IMPUTED AND IMPARTED RIGHTEOUSNESS
EXPLAINED By Nyron Medina
Statement of the case
1. Imputed and imparted righteousness are usually seen as different things in apostate
theology; they are presented as happening either successively or at the very same time,
but they are presented as two different salvific functions.
“In this most illuminating paragraph, the writer traces two distinct phases in the process
of our salvation—two complementary aspects of the plan of redemption—which are in a
certain sense successive, but at the same time simultaneous; two different operations of
the same righteousness of Christ, which alone can satisfy the demands of divine justice
and make saints of us. Let us analyze in outline form these two phases:
A. THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF CHRIST BY WHICH WE ARE JUSTIFIED.
1. It is imputed to us, which is, credited, granted freely without our earning it.
2. It provides our right to heaven. It is the only merit we can claim.
3. It justifies us, that is, by it we are reckoned righteous in God’s sight …
B. THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF CHRIST BY WHICH WE ARE SANCTIFIED.
1. It is imparted in a gradual, invisible process of Christian growth.
2. It provides our fitness, or preparation, for heaven.
3. It sanctifies us, or changes us into saints, transforming our characters …” Fernando
Chaij, Preparation for the Final Crisis, p. 42. (Emphasis supplied).
2. Imputed righteousness is usually presented as the righteousness of Christ that is put not
in us, but in our account when we repent and believe. We are told that imputed righteousness gives us only a legal standing based on the death of Christ for our sins. We
may be unrighteous, but God declares us righteous still.
“Thus, the “righteousness from God” is, first of all, an imputed righteousness. That is, we
are given legal standing before God as righteous persons. We may in fact be sinners, but on the basis of Jesus’ death for our sins, God acquits those who believe in him and
pronounces them righteous … The first part of Romans deals with righteousness in a forensic and judicial sense—human beings are in fact unrighteous, but God through Christ’s death has found a legal basis in which to declare the believer righteous anyway.”
Lawrence O. Richards, Zondervan Expository Dictionary of Bible Words, p. 536.
(Emphasis supplied).
3. Imparted righteousness is usually presented as the righteousness of Christ that is
imparted actually into us. This is used to mean that we are given obedience to the Law of
God as an active change from sin.
“Now let’s look at imparted righteousness. What’s in the middle of imparted? Part.
Imparted righteousness is righteousness that becomes a part of you. It’s the same as
sanctification. It’s becoming like Christ. But it does not save you. The imputed
righteousness saves you. The imparted righteousness changes you. And it will continue to change you forever.” Steve Marshall, What’s the Difference? p. 20.
4. In looking a little more at the word impute, we are told. “To impute something to a person means to set it to his account or to number it among the things belonging to him—to reckon it to him. If something is imputed to a person, it is made his legally; it is counted or imputed as his possession. To impute means to account,
charge, credit, reckon, attribute, etc. … In all these cases the act of imputation is simply
the charging of one with something … In the same manner, when God is said “to impute
righteousness to a person, the meaning is that He judicially accounts such a one to be
righteous and entitled to all the rewards of a righteous person.” David N. Steele and
Curtis C. Thomas, Romans An Interpretive Outline, pp. 29-30.
5. We are told that imputed righteousness is justification, or is called the gift of justification
by faith. “We must be careful not to confuse imputed righteousness (which is received by faith alone and is the only ground of justification) with the personal acts of righteousness which are performed by believers as a result of the Holy Spirit's work in their hearts. These personal acts of righteousness in no way secure or add to our justification … the righteousness for which we are justified is neither anything done by us nor wrought in us, but something done for us and imputed to us.” Ibid, p. 31.
“… Jesus rendered perfect obedience to the Father and worked out a perfect
righteousness which is imputed to all who believe in Him. Christ’s representative work
(His obedience) forms the ground for the justification of His people …” Ibid, p. 42.
“… a guilty sinner who has no righteousness of his own can obtain perfect righteousness
through faith in Jesus Christ. The moment the sinner believes, Christ’s righteousness is
credited to him and consequently he is declared righteous (he is justified) by God. The
ground of the sinner’s justification before God is the imputed righteousness of Christ.”
Ibid, pp. 123-124.
6. Imputed righteousness is not put into us according to this theory, it is put into some so-called “spiritual bank account.”
