“A good tree bears good fruit.” In discussions among Lutherans about the Law,
it seems to be inevitable that this theological axiom will be quoted. It is usually taken to mean that the
Christian, who is a new creation in Christ through the work of the Holy Spirit
in baptism, does not need to be told what to do. Instead he or she will naturally and
automatically produce the manner of life that reflects God’s will. Typically it is quoted as proof that the
Christians do not need the Law addressed to them in the form of exhortation.
Two things need to be noted at the outset.
First, the statement, “A good tree bears good fruit” is not some kind of
special revelation provided by the Lord.
Instead it is an aphorism – a brief statement of widely accepted wisdom.
Davies and Allison note that it “is known from other texts and must be judged a
commonplace” (The Gospel According to St.
Matthew, 1:706).
Second, it must be recognized that while Jesus uses versions of this
phrase, he never uses it to make this
specific point. The specific use for
which Jesus employs the saying is to make the point that the character of an individual is
recognized by what he says or does (Matthew 7:16, 20; 12:33; Luke
6:44). Jesus applies this truth to false
prophets (Matthew 7:15-20), Pharisees who blaspheme the Spirit (Matthew
12:33-36), and people in general (Luke 6:43-45).
Jesus never uses the general truth, “A
good tree bears good fruit,” in order to say that those who have received
regeneration through the work of the Spirit will naturally and automatically
produce the manner of life that reflects God’s will. This has not stopped
Lutherans from speaking as if he did, or from using it to describe the
spontaneity of good works. For example, Steven
Hein has written.
Fruit, as we know, is simply the product of a healthy growing fruit tree or vine. It just appears on the branches spontaneously and effortlessly as a consequence of the tree being alive according to the type of branch that God created. It is just the nature of grape vines to produce grapes or apple trees to produce apples. It is as simple as that. Reflect on what this means for a moment. The vineyards are silent at night, are they not? There is no grunting or groaning as the fruit matures … and no whining questions: “Do we have to produce grapes? How many?” They just silently do it!There is an insight here about good works in the Christian’s life in Christ. To live in Christ is simply to bring forth the works of Christ; works that he produces simply by being who he is through each of us by virtue of who we are in him. As we live in Christ and his righteousness through faith, our faith is just naturally and spontaneously fruitful in works of loving service. It is what faith does. As an indicative statement, faith is active in love. Moreover, God is love, and he created and redeemed us from sin to love. It is not a matter of compulsion or coercion, as if works of love were something foreign to our recreated nature. The grace by which we live and grow in Christ is the grace that empowers and engenders a fruitful faith. Works of love are how faith expresses itself in daily living. They are spontaneous and seemingly effortless, without calculation or self-concern (“Sanctification: The Powerful Pardon,” Logia: A Journal of Lutheran Theology 6 (1997): 19-23, 22).
The law
has no role to play here. The only thing
it can do is show people their sin (second use of the law) so that they turn to
the Gospel (what Hein calls “full-strength law”; “The Two-Faced God,” Logia: A Journal of Lutheran Theology 5
[1996]: 5-10, 8-9). Hein writes:
What does effective ministry of the law do for the new self? Nothing in any direct way, but it does create a powerful hunger and thirst for our Lord’s bread of life and living water of the gospel. The law itself imparts no spiritual nutrition or power for Christian living, but it is God’s great appetite builder that sends us running for the word of life. And the ministry of the gospel is how our Lord feeds the new creation to sustain and mature our faith and life in Christ (“The Two-Faced God,” 10).
For
this reason Hein is quite negative about exhortation. He opines that, “Exhorting good works does
not produce or increase them. They are empowered and increased only by the
continual impact of God’s Word of forgiveness as we live and grow in Christ" (Justification: You Have It All, But You Always Need More).
The
argument that “A good tree produces good fruit,” is not new in
Lutheranism. Formula of Concord Article
VI was written in order to address those who were saying that while the Law
convicted of sin in the conversion of individuals, it was not needed by the regenerate
(this is known as the second antinomian controversy; in the first antinomian controversy,
Agricola had argued that it is the Gospel rather than the Law which works
repentance). Martin Chemnitz writes about this in his Loci Theologici:
Therefore, they argue, the regenerate has no use for the Law, not even for teaching, because “His anointing will teach you all things,” 1John 2:27. Again, Rom. 12:2, “Be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may approve the things which God wills,” not by encouragement or urgings because the new obedience ought to be voluntary, just as there is no need to give a good tree commandments to bear good fruit, but of itself and by its own nature it does this. They can expand on this idea in a marvelous and popular manner (2:440; emphasis mine).
