The Light of the Law: Tav

Tav gives us a real sense of finality here at the end of this wonderful Psalm. You could summarise it as, “Hear my cry, I will praise you, be ready for me if I trip, I have not always done right”.

It feels like his last comments before he rises to action, like Frodo locking his front door at Hobbiton before setting off with the Fellowship. He just needs one more reminder that God is listening, God will help him and God will fetch him if he goes astray. Surely this author and the current reader can identify with that feeling. Let’s dive in.

Let my cry come before you, O Lord;

    give me understanding according to your word!

Let my plea come before you;

    deliver me according to your word.

119:169-170

There are five ‘let’ phrases in this poem, although there only seems to be a meaningful connection between these first two. They mirror each other quite closely, with the first phrase of both being ‘Let my (cry/plea) come before you’, and the second phrase being a request (for understanding/deliverance) ‘according to your word’.

On a practical note, the language here reminds this author that fervent and regular prayer is probably not a mild mumbling or a lukewarm listing of wants and concerns, but a cry. Too often this author’s prayer is more like recording a voicemail (in terms of passion and vigour) than coming before the all-powerful God of the universe who loves him.

It also really appears that this Psalmist prays with his Torah at hand, because in these verses as in much of the Psalm, he anchors his request in what he knows of God’s ways from his word. This is a good model for us. We should ask that God blesses us in accordance with his promises and with his word.

My lips will pour forth praise,

    for you teach me your statutes.

My tongue will sing of your word,

    for all your commandments are right.

v171-172

Just like the previous two verses, these two verses mirror each other quite closely. In both phrases he sings to God, either pouring forth praise or singing of his word. Then both verses establish that behaviour on the basis of God’s law, either in God teaching his statutes to the Psalmist, or in the recognition that all his commandments are right. Whenever we see a structure like this, we should take some time to consider and meditate on the pairing, and see what it has to teach us about the things it compares.

Did you notice that in v171 he says “you teach me”? This shows us that God is directly involved in our process of learning his word, whether in personal Bible study, in a Sunday School classroom, or otherwise. We do well to pray that God would give us understanding and true knowledge when we lead a Bible study or take part in one, because ultimately it his His Spirit who is present to build and furnish our souls with a mature knowledge of his statutes (cf. John 14:25-26).

There are two further points for consideration here. Firstly, our brother sings songs of praise because of his increasing knowledge of God’s word. This easily gives us reason to include in our Sunday Worship songs that speak of learning and reading his word, even though that is not currently en vogue in contemporary Christian music. Secondly, it makes sense that as we learn God’s ways more and more, as we have the powerful words of Scripture bouncing around in our heads more and more, that our souls would more naturally rise up in praise to God, even in small ways at small mercies. Praise is what all humans are built for, and those elect people who become new creations in Christ are praising in the only way that is good and beautiful.

Naturally verse 172 is much the same, and fills out our picture for us. We can sing about God’s word. It isn’t idolatry to love the Bible. All his commandments are right, so the Bible is the only book you can pick up where you never have to worry about spitting out the bones.

So, as a quick note of application, go find some theologically rich Christian music, especially some that references doctrine we learn in Scripture, and sing your heart out! After all, you’ll be doing it for all eternity.

Let your hand be ready to help me,

    for I have chosen your precepts.

I long for your salvation, O Lord,

    and your law is my delight.

v173-174

The language of this first line is so tender, like a child asking her father to stand by as she attempts a risky new feat like riding a bike or diving into a pool. As Christians we know that God’s hand is powerful, and that he is always paying attention and so could help us at any moment, but we are fallen humans, and it is reassuring to be reminded of it. As we noted at the beginning of this piece, language like this gives the impression that our Psalmist is about to rise and take action, and he’s looking for that last pep talk, that last skerrick of encouragement before he sets off.

What’s more, the request seems very sensible. God has given him rules about life. He has explicitly chosen to follow God’s rules. It makes sense that if he’s trusting God’s ways, he hopes that God would intervene on his behalf should calamity come knocking.

The second phrase is similar. He longs for God’s ‘salvation’. As we have previously discussed, this isn’t justification narrowly concerned, but more like vindication and deliverance generally. He appears to be looking forward to a time in the future where he expects that he will see God publicly come in to bat for him and ‘save him’, just as he asks God to be ready to stretch out his hand should he need it.