“There are two other terms that go along with justification and sanctification. One is
imputed righteousness, and the other is imparted righteousness. Imputed righteousness
has to do with justification. What does “imputed” mean? What is the middle of the
word? Put. Impute means to put something to someone’s credit or account. So, imputed
righteousness is Christ’s righteousness. His 100% perfect, obedient life that is put to your
credit when you accept Him as your Saviour. God looks at your spiritual bank account
before you accept Christ, and it’s empty. You accept the Lord Jesus Christ, and instantly
it’s full. God the Father puts Christ’s perfect, 100% righteous life to your credit. He fills
your spiritual bank account to overflowing with perfect righteousness. Christ’s own
righteousness is imputed to you. It’s put to your account.” Steve Marshall, What’s The
Difference, p. 20.
7. Imputed righteousness, we are told, does not change the believer, he remains in the same
moral state as he was before he was justified or righteousness imputed to him.
“Imputation does not change one’s nature; it only affects one’s legal standing. Jesus
Christ lived a perfect life—He completely kept God’s law. The personal righteousness
worked out by Christ during His life on earth is imputed to the sinner the moment he
believes. The believer is credited with Christ’s righteousness and God views him as if he
had done all the good that Christ did. Christ’s obedience, His merit, His personal
righteousness is imputed to (credited to, set to the account of) the believer. This in no
way changes the believer's nature (any more than the imputation of sin to Christ changed
His nature); it only affects the believer's legal standing before God.” David N. Steele and
Curtis C. Thomas, Romans An Interpretive Outline, p. 30. (Emphasis supplied).
8. Here is another way in which the believer is being identified as being unchanged when
righteousness is imputed to him. God is said to look at him as if he is righteous, while in
fact he is still a sinner.
“When you and I accept the Lord Jesus Christ as our Saviour, we ourselves are guilty,
wretched sinners. But the moment we accept Him as our Saviour, God imputes to us
Christ’s perfect righteousness. He puts to our account that perfect, righteous, obedient
life. In ourselves, we are still sinners. But God doesn’t look at us in ourselves. He looks at
us in the robes of Christ's righteousness. He looks at us with Christ's righteousness
imputed to us. And how does He judge us now? Not guilty! Innocent! And that’s what
imputed means. Though we are still sinners. We still fail. We may fall. But God doesn’t
see that. As we trust in Jesus, He sees Christ’s perfect obedience in place of our imperfect
obedience.” Steve Marshall, What’s The Difference, p. 21.
9. Here is a more deceitful and yet mild statement identifying imputed righteousness as a cover for sin instead of the gift of sinfreeness. It is called a “covering of moral
nakedness.”
“The white raiment which the Faithful Witness counsels us to buy from Him represents not
only justification, which is, the imputed righteousness of Christ, Heaven’s provision for
covering our moral nakedness and pardoning our sins.” Fernando Chaij, Preparation for
the Final Crisis, p. 44. (Emphasis supplied).
10. Here is another statement that presents imputed righteousness as God blinding His mind to the reality of the believer’s wretchedness and shame of his nakedness.
“Justification is our right to heaven. The thief on the cross, without having had
opportunity to live any length of time after the forgiveness of his sins, will be saved. The
application of Christ's imputed righteousness presented him perfect and entire in the
sight of heaven. Likewise, God does not see the spiritual wretchedness of the penitent
prodigal today, nor the shame of his nakedness; but the precious robe with which Christ has covered him. He does not see the record of his sin, but the perfection of the life of Christ, who freely forgave him the moment he repented.” Ibid, p. 44. (Emphasis
supplied).
11. We can now sum up by saying that according to the theory of imputed and imparted
righteousness, the first is called justification and is the imputation of the perfect
righteousness of Christ as a cover to spiritual wretchedness and nakedness, while the
second is called sanctification, and is the gradual impartation of Christ’s righteousness for victory over sin. This is in fact the basic “righteousness doctrine” of most Protestant
churches today including the nominal Seventh-day Adventist Church. That imputed
righteousness is called “justification”, while imparted righteousness is called
“sanctification” can be seen in this statement.
“Now we’re talking about the difference between justification—imputed righteousness,
and sanctification—imparted righteousness.” Steve Marshall, What’s The Difference, p.
21.
12. On the basis of an imparted righteousness concept that represents God as seeing the
believer righteous and flawless despite the fact that he has sin in him, and an imparted
righteousness as a gradual change of moral state, we can now understand why imputed
righteousness is represented as that which saves man, while imparted righteousness does
not save the man even though it changes him.
“Whom the Lord justifies He always sanctifies. The two always go together. One saves.
The other changes. One is the cause. The other is the effect. Sanctification does not save
you. And it does not add anything to your salvation except proof—visible to the world
that you’ve accepted the Lord Jesus Christ as your Saviour. That’s what it’s all about.”
Ibid, pp. 28-29.
What the Bible Teaches
13. Now here are some summary points showing that the Bible presents a different picture, or a different explanation about imputed and imparted righteousness.
