Freedom from False Wisdom and Secure in His Righteousness
Colossians 2:20-23
"If with Christ you died to the elemental spirits of the world, why, as if you were still alive in the world, do you submit to regulations—"Do not handle, Do not taste, Do not touch" (referring to things that all perish as they are used)—according to human precepts and teachings? These have indeed an appearance of wisdom in promoting self-made religion and asceticism and severity to the body, but they are of no value in stopping the indulgence of the flesh."
My works are not my righteousness, they are a reflection of my faith. If I say I have faith and my faith is not producing works of righteousness (active faith) then I'm making a false boast of faith. Our righteousness is not earned by works, where human regulations and self-made efforts produce only an appearance of godly wisdom.
This is NOT unique to Protestant theology, this is biblically based and substantiated. Justification, being declared righteous before God, is by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone (Romans 3:28; Ephesians 2:8-9; Galatians 2:16). There is no other religion that can make that claim. This is not merely a Protestant invention or tradition, despite what many believe. The apostle Paul repeatedly emphasizes that justification, God’s declaration of righteousness upon the sinner, is a gift received by trusting in Christ’s finished work, not earned through any human effort or merit.
What sets this apart is the radical nature of the claim.
Claim:
Christ's righteousness is imputed (credited) to the believer solely through faith in Christ, who bore our sin and provided His perfect obedience in our place.
Contrast:
This stands in stark contrast to virtually every other religious system, where acceptance before the divine (or some ultimate reality) involves an accepted combination of human achievement, rituals, moral striving, or accumulated merit.
• In Islam, salvation involves submission to Allah, good deeds outweighing bad ones on the Day of Judgment, and God’s mercy; but it’s not purely by grace through faith apart from works. You'd better hope you were good enough.
• In Hinduism or Buddhism, liberation (moksha or nirvana) comes through karma, dharma, meditation, renunciation, or enlightenment, human effort and cycles of rebirth play central roles. Again, you'd better hope you outweighed enough bad karma with good karma or else you'll reincarnate as an ant or maybe a worm.
• In Judaism (post-New Testament developments), righteousness often ties to observance of Torah and mitzvot, though grace is acknowledged; it doesn’t center on faith in a divine substitute’s atoning work. Again, dietary constraints, lifestyle constraints, adherence to feasts and festivals, all of these foreshadowing things of the law are acting as replacements for divine grace.
• Even within the broader context of Christianity, traditions like Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy, view justification as involving faith plus infused grace enabling works (often through sacraments and the worship of angels and saints). All of it the vanity of the puffed up mind. Looking to some saintly figure or tradition that holds a certain degree of holiness that meditates beyond your less than perfect self righteousness. They look to the saints because they believe these dead in Christ are on a different level of consciousness in regard to the divine's attention. God is busy and doesn't have time to give direct access for every feeble faith-light person out there.
All these expressions of faith highlight why the biblical emphasis on imputed righteousness through faith alone feels so distinctive. It removes any ground for boasting in human effort, merit, or ritual. But it's only distinctive because it's biblical. It's the gospel truth. And this is the gospel’s uniqueness; God justifies the ungodly freely (Romans 4:5). God credits Christ’s obedience to us by faith. Any system adding human cooperation, merit, or infusion as co-contributing to the declaration of righteousness shifts the foundation of their faith from Christ’s finished work to their ongoing performance.
Listen, we shouldn't quibble over these things. It's no great leap at all to believe your standing in Christ is made secure not because of your faithfulness but because of His. Only pride would say otherwise. And so it should be no great leap to rest in that. Faith that truly grasps this produces active love and obedience, not to earn, but because we’ve been made alive in Him.
When you lean on His righteousness He'll produce fruit in you. He'll prune you and perfect you. He'll cultivate your works. He'll dress up your branches and make them grow and thrive. And there will be no shortage of sovereign strength because it'll come from the root which is Him.
There’s no pride in resting securely in Christ’s faithfulness rather than our own; it’s the opposite. Pride clings to self-effort, imagining we can secure or improve our standing through performance.
Humility, however, bows before the truth:
"It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me" (Galatians 2:20).
Our security isn’t fragile, dependent on our wavering faithfulness. We in Christ are not in danger of being reborn as an ant. Our faith is anchored in His unchanging, perfect obedience and finished work. We will be recreated into our spiritual bodies of His making. Our security in Christ is rock-solid, not because we’ve got it all together or because our faithfulness never falters, but because His faithfulness never does. We’re not dangling over an abyss, hoping our performance keeps us from slipping into some lesser form of existence. No, the gospel promises something infinitely better, a final, glorious recreation into spiritual bodies fashioned by Him, imperishable and full of His life. Our future isn’t fragile probation; it’s assured transformation.
What an amazing freedom! May this truth anchor your heart today. Go and produce the fruit HE is giving you to become. Not because you’re in danger of loss or demotion; but because you’re headed for transformation into His likeness, forever secure in Him through faith alone.
Amen and amen.