June 17 – LD 24, Day 7: A Careless And
Profane Christian Is Impossible
by Prof Herman Hanko
Read: Matthew 25:31-46
What about careless and
profane Christians? Are there such people? Do anyone
of you know of such a person? Are you such a person? Does the doctrine of justification
by faith alone make you want to sin as much as you like because you are going
to heaven in any case? No matter how much you sin?
I know people who do say
this as an excuse for their sins. Young people are sometimes tempted to say
this. They go to shows, drink too much alcohol, go to wild parties where
ungodly music is played, and live as the world. When they are reprimanded for
their sins, they fall back on the excuse: I am justified without my works. I am
going to heaven because my sins are forgiven.
What can be said to
these people? This can and must be said: If you excuse your sin because of the
doctrine of justification alone, you are not a Christian, for a Christian would
never say anything like that. You may claim to be a Christian. You may have
been baptized. You may have gone to a Christian school. You may go to church
every Lord’s Day. But you are not a Christian.
Paul says the same thing
in Rom 6. He has developed beyond any fear of contradiction the truth of
justification by faith alone. He receives an objection: “What shall we say
then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound?”
Some in Paul’s day
carried the whole matter to that extreme. They said, “It is better to sin wildly,
for the greater sinner we show ourselves to be, the more wonderful is our
justification.” There was a woman who claimed to be a prophetess in the
But one who is a true
Christian does not say these things. The reasons for this are:
First,the sinner who is justified is also sanctified, that
is, made holy. A just judge does not declare a prisoner innocent and then let
him stay in jail. If a man is innocent, the judge orders his release.
So God, the righteous
judge, does not declare us to be without sin and then leave us in the prison of
our sins; He delivers us from our sins. Depravity was the punishment for our
sins; if our sins exist no longer, the punishment is taken away. We are
sanctified. This is Paul’s argument in Rom 6.
But there is more. The
justified sinner, in his own consciousness, never can and never will, say: “Now
I can sin as much as I like. I have attained justification; I can now eat and
drink and be merry.” That is a spiritual impossibility. The justified sinner is
so overwhelmed by the wonder of God’s grace in Christ that all he wants to do
is please his Savior. And when he sins, he does not say, “I’m justified; it
doesn’t matter.” He says, “Lord, Be merciful to me, a sinner.”