These points will later be examined from scripture.
a. Imputed and imparted Righteousness are the same thing, they are the one same
event.
b. Imputed Righteousness merely shows how the Righteousness is given to the believer,
not where it is placed, or that it is not an actual change of moral state.
c. Imparted Righteousness shows the fact that the Righteousness imputed is actually
given to the believer.
d. The way God imparts Righteousness is by imputing it, because, for God, imputing is
imparting.
e. It is the one and the same Righteousness that is imputed thus imparted. It is the
Righteousness of God, His divinity or Love.
f. Justification is by imputed thus imparted Righteousness.
g. Sanctification is by imputed thus imparted Righteousness.
h. This is so because God justifies (makes us righteous) by imputing Righteousness to the
believer, thus imparting it to him, and this separates him from sin which is
sanctification is reality.
i. Imputed Righteousness is our title to heaven because it shows that we are not saved
by our righteousness which is our good works which we perform, it shows that it is by
God’s Righteousness that we are saved. God’s Righteousness is our title to heaven, we
go there because of His Name or Righteousness.
j. Imparted Righteousness is our fitness for heaven. It is the Righteousness of God that
is given to us that fits us for heaven.
k. Since God does not impart Righteousness to us visibly pushing it into our brains,
imputed Righteousness is used to show us HOW God gives the Righteousness to us, by
His actual mental estimation of it to us, this is called imputation.
l. But it is also called imparted Righteousness, because it is meant to show us that it is by
the Spirit that God actually transmits the Righteousness to us.
m. By esteeming (imputing) and imparting (transporting) the Righteousness to us, God is
giving it to us by His mind and Spirit working simultaneously, since the Spirit knows the
mind of God.
n. Since the Righteousness of God was already placed into our hearts by the Spirit to
convict us of sin and of Righteousness, if we repent and believe, all it is left with for
God to do is to give or impart the Righteousness to us by imputing it to us, or
esteeming it as ours, then it is actually our new experience.
o. Since imputed Righteousness is in fact imparted Righteousness, it does change the
person’s moral state, thus he stands before God as indeed truly subjectively righteous;
this means, that he now has God who is his Righteousness dwelling IN Him.
14. Now in answering the various erroneous concepts about imputed and imparted
Righteousness we first see that the Righteousness imputed is the Righteousness of God, it
is God Himself or His divine nature. (Philippians 3:9; Jeremiah 23:5, 6; 2 Corinthians 9:9; 2
Peter 1:4).
15. We have seen the fact that “imputation” is a word that means to reckon, to account, or to
mentally esteem something given unto someone.
“IMPUTATION … the act of imputing or charging; attribution; … IMPUTE, to think, to
reckon; properly, to set, to put, to throw to or on … to ascribe …” Noah Webster, 1828
American Dictionary of the English Language.
16. The imputation of the Bible is not make believe counting. If it is esteemed to someone, it
is in fact the person’s thing in reality. (Romans 4:3; Galatians 3:7-9, 14; Romans 8:9).
17. Imputation is used as different words in the Bible. Some of the words are:
a. Impute
b. Counted Romans 4:3, 4, 6; Galatians 3:6.
c. Accounted
d. Reckoned
18. The Scriptures reveal that God justifies by imputation; His method of justifying the
believer is the opposite of works, it is by counting the Faith for Righteousness to the
believer. Romans 4:1-5.
19. But we must observe that when God imputed the Faith for Righteousness to Abraham, it
was really imparted to him because he actually HAD the Righteousness. Romans 4:9-11.
20. Observe that the Faith is imputed to Abraham for him to acquire its Righteousness, but the use of the word impute is meant to convey the meaning “impart” also. Because Abraham has the Faith which is imputed to the point of walking in it. Roman 4:9, 12, 20-22. not” state, but changes to the way or state God calls it. This is explained in the Bible as
Abraham’s deadness of body and Sarah’s deadness of womb as being now alive because
God counted it is so. This is exactly what imputation shows. When God counts something
to be a particular way, it really happens the way He counts it. Romans 4:17-19.
21. When God calls something that was not, as though it was, it does not remain in its “was
22. We are also told in the Bible that Righteousness is imputed to the believer that he may be
justified, but since the word “imparted” is NOT used in the Scriptures, it is implied in the
word “imputed”. We can see this by asking the question: Where is the Righteousness that
is imputed housed? In the heart of the believer, or in records in heaven alone? The
Scriptures tell us that the Righteousness is housed in the heart of the believer. This shows
that imputed Righteousness is in fact imparted to the heart, imputation being the
method used to do so. (Romans 4:9, 11; Psalms 40:10).
