Sanctification: By Grace Alone
by the Rev. Dr. David P. Scaer
Professor of Systematic Theology,
Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Indiana
Luther placed justification, the doctrine of God's free grace in Jesus
Christ, at the heart of his theology. Man is saved not by anything he does
or could hope to do, but by what God has done once and for all in Jesus
Christ. Since the Reformation, God's accepting the death of Christ in place
of the sinner's death has been the hallmark of Protestantism and more specifically
of Lutheran churches. Salvation is sola gratia and sola fide. God justifies
the sinner purely out of His grace through faith without works. Just as
no one raises himself from the dead, so no one makes himself a Christian.
God, who brought Jesus back from the dead, alone brings believers to Christ
and declares them righteous. Lutherans hold that justification is monergistic,
a Greek derivative, which means that a thing has only one cause. God alone
converts Christians. He alone justifies believers. This principle also
applies to sanctification. He alone makes us holy. God is the cause and
content of our sanctification.
Traditional Roman Catholicism shares with Lutheranism a monergistic
view of the general plan of salvation. God alone sent His Son into the
flesh (incarnation) and sacrificed Him for the world's sin (atonement);
however, the certainty of individual salvation is made dependent on the
level of believers' personal holiness. Sanctification requires cooperating
with divine grace in doing good works. At the center of this system is
a doctrine of sanctification which holds that man cooperates with God for
the certainty of salvation. There is no place for the total justification
of sinful humanity as God's completed activity in Christ. Man cooperates
with God in becoming holy and so sanctification is defined in ethical terms,
which can be measured.
A majority of other Protestant denominations agree with Luther's monergistic
doctrine of justification, but like Roman Catholics they see sanctification,
the working of the Holy Spirit in Christian lives, in synergistic terms,
another Greek derivative, which means that a thing has two or more causes.
Believers are required to play a part in developing their personal holiness
by living lives disciplined by the Law and by special ethical regulations
set down by the church. Christians can and must cooperate with God's grace
to increase the level of personal sanctification. Cooperation, a Latin
derivative, is a synonym of synergism, and also means two or more things
or persons working together. As a rule most Protestants agree with Luther
that God alone justifies sinners and initiates the work of sanctification,
but many differ in holding that believers are responsible for completing
it. They oppose the Roman Catholic view that pilgrimages, novenas, penance
and masses as good works; however, they agree with Catholicism that man
cooperates with God in his sanctification to attain personal holiness.
God alone justifies, but sanctification is a combined divine-human activity,
which even though God begins, each believer is obligated to complete. In
this system, the Gospel, which alone creates faith, is replaced by the
Law which instructs in moral requirements and warns against immorality.
Justification by grace is seen as a past event and the present focus is
on man cooperating with God to reach a complete sanctification.
Lutherans recognize that Christians as sinners are never immune to the
Law's moral demands and its threats against sin, but in the strictest sense
these warnings do not belong to Christian sanctification, the life believers
live in Christ and in which Christ lives in them. In Roman Catholic and
some Protestant systems, the Gospel brings the good news of salvation in
Jesus Christ, but is replaced by the Law which sets down directives for
Christian life and warns and threatens the Christian as Christian. Law,
and not the Gospel, becomes God's last and real word for the believer.
So Christianity deteriorates into an implicit and eventually coarse legalism
and abject moralism. Jesus faced this understanding of an ethically determined
concept of sanctification among the Pharisees. Holiness was defined in
terms of fulfilling ritual requirements. Sixteen centuries later for similar
reasons, Luther raised his protest against medieval Catholicism.
At times, the New Testament uses the words sanctify and sanctification
of God's entire activity of God in bringing about man's salvation. More
specifically it refers to the work of the Holy Spirit to bring people to
salvation, to keep them in the true faith and finally to raise them from
the dead and give them eternal life (Small Catechism). All these works
are also performed by the Father and the Son. Since God is not morally
neutral and does not choose to be holy, but He is holy, all His works necessarily
share in His holiness. The connection between the Holy Spirit and sanctification
is seen in the Latin for the Third Person of the Trinity, Spiritus Sanctus.
The Spirit who is holy in Himself makes believers holy, sanctifies them,
by working faith in Christ in them and He becomes the sources of all their
good works. Sanctification means that the Spirit permeates everything the
Christian thinks, says and does. The Christian's personal holiness is as
much a monergistic activity of the Holy Spirit as is his justification
and conversion. The Spirit who alone creates faith is no less active after
conversion than He was before.
Our Augsburg Confession recognizes those things which keep society and
government together as good works, but strictly speaking, they do not belong
to a Christian's personal holiness and have no necessary relationship to
justification. Unbelievers can do these works as can Christians. The works
of sanctification are, strictly speaking, only those which Christians can
do. They find their source, content and form in Christ's offering of Himself
for others and are given to Christians by the Spirit who proceeds from
the Father and the Son and who is sent into the world by the Son. Sanctification
is a Trinitarian act. God dwells in the believer in order to accomplish
what He wants. The petition of the Lord's Prayer that "God's will be done"
is a prayer for our own sanctification.
The Spirit who assisted Christ during the days of humiliation to do
good to others and to offer Himself as a sacrifice to His Father is the
same Spirit whom Christ by His death, resurrection and ascension gave to
His Christians. Jesus, in requiring that we love God with our whole being
and our neighbors more than ourselves, was not giving us an impossible
goal to awaken in us a morbid sense of sinfulness. Nor was He speaking
in exaggerated terms to make a point, but He was describing His own life
and the life of His Christians who live their lives and die in Him. Like
Christ, Christians trust only in God and sacrifice themselves for others.
Sanctification not only defines the Christian life, but in the first and
real sense it defines Christ's life.
Jesus Himself loved God with everything which He was and had and made
us His neighbors by loving us more than He loved His own life. Sanctification
is first christological, that is, it is Christ's own life in God and then
our life in Him. His life did not follow a system of codes, a pattern of
regulations or list of moral demands and constraints and restraints. Just
as Christ's life had to do with self-giving, our sanctification has to
do with presenting our bodies as living sacrifices.
Our sanctification finds its closest point of contact in the earthly
life of Jesus who gave Himself for us. Christ's giving of Himself is in
turn an extension of Father's giving of His Son, "God so loved the world
that He gave His only Son." The sending of the Son as a sacrifice reflects
the Father's eternal giving of Himself in begetting the Son, "begotten
of His Father before all worlds." So the Christian doctrine of sanctification
draws its substance from atonement, incarnation and even the mystery of
the Holy Trinity itself. This self-giving of God and of Christ take form
in the lives of believers and saints, especially those who are persecuted
for the sake of the Gospel and martyred. On that account St. Paul sets
himself and his companions in their sufferings as patterns of sanctification
for those to whom they preached the Gospel.
As magnificently monergistic as our sanctification is, that is, God
works in us to create and confirm faith and to do good to others, we Christians
are plagued by sin. In actual practice our sanctification is only a weak
reflection of Christ's life. Good motives often turn into evil desires.
Good works come to be valued as our own ethical accomplishments. Moral
self-admiration and ethical self-absorption soon replace total reliance
on God. The sanctified life constantly needs to be fully and only informed
by Christ's life and death or our personal holiness will soon deteriorate
into a degenerate legalism and barren moralism. God allows us Christians
to be plagued by sin and a sense of moral inadequacy to force us to see
the impossibility of a self-generated holiness. Our only hope is to look
to Christ in whom alone we have a perfect and complete sanctification.
"He is the source of your life in Christ Jesus, whom God made our wisdom,
our righteousness and sanctification and redemption" (1 Cor. 1:30). |