"Sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace."-ROM. vi. 14.
THE words, Covenant of grace, though not
found in Scripture, are the correct expression
of the truth it abundantly teaches, that the
contrast between the two covenants is none other
than that of law and grace. Of the New Covenant,
grace is the great characteristic: "The law
came in, that the offence might abound; but where
sin abounded, grace did abound more exceedingly."
It is to bring the Romans away entirely from
under the Old Covenant, and to teach them their
place in the New, that Paul writes: " Ye are not
under the law, but under grace." And he assures
them that if they believe this, and live in it, their
experience would confirm God's promise: "Sin
shall not have dominion over you." What the
law could not do--give deliverance from the
power of sin over us--grace would effect. The
New Covenant was entirely a Covenant of grace.
In the wonderful grace of God it had its origin;
it was meant to be a manifestation of the riches
and the glory of that grace; of grace, and by
grace working in us, all its promises can be
fulfilled and experienced.
The word grace is used in two senses. It is
first the gracious disposition in God which moves
Him to love us freely without our merit, and to
bestow all His blessings upon us. Then it also
means that power through which this grace
does its work in us. The redeeming work of
Christ, and the righteousness He won for us;
equally with the work of the Spirit in us, as the
power of the new life, are spoken of as Grace.
It includes all that Christ has done and still
does, all He has and gives, all He is for us and
in us. John says, "We beheld His glory, the
glory of the Only Begotten of the Father, full of
grace and truth." "The law was given by Moses
grace and truth came by Jesus Christ." "And of
His fulness have all we received, and grace for
grace." What the law demands, grace supplies.
The contrast which John pointed out is expounded by Paul: "The law came in, that the offence might abound," and the way be prepared for the abounding of grace more exceedingly. The law points the way, but gives no strength to walk in it. The law demands, but makes no provision for its demands being met. The law burdens and condemns and slays. It can waken desire, but not satisfy it. It can rouse to effort, but not secure success. It can appeal to motives, but gives no inward power beyond what man himself has. And so, while warring against sin, it became its very ally in giving the sinner over to a hopeless condemnation." The strength of sin is the law."
To deliver us from the bondage and the dominion
of sin, grace came by Jesus Christ. Its work is
twofold. Its exceeding abundance is seen in the
free and full pardon there is of all transgression,
in the bestowal of a perfect righteousness, and in
the acceptance into God's favour and friendship.
"In Him we have redemption through His blood,
the forgiveness of sin according to the riches of
His grace." It is not only at conversion and our
admittance into God's favour, but throughout all
our life, at each step of our way, and amid the
highest attainments of the most advanced saint;
we owe everything to grace, and grace alone.
The thought of merit and work and worthiness
is for ever excluded.
The exceeding abundance of grace is equally
seen in the work which the Holy Spirit every
moment maintains within us. We have found
that the central blessing of the New Covenant,
flowing from Christ's redemption and the pardon of
our sins, is the new heart in which God's law and
fear and love have been put. It is in the fulfilment
of this promise, in the maintenance of the
heart in a state of meetness for God's indwelling,
that the glory of grace is specially seen. In the
very nature of things this must be so. Paul
writes: "Where sin abounded, grace did more
exceedingly abound." And where, as far as I was
concerned, did sin abound? All the sin in earth
and hell could not harm me, were it not for its
presence in my heart. It is there it has exercised
its terrible dominion. And it is there the exceeding
abundance of grace must be proved, if it is to
benefit me. All grace in earth and heaven could
not help me; it is only in the heart it can be
received, and known, and enjoyed. "Where sin
abounded," in the heart, there "grace did more
exceedingly abound; that as sin reigned in death,"
working its destruction in the heart and life,
"even so might grace reign," in the heart too,
"through righteousness into eternal life, through
Jesus Christ our Lord." As had been said just
before, "They that receive the abundance of grace
shall reign in life through Jesus Christ."
Of this reign of grace in the heart Scripture
speaks wondrous things. Paul speaks of the grace
that fitted him for his work, of "the gift of that
grace of God which was given me according to the
working of His power." "The grace of our Lord
was exceeding abundant, with faith and love."
"The grace which was bestowed upon me was not
found vain, but I laboured more abundantly than
they all; yet not I, but the grace of God which
was with me." "He said unto me, My grace is
sufficient for thee; My strength is made perfect
in weakness." He speaks in the same way of grace
as working in the life of believers, when he exhorts
them to "be strong in the grace that is in Christ
Jesus"; when he tells us of "the grace of God"
exhibited in the liberality of the Macedonian
Christians, and "the exceeding grace of God" in
the Corinthians; when he encourages them: "God
is able to make all grace abound in you, that
ye may abound unto every good work." Grace
is not only the power that moves the heart of
God in its compassion towards us, when He acquits
and accepts the sinner and makes him a
child, but is equally the power that moves the
heart of the saint, and provides it each moment
with just the disposition and the power which it
needs to love God and do His will.
It is impossible to speak too strongly of the need
there is to know that, as wonderful and free and
alone sufficient as is the grace that pardons, is the
grace that sanctifies; we are just as absolutely
dependent upon the latter as the former. We can
do as little to the one as the other. The grace
that works in us must as exclusively do all in us
and through us as the grace that pardons does all
for us. In the one case as the other, everything is
by faith alone. Not to apprehend this brings a
double danger. On the one hand, people think
that grace cannot be more exalted than in the
bestowal of pardon on the vile and unworthy; and
a secret feeling arises that, if God be so magnified
by our sins more than anything else, we must not
expect to be freed from them in this life. With
many this cuts at the root of the life of true holiness.
On the other hand, from not knowing that grace
is always and alone to do all the work in our
sanctification and fruit-bearing, men are thrown
upon their own efforts, their life remains one
of feebleness and bondage under the law, and
they never yield themselves to let grace do all it
would.
Let us listen to what God's Word says: "By
grace have ye been saved, through faith; not of
works, lest any man should glory. For we are His
workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works,
which God afore prepared that we should walk in
them." Grace stands in contrast to good works of
our own not only before conversion, but after
conversion too. We are created in Christ Jesus for
good works, which God had prepared for us. It
is grace alone can work them in us and work them
out through us. Not only the commencement but
the continuance of the Christian life is the work
of grace. "Now if it is by grace it is no more of
works, otherwise grace is no more grace; therefore
it is of faith that it may be according to grace."
As we see that grace is literally and absolutely to
do all in us, so that all our actings are the showing
forth of grace in us, we shall consent to live the
life of faith--a life in which, every moment, everything
is expected from God. It is only then that
we shall experience that sin shall not, never, not
for a moment, have dominion over us.
"Ye are not under the law, but under grace." There are three possible lives. One entirely under the law; one entirely under grace; one a mixed life, partly law, partly grace. It is this last against which Paul warns the Romans. It is this which is so common, and works such ruin among Christians. Let us find out whether this is not our position, and the cause of our low state. Let us beseech God to open our eyes by the Holy Spirit to see that in the New Covenant everything, every movement, every moment of our Christian life, is of grace, abounding grace; grace abounding exceedingly, and working mightily. Let us believe that our Covenant God waits to cause all grace to abound toward us. And let us begin to live the
Grace unto you, and peace be multiplied!