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Justification and Verification

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

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In this article I want to draw attention to one particular argument used by some modern Protestant theologians, an argument concerning the verifiability and falsifiability of Christian belief. This argument consists of an appeal to the Pauline idea of justification, but the difficulty which the argument raises concerns the meaning which is given to ‘justification’. The concept of ‘justification’ can acquire rather different meanings from the contexts in which it is used; that is to say, the meaning which ‘justification’ has on any particular occasion depends on the character of the position which it is being used to attack. Let us look at some of these positions in order to see what differences of meaning ‘justification’ may have.

Paul gave the first peculiarly Christian exposition of the idea of ‘justification’ in his letter to the Romans, though he had previously used the idea in a more rudimentary fashion in his letter to the Galatians. Paul used the idea to distinguish Christianity from any other form of religion, particularly that of Judaism. He says that justification, i.e. the state of being righteous which allows us to stand before God without fear of condemnation even though we are technically still sinners, comes through faith and not through works of the Law (the Jewish Torah). In so far as we try to justify ourselves before God by performing pious practices and carrying out morally good behaviour, we will not succeed either in performing these works successfully or in being judged to be righteous (Rm. 3.20). But in so far as we abandon any attempt to make ourselves righteous before God, in so far as we accept that God makes us stand uncondemned, we will be judged to be righteous (Rm. 3.21-6).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1974 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 Church Dogmatics 1.2. pp. 280–361.

2 The Reality of Faith (Philadelphia 1959)Google Scholar ch. 10.

3 ‘Bultmann Replies to the Critics’ in Kerygma and Myth (London 1972), I, p. 210fGoogle Scholar.

4 ‘The Significance of the Critical Historical Method for Church and Theology in Protestantism’ in Word and Faith, p. 56f.

5 Theology and Proclamation, p. 62f.

6 Letters adn Papers from Prison (Fontana edition, London 1953) pp. 91–2, 95, 106–10Google Scholar.

7 This, of course, goes back to Lessing's statement: ‘Accidental truths can never become the proof of necessary truths of reason’, from ‘On the Proof of the Spirit and Power’ in Theological Writings, ed. by HenryChadwick, p. 55.

8 ‘Is Exegesis without Presuppositions Possible?’ in Existence and Faith, pp. 347–9.

9 ‘Response to the Discussion’ in Theological as History: New Frontiers in Theology, Vol. 3, ed. by J. M. Robinson and J. Cobb, p. 229f.