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"He is the Rock, His work is perfect; for all His ways
are judgement: a God of truth and without
iniquity, just and right is He." Deuteronomy 32:4
This text is taken from the beginning of a speech that Moses made
before the nation of Israel shortly before
she crossed the Jordan intothe promised land. Actually this
is more than a speech, it is a song; a beautiful
word of praise to God in which Moses recounts two histories.
There is the sad history of the unfaithfulness
of the Israelites to their God, and the history of God's dealings
with this stiffnecked people, a treatment of
them in which God was always strictly righteous.
Because Israel had so often failed to hear the Word of God, Moses
addresses his words to the heavens and
the earth. The creation was there; let the whole creation
bear witness to the truth of what he says! "Give
ear, O ye heavens, and I will speak; and hear, O earth, the words
of my mouth. My doctrine shall drop as
the rain, my speech shall distil as the dew, as the small rain upon
the tender herb, and as the shower upon
the grass: Because I will publish the name of the Lord;
ascribe ye greatness unto our God." And then the
faithful servant of God points Israel and us to the everlasting
truth that we may never forget. "He is the
Rock, His work is perfect; for all His ways are judgement:
a God of truth and without iniquity, just and
right is He," From this passage in its historical setting
we may learn regarding the wonderful virtue of
God's righteousness.
Righteousness is a legal term. Righteousness involves
perfect conformity to some standard or law.
That is true in respect to man, but that is no less true when we
consider the righteousness of God. The
righteousness of God means that He conforms perfectly to a certain
standard. Both the Hebrew and the
Greek terms express the idea of being straight. So we must
conceive of a certain standard, a perfectly
straight line. That which is conformed to that standard is
righteous; that which does not conform at all
points is crooked, perverse, unrighteous, and evil.
God is righteous in that He conforms very exactly to an ethical
yardstick. To be sure this yardstick
is not one of man's devising, as if man could ever call God into
account and judge whether God was worthy
of being called righteous! Rather, that God conforms to a
perfect standard means that He conforms to His
own holiness! God is spotlessly holy; God is light and
in Him is no darkness at all. He never takes delight
in sin, cannot tempt man with sin, can have nothing to do with sin.
That's God as far as His own Being is
concerned. And now in all God's willing, acting, and speaking,
in all His dealings with the sons of men. He
is always in perfect conformity with the standard of His own holiness.
We could define the righteousness of
God, then, as that virtue according to which God, in His willing,
working, and speaking, is always in
harmony with His holiness, or the ethical perfection of His Being.
In the text quoted above, Moses makes a marvelous statement
regarding the righteousness of
Jehovah! His point is that in all the dealing of God with
Israel in the wilderness, God was always righteous,
always in conformity with His beautiful holiness. Notice how
the Old Testament mediator heaps up words
as he ascribes greatness to God. He is the Rock; not a rock,
but the Rock, the One who is firm, stable,
unchangeable, the standard and criterion of all things. For
this reason, His works are perfect, that is,
sound and blameless. Hence, all His ways are judgment;
in all His dealings with men, God is always
busy comparing men to the standard of His Holy Word and Law.
And in all of this, He is a God of truth
and without iniquity . . . just and right, or just and straight,
is He! What makes this passage so beautiful,
in addition to the fact that all these terms are heaped one upon
another, is the fact t that Moses declares this
so joyfully even though this righteous God has recently declared
that Moses would not enter into the land.
You know the history of Moses striking the rock in anger, of calling
the people of God rebels, of growing
tied of his mediator's work. Well, God in His righteousness
declared that Moses would see the land, but he
would not enter it. Moses pleaded, but God said, "No, and
don't ever bring it up again." then Moses bows
to that judgment of God, and here even magnifies the God of such
consistent, high righteousness.
The Scripture uses the word righteousness in several other
senses than we have been discussing.
When we read in Matthew 19 that Jesus came not to call the righteous
but sinners to repentance, it is clear
that the Lord is speaking of a counterfeit, man-made, useless righteousness.
Secondly, the Bible, especially
in the Psalms, calls certain men righteous, because they are as
to the direction and tendency of their lives,
not sinless, but in harmony with the law of God nonetheless.