The
similarity to what Hein and other modern Lutherans say about the good tree is
quite striking. To be sure, there is an
important difference. Chemntiz’s
opponents in the second antinomian controversy denied that the law should be
spoken to Christians in any form. Modern
Lutherans like Hein are absolutely clear that sharp accusatory law
(“full-strength law”) should be addressed to Christians in order to reveal
their sin (second use of the law). In
this sense they are not antinomians.
However, in another way they are.
They do not believe that exhortation and paraenesis directed at the
Christian has a role to play in aiding them to live like Christ. In order to articulate this difference I have called it “soft antinomianism” which is an inability and even a refusal to
preach about new obedience and good works.
It does not exhort, admonish and teach in sermons about how Christians
are to live because of what Christ has done for us. Unfortunately it has become a common problem
in the Lutheranism that has come out of the second half of the twentieth
century, and is exemplified in the
theology of 1517./Christ Hold Fast.
At
first glance, “A good tree bears good fruit” seems like a strong argument
against exhortation and paraenesis.
After all, Jesus said it. However, beyond the observations with which I
began this post, it must also be recognized that when the Lord uses this saying
he is not providing a comprehensive biblical anthropology. He is making a very specific use of a saying
that is a general truth. To employ this as some kind of guiding principle about
how pastors should address Christians is deeply misguided.
Sadly,
the Christian is not only a good tree.
He is also a bad tree at the same time.
The Formula of Concord says, “However, since believers in this world are
not perfectly renewed – the old Adam clings to them down to the grave – the
battle between spirit and flesh continues in them (SD VI.18). Therefore speech addressing the
Christian must also take this reality into account.
Martin
Chemnitz was a key player in the development of the Formula of Concord, and was
one of the original six theologians who signed it. It seems safe to believe that he had a good
understanding of what is confessed in Article VI. After referring to the antinomians who spoke
about the Christian being a good tree, he went on to describe what he confessed
and taught. He writes in the Loci Theologici:
In the third use of the law, the term "use" refers to the effect that the Law has on the hearer (the way it is received). There is one Law and it can have different effects. In fact, because of the complexity of the sinner there can be more than one effect at the same time. This effect (this use of the law) is determined by the Holy Spirit alone as he utilizes the law to produce the effect (the use) he intends (FC SD VI.3, 11-14). A pastor cannot decide that he is going "to do some third use preaching."Because in this life the renewal of the Spirit does not wholly take away our old nature, but at the same time the old and the new man remain (the outward and the inner man), therefore there is a use of the Law in the regenerate that it may contend and coerce their old man (ut arguat & coerceat vetustatem); and the beginnings of the new obedience are weak and are not supported by our whole spirit and mind. But Rom. 7:25 shows that “with the mind I serve the law of God but with the flesh the law of sin”; and again vv. 22- 23, “I delight in the law of God in my inmost self, but I see another law ….” Therefore these weak beginnings must not only be encouraged (fovenda) by the earnest treaties of the Gospel but also fostered by the precepts, exhortations, warnings and promises of the Law (sed & praeceptis, exhortationibus, comminationibus, promissionibus Legis excitanda, urgenda). For we experience that the new obedience is not so voluntary a thing as a good tree which brings forth its new fruit without any command or exhortation (2:441; emphasis mine).
In the third use the Spirit utilizes the law so that the actual behavior of the Christian reflects God’s will. The Lutheran Confessions are absolutely clear in stating that Christians do fail in the struggle against the old Adam/flesh (Ap IV.175-176; LC I.316; III.86-87; FC Ep II.12.). On the other hand they are also clear in confessing that the regeneration worked by the Spirit creates a change in the Christian that impacts the way we live (Ap IV.45-46, 64-65, 125-127, 136, 175, 250-251; Ap XII.82; LC II.1-4; II.53, 67-69; LC III.52; LC IV.64-67, 74-76; FC SD II.39, 48, 70, 89; FC SD IV.10-12, 38). It is the Spirit who always supports the inner man through the Gospel so that he can struggle against the old Adam/flesh. It is the inner man who struggles against the old Adam/flesh (FC Ep VI.4; FC SD VI.18, 23). The Spirit applies the law to the old Adam/flesh and the Spirit's utilization of the law to compel and repress the old Adam/flesh aids the inner man in his struggle so that the inner man determines what the individual actually does on particular occasions. In this way (and this way alone) it is entirely correct to say that the Spirit’s utilization of the law helps the Christian live according to God’s will.