These two verses would make for a great couplet to recite before embarking upon street evangelism. It can be stressful or confusing sometimes, so calling upon God’s help and salvation makes a lot of sense, and hopefully these words will give us the courage to stand firm on his precepts and law.

Let my soul live and praise you,

    and let your rules help me.

I have gone astray like a lost sheep; seek your servant,

    for I do not forget your commandments.

v175-176

Verse 175 seems to summarise key ideas from verses 171-172, possibly 173. He asks for life so that he can praise God (similar to ‘pour forth praise’ and ‘sing of your word’ in v171-172), and he appeals to God’s rules to do so (just like the accompanying phrases in v171-172), and he uses the same structure (let your x help me) from verse 173.

Similarly, verse 176 may be hearkening back to v169-170, since those verses had the Psalmist ‘crying out’ to God, hoping that his pleas would reach God. That perfectly maps onto the image of one who has gone astray like a lost sheep, and is now hopelessly crying out and wondering if their pleas are heard, hoping that God will seek them out and deliver them. Following on, the phrase “I do not forget your commandments” matches the phrases from v169-170 in which he appeals for understanding and salvation according to God’s word, since his knowledge of and love for God’s commandments is like that last rope of safety that he can hold onto and appeal to as he asks God to drag him out of the muck.

To bring together and paraphrase the spirit of v169,170,176, we could say, ‘God I have lost my way and I’m crying out to you. It feels like you might not hear me since I’m so far away from you, but I hope you will. I’m relying on what your word says about how forgiving you are, and how you promise to keep your people safe in your hand. Please come and get me, I haven’t forgotten everything’.

Lastly, there is something very unique about v176. It is one of only two verses in all of Psalm 119 in which the Psalmist directly admits wrongdoing or sin (cf. v67 “I went astray”), and the only place where he asks God to seek him, and not the other way. This is such a cliffhanger and an unexpected turn in this Psalm, which has otherwise stayed extremely consistent in the kinds of statements and requests made. It is the last verse of the whole Psalm, and its inclusion here can be no accident.

Likewise, take note of the manner in which he says he has strayed: “like a lost sheep”. This is totally unlike the way that wicked people turn away from God’s law, which he describes in clear terms as decided moral rebellion. He is still God’s servant and sheep, but in his weakness and folly he has gone astray. So also, dear reader, you may find yourself from time to time like this. If you have become consumed with the worries of this world or the pride in your possessions, you might have lost track. You’re still God’s servant and the sheep of his flock, but perhaps you need the shepherd to come find you and bring you back. That doesn’t mean you have become the wicked one who disparages and maligns God’s law.

So, that’s it. That is the end of Tav, the end of Psalm 119 and the end of the final post in our series ‘The Light of the Law’. We have read through and commented on each poem in Psalm 119, and it has been an incredible journey, one that has shown the invincible goodness of God’s law, the incredible blessings of faithfulness, the very real struggles and pain of living in a fallen world, the need for supernatural work in our hearts if we would believe and live faithfully, and so much more. These words are words of light, and words of life. This author prays that they have encouraged and strengthened you, as they have him.


This article series will remain visible on this blog for some time, but in 2025 much of this will be taken down, since these articles will undergo editing and revision, some extra bits will be added in, and it will be compiled together into a book which this author will sell. We hope that if you have gained from these articles, that you will consider buying it.

God bless you all.

The Light of the Law: Pe

This next poem, Pe, is simply incredible, and does something this author has not detected from any other stanza so far. This poem seems to borrow its central themes and even some of its form from one of the most famous Old Testament passages: God’s benediction from Moses to Aaron and his sons in Numbers 6:22-27. Here is that text.

The Lord spoke to Moses, saying, “Speak to Aaron and his sons, saying, Thus you shall bless the people of Israel: you shall say to them,

The Lord bless you and keep you;

the Lord make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you;

the Lord lift up his countenance upon you and give you peace.

“So shall they put my name upon the people of Israel, and I will bless them.”

