Justification is a declaration or pronouncement that someone is righteous; for example, in court after due trial (Deut. 25:1).1 Such declarations are made in everyday life, also. For instance, when the tax collectors ‘justified God’ (Luke 7:29), they declared him righteous. Justification, I repeat, is a declaration. To ‘justify’ does not mean ‘to make righteous’. This is most important. Judges do not make defendants righteous or wicked – they declare them so (Deut. 25:1). The Spirit did not make Christ righteous – he declared, demonstrated him righteous (1 Tim. 3:16). The crowd did not make God righteous – they declared him righteous (Luke 7:29). Of course, if a human court could make the guilty righteous, it would be highly commended, to say the least – but that is an utter impossibility, and not what we are talking about. Likewise, condemnation – the opposite of justification – is a pronouncement or declaration. To condemn a man does not make him guilty; it declares him guilty. |