The preacher today can’t control how
the Spirit will utilize the law. When it comes to the deployment of exhortation to Christian
living, we must recognize that Paul couldn’t control how the Spirit utilized the
law either. And yet, Paul exhorted, admonished, and taught Christians how to
live. Formula of Concord article VI was
developed on the basis of apostolic exhortation like we see in the Paul – the
paraenesis which is so common in the New Testament. Article VI explains why this language is
needed, and how the Spirit utilizes it in the third use of the law. Secure in this understanding, Lutheran
preachers need to follow the apostolic example of Paul’s letters in exhorting
and admonishing Christians to a life of new obedience and good works. They can
do this in the knowledge that Spirit can and does utilize this exhortation in
the manner confessed by Formula of Concord article VI. Because of the inspiration of Scripture, the
apostolic pattern of exhortation and admonition discussed by Formula of Concord
VI in relation to the third use of the law is in fact a key Spirit provided model and pattern for addressing Christians.
For more on this subject see my article that has just been published: "Speaking like Paul and Luther: Pauline Exhortation and the Third Use of the Law." Logia: A Journal of Lutheran Theology 27 (2018): 15-25.
So in other words FC SD But when a person is born anew through the Spirit of God, and is made free from the law, that is, from the constraint of the law, and is led by the Spirit of Christ, he lives according to the unchangeable will of God revealed in the law, and does all, so far as he is born anew, through a free and cheerful spirit. And such works are not properly called works of the law, but works and fruits of the Spirit, (Gal. 5:22,) or, as St. Paul, Rom. 7:23,25, terms it, the law of the mind, and 1 Cor. 9:21, the law of Christ. For such persons are not under the law, but under grace, as St. Paul, Rom. 6:14 ; Rom. 8:2, declares.
ReplyDeleteSince, however, believers are not perfectly renewed in this life, but the old Adam cleaves to them even to their graves, the contest between the Spirit and flesh also continues. Therefore, they “delight in the law of God, after the inward man,” Rom. 7:22 ; but the law in their members wars against the law of their mind. Thus they are never without law, and yet they are not under, but in the law, living and walking in the law of the Lord, and yet performing nothing through constraint of the law.
But with respect to the old Adam, who still inheres in them, he
must be coerced, not only by the law, but by chastisement ; he nevertheless does all unwillingly and through constraint, no less than the ungodly, who are urged by the threatenings of the law, and kept in obedience, 1 Cor. 9:27, and Rom. 7:18–19. Further, this doctrine of the law is likewise necessary for believers, lest they should depend on their own sanctity and devotion, and under the pretext of the Spirit of God, institute self-chosen methods of
worship, without the word and command of God, as it is written, Deut. 12:8,28,32 : “Ye shall not do after all the things that we do here this day, every man whatsoever is right in his own eyes.” “What thing soever I command you, observe to do it : thou shalt not add thereto, nor diminish from it.”
and...In this manner Christians are not under the law, but under grace, because they are freed from the curse and condemnation of the law through faith in Christ, and because their good works, although still imperfect and unclean, are acceptable to God through Christ ; because, moreover, so far as they are born anew
after the inward man, they do from their hearts that which is pleasing to God, not through the constraint of the law, but through the renewal of the Holy Spirit. But nevertheless, they sustain a continual struggle with the old Adam.
I do believe that a Christian needs to hear the Law firstly because he is not fully renewed because of the flesh and secondly as some kind of reminder of who he really is in Christ -a new creation. I, a Christian, want to hear more often why Christ died for me on the cross and be exhorted to live a life worthy of my calling. If this is not done more often, I am likely to take my renewed life for granted and forget altogether a life that’s pleasing to my Lord.
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