The middle three lines (which are verses 24-26) are the core of this benediction, but we have given it some immediate context. As we dive into Pe, we’ll frequently make references back to this, and see just what beautiful and excellent things our ancient brother in the faith has to show us.

Your testimonies are wonderful;

    therefore my soul keeps them.

The unfolding of your words gives light;

    it imparts understanding to the simple.

119:129-130

First things first, we will kick this off with a comparison to Numbers 6. Verse 24 of that passage reads “The Lord bless you and keep you”. The adaptation that we believe the Psalmist makes in verse 129 here. The Lord’s testimonies are wonderful, they are a blessing. The Psalmist’s soul keeps them. In both cases there is something of a blessing and a keeping.

Now let us make an aside. If you consider your own soul, reader, whose words and whose ideologies are found there? Is your innermost being a place for Moses, or for Marx? Is your soul bouncing around with the words of Paul, or of Billie Eilish? You will know what you find wonderful when you discover whose words come most easily from your memory.

The Psalmist goes on to show one of the civilisation-building excellencies of the Law: it gives understanding and knowledge to the simple. Biblically, ‘simple’ isn’t an insult. It is a recognition that a person’s faculty of discernment has not developed much yet, so their moral compass isn’t fully formed, and they could still go either way. The simple need guidance, formation and teaching, but they are distinct from the wicked.

Truly, when you hear your pastor open God’s word to you on the Lord’s Day, a beacon of light is being unveiled before you. It is the deeply digested knowledge of God’s word that will fill your eyes with light and understanding.

Finally, the recognition that the Psalmist’s soul keeps God’s law shows that Old Testament worship was not behavioural (meaning that it concerned the actions of one’s hands), but in fact also concerned the inclinations of their hearts. This is a misconception put forth by some modern Orthodox Jews.

I open my mouth and pant,

    because I long for your commandments.

Turn to me and be gracious to me,

    as is your way with those who love your name.

v131-132

Verse 131 shows us what is the disposition and posture of one who has been powerfully changed by the grace of God: they are like an exhausted runner on a hot day, panting with longing for God’s commandments. Whether or not he knows and keeps God’s law isn’t a minor point for sometime in the future for him. He has seen the blessing of righteousness, and he’s putting in a mighty effort to learn it.

In the following verse we have the next reference to Numbers 6. Here is where it starts to get a little out of order, so screw on your thinking cap and follow along. Numbers 6:25 says “the Lord make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you”. The second phrase there “and be gracious to you” is there almost word for word in Ps 119:132, rendering it in the first person as “and be gracious to me”. The interesting thing is that the phrase before this is “Turn to me”, which has similarities to both phrases from Numbers 6:25 and 6:26, which are “the Lord make his face to shine upon you” and “the Lord lift up his countenance upon you” respectively.

Whichever verse he was alluding to, the first part of 119:132 is clearly drawing upon Numbers 6:25-26. However, please don’t hear this as merely an intellectual or analytical observation. Praise the Lord, because you can apply this to your daily life! How? Well, what we’re seeing is that a worshipper of God has become really familiar with God’s word, and when he’s writing his own songs and poetry he borrows language and ideas from Scripture.

We can apply this today by letting the language of our prayers, and even the language of the songs we choose to sing to God, be moulded and shaped and imbued with Scripture. To give an example, this author will include a short prayer based on Numbers 6:24-26.

“Father God, please let me see your face today as I work and drive and eat and talk. Please let me feel your love like the warm sunlight, and bring me peace in the troubles I’m facing. I ask you this in Jesus’ name, Amen.”

We’re not done. There’s still one more reference in this passage! Following the benediction in verses 24-26, Numbers 6:27 says “So shall they put my name upon the people of Israel, and I will bless them”. This is showing us that God chooses a people, puts his name on them and blesses them. Ps 119:132 also links those two themes (turning to them and being gracious to them) with what we’re now looking at (those who love God’s name). One really remarkable thing to contemplate here is the link between God putting his name on a particular people, and those people loving his name. The beautiful truth is that when God puts his name on you, it isn’t a mere formality. His love changes you. His love elicits love from you. You love his name because he put his name on you.