The righteous stand out in contrast to, and in
opposition to, the wicked (See Psalm 1). Thirdly, the Scriptures
also speak of the gospel fact that there is a
righteousness provided by God for His children that is an imputed
righteousness; it is not earned by works
of the law, it is not deserved or a matter of wages, but it is graciously
bestowed upon a man because by faith
he is joined to Jesus Christ who is the righteousness of God.
But in our passage, the righteousness of God
Himself is on the forefront. It is even the case that if God
were not righteous, He would not be and could
not be God. Is there unrighteousness with God? God forbid!
God reveals His righteousness by unfailingly rewarding good
with good and punishing evil with
evil. That God blesses obedience and punishes disobedience
is the outstanding lesson of Deuteronomy 32.
Had the Israelites believed the report of the two faithful spies,
God would have led them into the promised
land immediately; because they accepted the lying report of
the ten spies in unbelief, God caused them to
wander in the wilderness a year for each day the spies were in the
land of Canaan (see Psalm 81:11-12). In
the last part of Romans 1 the apostle Paul makes clear that God
gives the wicked over to uncleanness, to
vile affections, and to a reprobate mind as a punishment upon their
sin, after they had manifest that knowing
God they refused to serve and glorify Him.
It belongs to the Gospel that God also rewards good with
good, for "we must all appear before the
judgment seat of God to receive according as we have done in the
body, whether that be good or bad." If a
man, by the sovereign grace of God, believes and repents, calling
upon the name of Jesus in the shadow of
the cross, God grants the great gift of forgiveness and everlasting
life. To be sure, it is God who works the
sorrow and repentance, the turning and the obedience. And
then the righteous God blesses His own work in
man with more and greater blessings! And there is never a
departure from that fundamental way of dealing
with the sons of men.
Sometimes children of God have questions at this point.
this was the case with Jeremiah (see
Jeremiah 12:1) and Asaph (see Psalm 73). Do you ever have
the same kind of problem? I do. We observe
wickedness and violence and rebellion about us in the world.
Yet those that practice these things seem to
prosper. they seem not to have any difficulties, they have
more than their hearts desire, they have the praise
of men. But the church and the children of God have hard going;
there is suffering, poverty, and
persecution. Does God not see? Why does He not strike
them down in His wrath? Well, then we need to
be instructed from the Word of God, and we need to learn that God
is indeed aware of these things and He
is judging those wicked every day. With the ease that they
experience God is setting them on slippery
places that they may hasten on to destruction. it isn't even
the case that they get away with something now,
but God's justice catches up with them in the Judgment Day. Rather,
God judges all men day by day, He
rewards good with good and evil with evil day by day; and
the Judgment Day is the great day in which all
these things become clear, unto the glory of His name!
There is another manifestation of the righteousness of God
that the Church must know and loves to
know. At the cross of Jesus Christ was displayed fully, terribly,
and beautifully the righteousness of God!
There He Who knew no sin was made sin for us. In order to
satisfy His justice and to maintain His
righteousness in the salvation of all the elect, God dealt with
Christ as if He had committed our sins. And
then, since Christ went all the way to death and hell in submission
to His Father's will, God accounts to the
elect the perfect obedience of Christ. God did not set aside
His righteousness in the salvation of the
Church, but He caused His saving love to reach us in the way of
justice, satisfaction, and payment! Psalm
85:10 expresses this so beautifully: "Mercy and truth are
met together, righteousness and peace have kissed
each other." Hence, we must conclude that God's dealings with
the wicked world and with the redeemed
Church are always characterized by justice and righteousness.
What is the believers response to this great truth of the
righteousness of God? the first response of
faith is to be filled with fear, reverence, and awe! Paul
said, "Knowing therefore the terror of God, we
persuade men." Jesus instructs us to "Fear Him, which after
He hath killed, hath power to cast into hell;
yea, I say unto you, Fear Him." the response of faith is to
love the law of God and to meditate upon it by
day and night. The response of faith is to hate sin as God hates
sin; to condemn it, flee from it, and avoid
the very appearance of it. The believer fears God and keeps
His commandments!
In the second place, the response of the believer is a deep
thankfulness that the righteous judgment
of God does not cause him to go down into death, but secures for
him a place in the everlasting tabernacle
of God. "God hath made Christ to be sin for us, Who knew no
sin; that we might be made righteousness of
God in Him." thus we spend our days in living a holy, thankful
life to the praise of our Redeemer God.
And we know that it will take eternity adequately to thank God for
His unspeakable Gift and His
unspeakable goodness.
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