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Strive to Stop Striving

Jared Wilson » God Heart Gospel Justification

Galatians 2:17 is the five-finger exploding-heart death punch of Galatians 2: “But if, in our endeavor to be justified in Christ, we too were found to be sinners, is Christ then a servant of sin? Certainly not!”

As I studied for my sermon on Galatians 2:15–21, this verse gave me the most fits. It looks straightforward enough, but it is deceptively complex.

Getting Caught Up in Legalese

First, I am seeing Paul turning the language of the legalistic Judaizers on its head. There is an echo here of “Shall we sin all the more so that grace may abound?” The more I gnawed on Gal. 2:17 the more clearly I could see that Paul is sort of saying, “If justification is not by faith alone in Christ alone, should we circumcise all the more so that justification may abound?” (And in Galatians 5:12 he does kind of say that).

In a nutshell Paul is saying “If justification in Christ alone reckons us still ‘sinners,’ Christ’s work is worthless and he is a minister of sin.”

Strive to Rest

But something else catches my eye. Still playing off the Judaizing zeal, he uses the phrase “endeavor to be justified in Christ.” Why would he use the word “endeavor”? Isn’t the truth he’s proclaiming about the end of endeavoring to be justified? That justification comes via faith (not works) in the finished endeavor of Christ?

Our flesh yearns for works, for the merits of self-righteousness, so it's hard work to make ourselves rest in the finished work of Christ.

Yes, but there’s something else here besides just tweaking the legalistic “work” lingo. There is a very real sense in which we must endeavor to be justified in Christ. This idea is repeated in Hebrews 4:9–11:

    So then, there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God, for whoever has entered God’s rest has also rested from his works as God did from his.
    Let us therefore strive to enter that rest, so that no one may fall by the same sort of disobedience.

 

It Is a Daily Work to Rest

Strive to enter rest? Endeavor to stop endeavoring? Why this language?

Tim Keller said, “Even after you are converted by the gospel, your heart will go back to operating on other principles unless you deliberately, repeatedly set it to gospel-mode.”

The gospel bids us strive to stop striving because it takes conscious effort to orient our stubborn selves around the gospel. Our flesh yearns for works, for the merits of self-righteousness, so it’s hard work to make ourselves rest in the finished work of Christ. It is a daily work, the labor of crucifying the flesh, taking up the cross, and faithfully following he who has finished the labor.

 

I’ll leave you with this quote from Martin Luther: “Most necessary it is, therefore, that we should know the gospel well, teach it unto others, and beat it into their heads continually.”

 


 

Adapted from Jared Wilson’s original post on Gospel-Driven Church


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