The careful reader might object here, saying, ‘But my friend, do you not see that God puts his name upon the people of Israel, yet here you are making application from this passage to the church today? This is a category error!’. Seeking not to draw attention away from our selected passages, this author will simply say that worshippers of Yahweh today are brothers in Christ with worshippers of Yahweh since the beginning. That is a more complicated subject, and one for a different book.

Last thing, we promise! There is a profound truth about God’s nature to cling to here. Verse 132 says “as is your way with those who love your name” (emphasis added). For those who love his name, it is God’s way, his modus operandi, his habit, to turn to them and be gracious to them. Do you feel that God deals only in harsh measures with you? Do you worry that he is watching only your neighbours and family, but letting your catastrophes bank up, one after another? This author, the wretch that he is, freely confesses to feeling that way all too frequently in recent months. If this is you too, you are not alone in this mistake. Neither are you alone when you confess it and throw it down, and when you come pleading to Jesus that he would remind you of the grace you know you have been given.

Keep steady my steps according to your promise,

    and let no iniquity get dominion over me.

Redeem me from man’s oppression,

    that I may keep your precepts.

v133-134

If you are going through something tough right now, these two verses might just be the lifeline you needed. We almost can’t believe that we have such a firm handhold in the Scriptures to hold to, when the breakers and waves of life come crashing down on us. These verses let us plead to God and ask on the basis of His promise, that he would keep our steps steady and let no iniquity get dominion over us. To be totally honest, this author doesn’t know the ins and outs of where the line is between iniquity hitting us from every side vs getting dominion over us, so we probably shouldn’t expect this verse to shield us from all iniquity, but do not let the words of this mere man dilute the promises of God!

Secondly, it is a sad but sobering reality that God’s people have experienced and will experience the oppression of man for ages to come. Since Egypt, God’s people have been slaves, but since the Exodus we have also been free men. God gives his people the liberation from the ultimate slavery and bondage which is Sin, so that we can endure any oppression and slavery we experience in this life, all the while pleading with God to set us free, let us not be put to shame, and bring justice down on our oppressors. Just think about it. Today there will be many men and women living in countries where being Christian is dangerous, and those brothers and sisters would feel the pang of this verse stronger than we would.

If you can live freely as a Christian, praise God! If you are experiencing man’s oppression, grasp this verse with all you’ve got, and ask that your God would redeem you and help you walk in his way.

But wait, is there no Numbers reference here? Well, this author didn’t see any at first. However, when comparing which Numbers 6 sections had already been cited and which hadn’t, he noticed that the second half of verse 26 (“and give you peace”) had no corollary yet. As you may now realise, those two verses that we just read are exactly that: the Psalmist’s cry for peace. It is the peace that comes in walking faithfully, it is the peace that comes from conquering schemes of iniquity. It is the peace that comes from shaking off the shackles of oppression, and it is the peace that comes from living a quiet and holy life before God. Considered positively and negatively, v133-134 are cries for peace.

Make your face shine upon your servant,

    and teach me your statutes.

My eyes shed streams of tears,

    because people do not keep your law.

v135-136

Last but not least, we have one of the most clear citations from Numbers 6. Our passage here says “Make your face shine upon your servant”, whereas Numbers 6:25 says “the Lord make his face to shine upon you”. If this reference is obvious to a 21st century Christian who hasn’t memorised any of the first five books of the Bible, how much more obvious would it be to the Jews of the day who had? This entire Psalm would just be one obvious adaptation.

It is incredible to see what you get when you mix this single-minded devotion to God and his statutes from Psalm 119 with the grand blessing language of Numbers 6, and we see it encapsulated there for us in verse 135, which says one and then the other.Finally, this poem ends with a verse that complements and yet contrasts to the first verse (v129). Our poem opened with the blessing of God’s testimonies and how his soul keeps them, and it closes with how his eyes shed streams of tears at the reality that so many live their lives without a single care for God’s law. May we Christians today also feel sorrow for the many on this Earth who have never even heard the name of Jesus or met a Christian. It is incredibly sad, but also wildly exciting. God has lost sheep in all those nations just waiting for someone to come and preach life to them. May we bring his light to shine upon them.

