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Octavius Winslow

Rom. 10:3

Rom. 10:3
Octavius Winslow June, 5 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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June, 5 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about righteousness?

The Bible teaches that human righteousness is insufficient for salvation and that true righteousness comes through faith in Jesus Christ.

The Scriptures clearly indicate that human attempts to establish one's own righteousness are futile. According to Romans 10:3, individuals who are ignorant of God's righteousness often strive to set up their own, yet this righteousness is likened to a 'broken cistern' that cannot hold the 'water of life.' Infallibly, the human effort will always fall short because all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23). Righteousness before God is not attained by deeds of the law since, as scripture states, 'by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified' (Galatians 2:16). Thus, only the imputed righteousness of Christ grants believers standing before God.

Romans 10:3, Galatians 2:16, Romans 3:23

How do we know justification by faith is true?

Justification by faith is a core doctrine supported by Scripture, affirming that faith in Christ, rather than law-keeping, grants us righteousness.

The truth of justification by faith is meticulously grounded in Scripture, particularly in passages such as Romans 5:1, which states, 'Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.' This foundational doctrine emphasizes that our relationship with God is restored not through our compliance with the law, but through faith in Jesus Christ. The Apostle Paul affirms this in Romans 10:4, saying, 'For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes.' Thus, by understanding that our righteousness cannot stem from our works, we grasp that acceptance before God relies solely on the finished work of Christ and our trust in Him.

Romans 5:1, Romans 10:4

Why is reliance on God's righteousness important for Christians?

Reliance on God's righteousness is essential for Christians, as it provides true peace, salvation, and assurance of eternal life.

For Christians, reliance on God's righteousness is not merely an option; it is essential for genuine faith and peace. The text emphasizes that human righteousness is akin to a 'broken cistern' that cannot provide the life-giving waters of peace, joy, and assurance. Christians are called to abandon their attempts at self-justification and instead lean entirely on the righteousness of God available through faith in Jesus Christ. As Romans 3:22 states, 'Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe.' In doing so, believers not only find rest for their souls but also secure their eternal future in the hope and confidence that Christ's righteousness fully satisfies God's requirements.

Romans 3:22

“For they being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteous ness of God.”

— Rom. 10:3

WHAT is man's own righteousness, the best that he ever made, but the hewing out of a created cistern, in the place of the infinite fountain? His obedience, at best, must be but a partial and an imperfect one; and, failing in a single point, entails eternal despair. "For whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all." But not only is it a shallow and contracted, it is also a "broken cistern." It can hold no water of life or of peace, of consolation f or of joy. In vain his spirit, tormented with guilt and agitated with fear, repairs to it for satisfaction and repose—it supplies it not. Let a man, for example, who is thus seeking salvation by the law, take the holiest day in the calendar of his life; let it be as free as it is possible for a fallen creature to make it from sin; let it be filled up with religious duties and services—it closes, and the curtains of night have drawn around him. Reposing on his pillow, he throws forward a glance into the eternal world—he thinks of the holy God, of the righteous law, of the solemn judgment, and the question, "What if this night I should be summoned to stand before my Judge!—what if to-morrow's sun should rise upon my corpse, and I, a departed spirit, should be mingling with the dread realities of an unseen world?"—and he trembles and turns pale. What! has not his best obedience, his holiest day, his strictest observance, brought peace to his conscience and quietness to his soul? What! does no bright hope of glory play around his pillow, and no loving, peaceful view of God cradle him to rest? Ah, no! He has "forsaken the fountain of living waters, and has hewed him out a cistern, a broken cistern, that can hold no water," and his night closes in upon him with the drapery of hopeless gloom.

To you, reader, is this solemn word now sent. Ah! while your eye has been scanning this page, has there not been in your heart the secret conviction of its truth? You have forsaken the righteousness of God, and for years have you been digging into the law, hoping thus to find in its strictest observance some well-spring of life and peace to your soul. But all your toil has been in vain, and all your time misspent. And why? because "by the works of the law should no man living be justified." As true peace only flows through the channel of justification by faith, turning your back upon that channel, there is, there can be, no peace for your soul. Oh that this voice, now sounding in faithfulness on your ear, might awaken you to a sense of your delusion and your folly, and win you to the "good and the right way." Oh that you might be persuaded to abandon the implements of a self-wrought righteousness, with which you have so long fruitlessly labored, and just as you are—poor, guilty, vile, helpless, and hopeless—betake yourself to the "righteousness of God, which is by faith of Jesus Christ." The law is a "broken cistern;" it holds no sweet waters of salvation, it gives out no streams of peace. But the Lord Jesus is a living fountain. He is the "end of the law for righteousness to every one that believes." He has brought in a new and an "everlasting righteousness," for the full justification of poor sinners, such as you. Abandon at once and forever the broken cistern of a creature-righteousness—too long has it allured but to deceive you—and repair to the fountain of a Divine righteousness, which never has and never will deceive a believing sinner. Drink, oh drink, from this life-giving fountain. Here are peace, joy, confidence, and hope. Clothed in this righteousness, you can look your sins in the face, and death in the face, and fear nothing.

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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