23. A proper translation of another Scripture shows us that the Righteousness goes into the
believer, thus it must be in him when imputed. Romans 3:22. States:
“Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ INTO [Greek “eis”] all and
upon all that believe for there is no difference.”
24. The fact that Righteousness through Faith being imputed to the believer to justify him, is
actually given or imparted to him, and he has it within, is seen by the fact that through
Faith being in him, he can now do the Law. Now if Faith and Righteousness were not in
him not being imparted to him by imputation, then, he would do the Law by his own
strength, and not because of being motivated or caused by God through the Faith of Jesus
Christ. This would be righteousness by works which is condemned by God. But all this
shows that when God imputes the Faith for the acquiring of its Righteousness to the
believer, He by this imparts it to him, and he has it in him so that He can do the Law the
right way—that is—by the Faith and Righteousness he has in him. (Romans 4:4, 5;
Romans 3:28, 30, 31).
25. We are told that imputation is forgiveness of sins. Romans 4:6-8.
26. This is so because two things happen under forgiveness:
a. The non-imputation (not counting) of the sins of the carnal mind to the penitent.
Romans 4:8.
b. The imputation or counting of Righteousness to the penitent. Romans 4:9.
27. But we observe that imputation as forgiveness is referred to in a Psalm of David, this is
Psalm 32. We need to see how it explains forgiveness which is imputation, and then we
will know if imputation changes us, thus if it is in fact the impartation of Righteousness.
Romans 4:6-8.
28. Psalm 32 tells us that forgiveness removes or lifts the rebellion from the person and
removes deceit or guile from his spirit or experience, so that he is righteousness.
means that imputed Righteousness is in fact Righteousness that is given to purify the
believer (sanctify him, separating him from sin) as God also non-imputes his idol-values
sins to him. This proves that imputed Righteousness also means God thus imparting it to
the person changing him, although the word “imparted” is not used. Psalms 32:1, 2,5,11.
(Quote from the Exegesis Bible).
29. This would also mean that David’s great Psalm of forgiveness, Psalm 51, is also about
imputed Righteousness. The heavy subjectivity in this Psalm would mean that imputation
is really transformative impartation. Psalms 51:1, 2, 6, 7, 9-12, 14, 17.
30. Another important point we can clearly see, is that imputation is called “blessedness” in
the Bible. Romans 4:6-9.
31. This blessedness is described as Justification by Faith. So that, imputed Righteousness
which is how God justifies us, is the blessedness of Justification by Faith which is described
as the gift of the Spirit. Therefore, imputed Righteousness is God giving to us
Righteousness through giving us the Spirit within. Galatians 3:7-9, 14.
32. The Spirit is in our hearts when we are justified, so that imputed Righteousness is the gift
of the Spirit that is within the heart; obviously this is imparted Righteousness, because
the Spirit is within us. So that imputation is impartation and also subjectively
transformative. (Galatians 4:6; Romans 5:1, 5).
33. This is the new birth also, because the gift of the Spirit as Justification, and which is
imputed Righteousness, is being born of the Spirit which is the new birth. Thus the new
birth is by imputed Righteousness, showing that imputation is in fact transformative thus
changing us, fitting us for heaven. The new birth transformative nature of imputed
Righteousness shows that the Righteousness is also imparted, fitting us for Heaven.
(Galatians 3:14; Galatians 4:6; John 3:5-8; Romans 8:10).
34. That Justification which is by imputation is also impartation, is seen by the fact that in the
break from inner sin, we are separated from it, and this Justification is called (first)
Sanctification. 1 Corinthians 6:9-11.
35. In Justification, when God imputes Righteousness for change in us, the fact that this is also
the impartation of Righteousness for holiness, is seen in that Justification is first of all the
non-imputation or removal of the old carnal heart, and then the substitution of it with the
new holy man. (Romans 4:6-8; Romans 6:6, 7; Ephesians 4:22-24).
36. This fact about imputation and impartation being two ways of saying the same thing is
seen in the following Scriptures which show circumcision as the putting off of the old man
of sins, which is a symbol of Justification by Faith, which is also the gift of Righteousness
by imputation, or the gift of Life. So imputation is the impartation of Righteousness or
Life. (Colossians 2:11-13; Romans 4:11; Romans 5:18; John 6:53, 54, 56).
37. The Righteousness of God imputed to the penitent is God Himself given to the penitent,
but God does not go into any spiritual bank account, He dwells in the person by the Spirit,
which is why Justification by faith, which is by imputation, is said to be the gift of the
Spirit. All this shows that imputed Righteousness (of God, God Himself), is the
impartation or gift of God in the person. (Jeremiah 23:5,6; Romans 3:22; Romans 4:3; I
John 4:16; I John 3:24; Galatians 3:7-9,14).
