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Being
justified by faith, we have peace with God. Conscience accuses no longer.
Judgment now decides for the sinner instead of against him. Memory looks
back upon past sins, with deep sorrow for the sin, but yet with no dread
of any penalty to come; for Christ has paid the debt of His people to
the last jot and tittle, and received the divine receipt; and unless
God can be so unjust as to demand double payment for one debt, no soul
for whom Jesus died as a substitute can ever be cast into hell. It seems
to be one of the very principles of our enlightened nature to believe
that God is just; we feel that it must be so, and this gives us our
terror at first; but is it not marvellous that this very same belief
that God is just, becomes afterwards the pillar of our confidence and
peace! If God be just, I, a sinner, alone and without a substitute,
must be punished; but Jesus stands in my stead and is punished for me;
and now, if God be just, I, a sinner, standing in Christ, can never
be punished. God must change His nature before one soul, for whom Jesus
was a substitute, can ever by any possibility suffer the lash of the
law. Therefore, Jesus having taken the place of the believer -- having
rendered a full equivalent to divine wrath for all that His people ought
to have suffered as the result of sin, the believer can shout with glorious
triumph, "Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect?"
Not God, for He hath justified; not Christ, for He hath died, "yea
rather hath risen again." My hope lives not because I am not a
sinner, but because I am a sinner for whom Christ died; my trust is
not that I am holy, but that being unholy, He is my righteousness. My
faith rests not upon what I am, or shall be, or feel, or know, but in
what Christ is, in what He has done, and in what He is now doing for
me. On the lion of justice the fair maid of hope rides like a queen.
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