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Bro. Turner:
“We
are confused about ‘merit’ and ‘obedience’ controversies.
We know we must obey, and that promises are conditioned upon
obedience. Doesn’t that mean we ‘merit’ the promised reward?
Reply:
Mercy
may be extended upon conditions that in no wise earn the
result. Merit, not obedience, cancels grace!! “Merit"
is not found in common versions of the Bible, but the dictionary
tells us as a verb it means, "to earn by service or
performance; to deserve." Thus, "meritorious" works
are works that "earn" holiness, by which one could be
declared "free of guilt" because he truly is, on his own
merit, without sin. Such a one needs no mercy, needs
no forgiveness. Never having sinned, he "deserves"
praise. It is not a gift, not a reward; it is his by inherent
"right" or "due". We must not confuse this
with the hope and expectation of faithful saints, for their
confidence is not self-generated. They recognize themselves as
sinners (unworthy, failing to merit) and look to the mercies of
God via the crucified Christ, for forgiveness (Heb. 6:19-20; 7:25;
Gal. 2:20).
Many
first century Jews sought to "establish their own
righteousness" (Rom. 10:3), "having (their) own
righteousness which is of the law" (Phil. 3:7-9); and the
scriptures have much to say about the futility of such an effort.
Because they were under the Old or First Covenant, and New
Covenant writers are telling us to look to Christ (not to Moses)
for salvation, many have equated "meritorious works"
with O. T. command -
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ments — as if the Holy Spirit was saying, "You can not merit salvation
by keeping the Old Covenant" (period). That is true! But was
the Spirit saying, "You can merit salvation by keeping the
New Covenant?" Think that one over!!
What
makes the New Covenant superior to the Old?? Is it better because
"be baptized" is a better command that "be
circumcised"? The Hebrew writer hinges its superiority to its
"better promises" — which depend upon Christ's
sacrifice whereby mercy and forgiveness are extended (8:6-13).
Paul called the law "holy, just, and good" (Rom.
7:12-14), and blamed himself, not the law, for his wretchedness.
The solution was Christ as an offering for our sin (8:3),
not some new "set of comet ands" whereby we may merit
salvation. If the reader has given serious thought to the meaning
of "merit" he will agree when we say one does not merit
salvation by Old or New Covenant. Salvation is a gift of God: to
Old Covenant Jews who were faithful (Heb. 3:16; 11:40) and to
people of all ages who through faith are forgiven of their sins by
virtue of Christ's sacrifice on man's behalf.
Paul
wrote, "I buffet my body... lest I myself should be
rejected" and "I press on toward the goal" (1 Cor.
9:27; Phil. 3:14). His confidence, assurance, hope, was not in
himself nor in his "merit," but in the mercy of God
through Christ. We must obey the Lord (Heb. 5:9; Gal. 5:6) but
none of us obey so perfectly we merit heaven. We should be
brought to our knees in the realization of our sinfulness and
consequent grave need for God's grace and mercy — "and be
ye thankful:"
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