On Theonomy

In much the same manner as the words ‘Baptist’ and ‘Evangelical’, the simple meaning of the word Theonomy is very different from the umbrella of ideas it has come to represent. As Doug Wilson has said, every Christian is a theonomist, because theonomy (theos-God, nomos-law) is just God’s law, and every person who is truly indwelt by God’s Holy Spirit loves and cherishes his law (see Psalm 119).

God’s law is often discussed as forming three categories: moral law, ceremonial law, and civil law. These distinctions are given by the student of Scripture for the sake of effective communication, and they broadly refer to the following:

  • Moral law: These laws are direct reflections of God’s character and his created order, and since God does not change, these laws never change, and are always applicable to all people at all times, e.g. prohibitions against idol worship, murder, theft, deceit, sexual immorality, etc.
  • Ceremonial law: this author must admit to not knowing all the fullness of the ceremonial laws and their Christological significance, but to name a few, the rules surrounding Passover, animal sacrifice and the Day of Atonement (yom kippur) were laws that served as reminders to God’s people of what they were expecting their Messiah to do, so once the Messiah came and completed his mission, they no longer needed these.
  • Civil law: God gave the nation Israel many civil laws to follow that were worded in a manner peculiar to the people who were receiving said law. These were specifically for a certain people at a certain time, and it would be a misunderstanding of Scripture to try to apply these directly and literally to our lives, e.g. Lev 23:22 states that one should not harvest their fields all the way to the corners, so that the poor people and the resident foreigners could glean just enough to eat and survive from said field. Since our societies aren’t ordered the same way as Israel, if today’s farmers left part of their field unharvested, it would just be a waste of crops and of land, since poor people and immigrants don’t just walk to the nearest farm and attempt to glean from their edges (correct me if I’m wrong). Applying this law in a wooden, direct, literal and non-contextual manner would not help at all in today’s society.

So, does the Christian uphold and attempt to fulfill all three of those categories? No. The theonomist recognises that ceremonial law, that which served to point forward to the Messiah, has been beautifully fulfilled and has now passed away. The Christian would be sinning against the cross to offer a burnt offering to God if they followed the instructions given in the Pentateuch. Hebrews makes this very clear.

The category of moral law is understood by all to have continuing authority and relevance. There is not a faction of Christians who advocate that worshipping idols or slandering one’s neighbour or committing adultery with his wife are now areas of Christian freedom.

All of this has been said to establish where the disagreement lies. The disagreement lies in the purpose and proper place of the civil law in today’s society. Let us trace out some of these topics dialogically to see the way they are discussed and how the conversation develops.

Theonomist: I believe that the best law for any given nation will be laws that honour God and love one’s neighbour, and so I think there is merit for using Old Testament civil law in today’s society.

Non-theonomist: That makes no sense. Those laws were good, but they were good for a specific people in a specific place. We aren’t mostly farmers, and we don’t stone people.

Theonomist: You’re right about the fact that given the different type of society the law was given to, it would be impossible and inappropriate to directly copy and paste it into our law books. However, that’s not what I’m espousing. The New Testament establishes a precedent for the idea behind Old Testament law being applied, though not the exact situation. We call this the ‘general equity’ of Old Testament law, and I think this absolutely should be applied to our society.

Non-theonomist: Ok that makes more sense. Even still, I’m not convinced that Biblical law should be thrust upon unbelievers. I’m ok with Christians and churches self-governing according to the general equity of God’s law, even that of the Old Testament, but we adhere to God’s law out of love, in response to grace. You can’t force an unbeliever to love and follow God’s law.

Theonomist: Do we agree that whether biblical law or not, all governments are imposing a moral framework upon their people, and apart from anarchist societies, infraction against those laws is duly punished?

Non-theonomist: Well yeah, I mean most of the time the government doesn’t have to force people to do things, but I’ll grant your point that all governments have to impose some set of laws.

Theonomist: Great. The most basic position of the Theonomist is that the best laws any nation can have will be laws that come from and reflect the laws that God has given his people. No other source of law will produce statutes as righteous as those that God has revealed, and no other system will defend the rights of the downtrodden or preserve the dignity of the helpless as well as law that originates in Scripture.

Non-theonomist: Again, I agree that for Christians, following God’s law is great, and something that we love to do, but I’m not sure that’s the case for non-Christians. Would you make it illegal for people to be atheistic or to follow another religion?

