The Infinite Merit of Christ
The Infinite Merit of Christ: The Glory of Christ’s Obedience in the Theology of Jonathan Edwards
Christ, in His incarnation, life, death, and exaltation, is God’s great instrument in the manifestation and communication of His excellent perfections. (38) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
God delights in His creatures insofar as they display His own holiness and happiness communicated to them. (36) —From the The Infinite Merit of Christ
Endorsements
While setting the record straight on Edwards’s theology through leaning heavily on his own writings (800 quotes from Edwards!), Biehl’s work is also a tour de force for the confirmation of Reformed orthodoxy in the midst of ongoing debates about justification today.
Joel R. Beeke
President and Professor of Systematic Theology and Homiletics, Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary
Craig Biehl provides a thorough, detailed, well written and convincing treatment of Edwards’ view of divine merit.
Ken Minkema
Director, The Jonathan Edwards Center, Yale University
I absolutely love this book. I like everything about it from the page design; to the flow of Biehl’s (and Jonathan Edwards’s) logic; to the conclusions Craig Biehl draws from his careful analysis of Jonathan Edwards’s writings. Biehl provides a helpful rebuttal to several currently-popular points of view that have (for various reasons) downplayed the importance of imputed righteousness and rejected the significance of Christ’s human obedience to Moses’ law. This is a book to be reckoned with in all those debates.
Phil Johnson
Executive Director, Grace to You
March 30, 2016 – Thank you to Books At A Glance and reviewer Jeffrey C. Waddington for their review of The Infinite Merit of Christ.
July 23, 2015 – Thank you to Books At A Glance for their review of The Infinite Merit of Christ.
"God manifests His glory to the understanding of His creatures in the revelation of the excellence of His perfections in the Son, and in communicating His glory to the hearts of His creatures in making them participants in His holiness and happiness by the Holy Spirit. (30) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"God is glorified to a greater degree when His creatures not only see the display of His glory, but ‘rejoice’ and ‘delight’ in His glory, as that very delight is the Holy Spirit dwelling within the believer. God communicates His glory ‘that it might [be] received both by the mind and heart.’ (32) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"The love that is the Father’s delight in the Son and the Son’s delight in the Father is the very same love that is God’s delight in the believer as the Holy Spirit dwells and manifests within the believer His holiness, love, and delight in God. (33) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"As the holiness and happiness of the creature and the glory of God cannot be viewed as separate purposes of God, and as the excellence in the creature is the excellence of God communicated to the creature. (35) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"God accomplishes His ultimate purpose to display and communicate His glory to His creatures in His glory displayed in the person and redeeming work of Christ, and in the giving of the Holy Spirit to believers by whom they love and rejoice in the excellence of the Son and the Father. Consequently, God’s ultimate purpose to glorify Himself is one and the same with His purpose to communicate His happiness to His creatures, the whole of which is accomplished in and through the person and redeeming work of Christ. (37-8) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"In all things, Christ is the means by which God manifests His glory. (40) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"For the death of Christ not only satisfied the required penalty of God’s rule of righteousness, but also constituted an infinitely meritorious act of obedience. Indeed, Christ voluntarily condescended from infinite glory to suffer infinite humiliation, to suffer the greatest trial of obedience ever experienced, and to bear the infinite wrath of God for the benefit of infinitely undeserving and hateful creatures. In so doing, Christ accrued infinitely greater merit on behalf of those for whom He died than Adam would have merited for His posterity had he obeyed. The death of Christ is the apex of Christ’s redemptive work, His greatest act of obedience, and the greatest display of God’s excellent perfections ever accomplished. In this one act of obedience the positive and negative righteousness required by God’s rule of righteousness are satisfied and infinitely exceeded on behalf of sinners. In this way Christ’s obedience to death was infinitely meritorious and ‘the most exalted part of Christ’s positive righteousness.’ (195-6) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"The death of Christ is the apex of Christ’s redemptive work, His greatest act of obedience, and the greatest display of God’s excellent perfections ever accomplished. In this one act of obedience the positive and negative righteousness required by God’s rule of righteousness are satisfied and infinitely exceeded on behalf of sinners. In this way Christ’s obedience to death was infinitely meritorious and ‘the most exalted part of Christ’s positive righteousness.’ (196) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"When given a full view of the fiery furnace in which He was to enter, He was “overwhelmed with the thought; his feeble human nature shrunk at the dismal sight. It put him into this dreadful agony…but his love to sinners held out.” Such would not be undertaken by Christ “needlessly” if the salvation of His elect could be accomplished another way, for “he desired that the cup might pass from him.” Yet, “if sinners, on whom he had set his love, could not, agreeably to the will of God, be saved without his drinking it, he chose that the will of God should be done.” He chose the furnace “rather than those poor sinners whom he had loved from all eternity should perish.” He did not grasp His glory “when the dreadful cup was before Him,” He did not claim His Father’s love to avoid it, nor retreat on account of the vile nature of His enemies for whom the cup would be consumed. “On the contrary, his love held out, and he resolved even then, in the midst of his agony, to yield himself up to the will of God, and to take the cup and drink it.” (220-1) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"All of Christ’s redeeming work on earth was undertaken on behalf of His bride for whom He acted as surety and representative. The Son freely undertook to stand for His bride in binding Himself to the covenant terms and took upon Himself a human nature and body that He might stand as their proper substitute and representative. In every propitiatory and meritorious act of His entire life of humiliation He acted on her behalf, and willingly drank the cup of God’s wrath in her place. In all this, Christ succeeded in meeting and infinitely exceeding the requirement of God’s rule of righteousness for which Christ and His bride would be rewarded. Therefore, Christ’s perfect obedience merited the salvation and exaltation of the elect. (227) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"Christ’s perfect obedience to God’s rule of righteousness redeemed His bride in the accomplishment of the ultimate purpose of God. He purchased her happiness that she might dwell with Him and enjoy the glory of Himself and the Father forever. The bride is thus brought into the most intimate of communion with God and made a member of God’s family. (241) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"By the infinite display of God’s excellent perfections in the infinitely meritorious obedience of Christ, unworthy sinners are brought into intimate communion with the persons of the Trinity. United to Christ in His humanity, the saints have an intimacy beyond which they would have enjoyed had Christ not taken upon Himself a human nature, as well as a greater intimacy with the Father in being united to Christ as the eternal Son of God. God designed that through “an intimate enjoyment of the Son,” saints “shall have a most intimate enjoyment of the Father,” so “‘our fellowship is with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ’ (I John 1:3).” (242) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ
"God would not be God if a single soul were saved apart from the perfect satisfaction of God’s unchanging rule of righteousness. And, as the glory of God consists in the excellence of His perfections, there could be no display or communication of the excellence of His perfections if God were not perfectly righteous and just. (249) —From The Infinite Merit of Christ