakdown of the apostle's figure. He started
by the assumption that the law stands in the place of the husband, and
that the sinner occupies that of the wife. The teaching of the figure is
that so long as the husband lives, the wife is under his dominion by
covenant. If she break that covenant, she is under penalty of death. On
the other hand, if he die, she is free to enter into the marriage
relationship with another. Now the apostle's argument is not that the
sinner is set free by the death of the law, for the law does not die. In
the application of the principle it is the sinner who, occupying the
place of the wife, and having broken the covenant with law, must die.
Wherein then is the value of the figure? It can only
be discovered as we remember that Christ was first of all the Fulfiller
of the law. Himself being its Incarnation and Embodiment, and in that
way all its rights were vested in Him. If the law is taken as
representing the first husband, and Christ as representing the second,
we must now come to see that the sinner is under the death penalty, for
breaking the law as ultimately revealed in Christ; but Christ as the
perfect One, Fulfiller of law. Embodiment of its ideals. Incarnation of
its holiness, takes the death penalty which should fall upon the sinner,
and dies, thus cancelling the penalty due to the sinner.
The death of Christ is not the final fact, however.
He was raised from the dead, and now takes that sinner, - whose breaking
of the covenant with Him as law issued in death, which death He has
died, - into the place of a new union with Himself. The sinner breaks
the covenant of obedience to Christ the Holy One. Christ dies instead of
the sinner. Christ rises and marries the sinner, having satisfied His
own claim as the Holy One.
If at first, therefore, it seems as though the
apostle's figure had broken down, this closer examination reveals the
fact that by the very change in his metaphor, he gave the most exact
illustration of the true facts of the case. The sinner has violated the
covenant of law, and consequently the law, as the first husband,
proceeds to demand the sentence of death upon the guilty one. Then
Christ in infinite graciousness takes the responsibility of that
violated law upon Himself, and suffers the death penalty, righteously
inflicted by law. Emerging therefrom He brings the sinner through death
out of that responsibility to the law resulting from the broken
covenant, into relationship with Himself in a new covenant. Thus there
is a change of the centre of responsibility from the law to Christ.
The perfection of the figure is emphasized by that to
which we have already drawn attention, that Christ is in Himself the
Master and Embodiment of law, so that His emergence into life, bringing
with Him the rescued sinner, does not leave an angry and disappointed
law behind, but in recognition of all its claims, magnifies it and makes
it honourable.
The value of this teaching is evident. The figure of
the bond-slave teaches us that a change of masters must produce a change
of service. The marital figure reveals the fact that a change of
covenant changes the centre of responsibility.