Theonomist: There is an important distinction between sins and crimes. Theonomy as I understand it doesn’t mean making it illegal to disrespect or dishonour your parents. Now, I have to admit, I don’t yet know all the ins and outs of what would be crime, and what would remain as legal sin, but I don’t think apostasy would be illegal.

Non-theonomist: Well, I think that’s something you’d need to be clear on before I could entertain this system.

Theonomist: Now, let me ask you a question. Should abortion be legal?

Non-theonomist: No, abortion is murder, and murder is illegal.

Theonomist: Why is murder wrong? Can you defend that without reference to Scripture?

Non-theonomist: I can’t answer that without referencing Scripture, but many non-Christian societies have that law.

Theonomist: Correct, but they have no reference point, no standard, by which to correctly determine whether something is right or wrong. We both know that the heart is desperately wicked, and that man’s heart and mind alone are not wholly reliable for establishing justice. For us to say whether a law is good or not, we have to reference the standard of God’s law.

Non-theonomist: Yeah, I’m aware of the epistemological insufficiency of a non-Christian framework for moral judgement.

Theonomist: Great. My position is that for a nation to create good laws, they must reflect God’s revealed character and God’s revealed law. Stealing and murder are crimes because they violate God’s law. Abortion and things like sex-transition-surgery should be crime for the same reason.

Here ends the hypothetical dialogue. Our goal is to see the reasonable objections brought by the non-Theonomist, but also to see that they are objections to a position that the Theonomist does not hold. The fundamental end point of the discussion is that the only source of good laws is God. If laws are good, they reflect God’s character and his revealed law which we have in Scripture.

We will now address a couple more misunderstandings and objections, but no longer in dialogical form. The first matter is that of how this change is brought about in a society. Sometimes, this view of Theonomy is wrongly compared to the ‘7 mountains mandate’, which is an errant eschatological perspective that says that Christ cannot return until the church takes control of the seven major spheres of influence in society (Education, Religion, Family, Business, Government, Arts and Media).

There are a host of problems with this perspective, but the aspect we draw attention to is that it envisions top-down change rather than bottom-up change. That is, the church must ‘invade’, ‘occupy’ or ‘transform’ spheres of power so that they transform the people in them. In this way, they are targeting the ‘top’, and hoping that by transforming the highest level, transformation will trickle down to the hearts of the people (note: if the esteemed reader is a proponent of seven mountains theology and would like to offer a correction on that summary, feel free).

The view of Theonomy that we posit here does include societal change at all levels in the direction of conformity to the image and law of Christ, but it sees that change as being bottom-up. It is as simple as this: as the Good News about Jesus spreads through a population and spiritually dead people are brought to new life in Christ, it affects how they live. It becomes their desire to honour God in their place in society. Christians would choose to educate their children in a way that God has commanded, namely in the nurture and admonition of God (Eph 6:4). They would be obedient to instructions regarding worship and family life, as well as business practises. Christian artists, architects and musicians would joyfully use their gifts in worship to their creator, multiplying the renown of God’s name in society by their gifts. A nation filled with people who have been changed by the gospel will naturally bring with them gospel-shaped change. Additionally, this is an expectation of the Great Commission:

And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”

Matthew 28:18-20, emphasis mine

As Christians bring the Gospel throughout the world, the gospel changes people, they are then baptised and taught to be obedient to the commandments of God. What we mustn’t miss here is the reason Jesus gives for why this is a legitimate course of action. He says that all authority in heaven and on Earth has been given to him. Jesus doesn’t just reign in heaven, nor only in the heart of the Christian, nor only from the pulpit to the back door of the church. It is legitimate to bring about obedience to Christ on Earth because Christ is right now the King of all the Earth.

This truth bookends Paul’s Magnum Opus, the Epistle to the Romans:

“Paul, a servant of Christ Jesus, called to be an apostle, set apart for the gospel of God, which he promised beforehand through his prophets in the holy Scriptures, concerning his Son, who was descended from David according to the flesh and was declared to be the Son of God in power according to the Spirit of holiness by his resurrection from the dead, Jesus Christ our Lord, through whom we have received grace and apostleship to bring about the obedience of faith for the sake of his name among all the nations, including you who are called to belong to Jesus Christ”

Romans 1:1-6, emphasis mine

“Now to him who is able to strengthen you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery that was kept secret for long ages but has now been disclosed and through the prophetic writings has been made known to all nations, according to the command of the eternal God, to bring about the obedience of faith— to the only wise God be glory forevermore through Jesus Christ! Amen.”

Romans 16:25-27, emphasis mine

It is the expectation of both Jesus and Paul that as the gospel goes out into the world and changes hearts that lives will be changed, and that faithful obedience to God’s law will follow. In short, the gospel changes people, and a society of changed people becomes a changed society.

We argue here that this view was explained in parables by Jesus when he told his audience about the Kingdom of God:

“It is like a mustard seed that a man sowed in his garden, and it grew and became a tree, and the birds of the air made nests in its branches.”

Luke 13:19

“It is like leaven that a woman took and hid in three measures of flour, until it was all leavened.”

Luke 13:21

The Kingdom of God is something very small, something almost insignificant or hidden, that slowly but surely spreads and grows until it has reached its fullest extent. This is how the Good News works. It started with 12 scared disciples, but praise God that it has surely been spreading throughout the loaf, for today there are around 2 billion people professing faith in Christ. Whatever one’s eschatological (end-times) perspective is, one must see here that Jesus himself says that the Gospel will succeed in working throughout the dough. Compare Psalm 8, Psalm 110 and 1 Corinthians 15: in summary, Jesus is reigning, and will reign until all that opposes him has been subjected to him, and been brought low as a footstool for his feet. Only after he has destroyed all his opposition in the world will he present the Kingdom of God to the Father. This happens after the general resurrection from the dead.

For the person who has a defeatist mindset, expecting the Christian church to be oppressed into oblivion before her last-minute rescue by Jesus, this teaching will be a challenge. However, I challenge the esteemed reader to see that it is Biblical. 

Before we conclude, there is one more historical matter to address. Many nations at many times, even to the present, have organised themselves in such a way that national identity was paired with religious identity. To be Egyptian was to worship Isis and Osiris. To be Thai is to be Buddhist. To be Saudi Arabian is to worship Allah. To be Genevan under Calvin was to be Protestant. These are called Sacral societies, and this type of unity between the church and state is not endorsed or recommended by this author. This type of unity fails to understand that God has ordained three governments in Scripture: the government of the family, the government of the church, and the government of the state. Each of these is proper and Biblical. As such, the Theonomist recognises ‘sphere sovereignty’, meaning that there are different spheres of life with independent sovereignty, preventing the government from ordering the church what and how it must worship (as you see in Communist nations like China), also preventing the church from ordering the state government (as happens in nations like Iran), and recognising that the family unit is the essential building block of these governments.

We shall conclude by means of a caveat, because in discussion with a fellow theonomist, this author was reminded of one other truth: for the person who has been raised to life in Christ, and seated with him in the heavenly places, all the value of Christ’s active obedience (his having perfectly followed God’s law all the days of his life) is credited to the account of the Christian. Christ was and is the only man who ever could and ever will perfectly obey God’s law, the ultimate Theonomist, you could say. Though we have made a case here for the continuing validity and authority of God’s law, we recognise that ultimately all of God’s law was fulfilled and completed by Jesus, and as such we are not striving to be justified by our adherence to the law. We recognise that we are freed from all bondage to the law, whilst at the same time confessing that it continues to have authority over our lives. As such, the Christian can say ‘I am a slave of righteousness, and out of joyful obedience to Christ I strive to live in accordance with his law’ whilst also saying ‘My striving to adhere to God’s law is not because I hope to find justification therein, but because I love to please God, and his law brings me great liberty and freedom to glorify him and enjoy him forever’.

Dear Christian, meditate on Psalm 119, asking yourself if you can echo the Psalmist. His law is a beautiful and delightful thing, the awesome justice of it is truly the envy of nations. May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.

Blessed are those whose way is blameless,

    who walk in the law of the Lord!

Blessed are those who keep his testimonies,

    who seek him with their whole heart,

who also do no wrong,

    but walk in his ways!

Psalm 119:1-3