38. Since God dwells in light, and in Him is no darkness at all, a person who is justified by
Imputed Righteousness is in the light as God is in the light; thus God can NEVER blind His
own eyes of light to the spiritual wretchedness of such a person, because such a penitent
person who is justified by imputation is NOT in spiritual wretchedness, but in the light.
This means that the light who is Christ is in him, and this is the way God sees him.
Imputed Righteousness must therefore change the person from darkness to light, thus it is
in fact impartation. (1 Timothy 6:16; 1 John 1:5-7; John 9:5; Ephesians 5:14, 8; 2
Corinthians 4:6, 7).
39. Christ who is God is the Faithful and True Witness, thus He cannot testify of a person
having imputed Righteousness covering any spiritual wretchedness or shame of
nakedness, nor can He do to the penitent man such a thing. Imputation is impartation in
that He must remove the old garments before He gives a change of raiment of
Righteousness. This shows imputation to be a change, thus is impartation. (Revelation
3:14; Zechariah 3:3-5; Isaiah 61:10).
40. If, as the false gospel claims, that God imputes righteousness to the penitent and at the
same time imparts righteousness to change his character, then, since he is changed by
imparted righteousness, and this is the way God sees him, then why the need for an
imputed righteousness? This concepts causes the following confusions, and represents
God Himself as being confused:
a. With imputed righteousness God sees the person as righteous in standing only. This
means He does not see the believer as really righteous within.
b. Yet God is presented as seeing the believer as righteous within at the same time
because of the imparted righteousness.
c. This would mean that He is seeing the believer in two contradictory ways at the same
time; as righteous only in standing, yet righteous within.
d. This confusion can only make sense if the imparted righteousness within does not
render the believer to be free from sin within, so that sin still remains within him. Thus
God needs the imputed righteousness to see the believer as if he is truly righteous, or
that he may yet stand righteous in God’s sight.
e. This would mean that even though imparted righteousness was given to the believer to
compensate for its lack when he got imputed righteousness at the same time, sin still remained in the believer, so that good and evil (sin and imparted righteousness) dwells
together.
41. But all these contradictions reveals that these concepts are NOT the true Gospel of
Imputed and Imparted Righteousness, because the Bible says:
a. The person must be changed from within first, before he can perform the works of
righteousness that comes under (second) sanctification. Matthew 23:25, 26.
b. A good tree alone can bring forth good fruit, and an evil tree bring forth evil fruits. The
believer can only do righteousness in (second) Sanctification, if he is first righteous
within (or made so by imputed Righteousness). Thus imputed Righteousness must first
change the person, and this means that it is also imparted Righteousness. (Matthew
7:17-20; 1 John 3:7).
c. The Bible shows that imputed/imparted Righteousness which is Justification by faith
makes the person free from sin within. Romans 6:6, 7-11.
d. When Jesus makes the believer free he is free indeed, or really free from sin within.
(John 8:34, 36; Romans 6:18).
42. The book Preparation for the Final Crisis written by Fernando Chaij has done a lot of evil
in destroying quite a lot of Seventh-day Adventists who have studied it from cover to
cover. While the Spirit of Prophecy quotations are very informative and helpful, the evil
of the book lies in the fact that it starts off with the Evangelicals’ and false prophet's false
gospel. Then it misuses quotations concerning so-called “offshoots” from the church in
such a way, which, any criticism of the S.D.A. Church, and attempts to change it,
immediately brings a stigma upon the sincere reformer as an offshoot who is tearing
down the church. So a member is blinded by the false gospel, yet, if under conviction of
the Holy Spirit he sees the contradictions of the false gospel, and attempts to correct it in
the church, fear of being labeled, ostracized and rejected as an offshoot tearing down the
church, defers his correction and quiets his conscience.
LEVEL OF PERFECT NORM
INITIAL LEVEL OF SINNER’S LIFE
And with all the horrors and terrors of the final events, about the shaking, the sealing, the
need to overcome all sins, the Sunday law, the trial of Jacob’s trouble, the blotting out of
his past sins, and the plagues, etc., he is overwhelmed with discouragement at living holy
especially as that false gospel he studied at the beginning of the book offered no real
faith or science to actually and intelligibly overcome his sins, but more created theological confusion and doubt in his mind, or gave him a dogmatic so-called gospel
knowledge as the truth, with more excuses for needing more so-called imputed
righteousness. Most Adventists just give up and backslide leaving the religion, while
some gradually develop the horrible moral implications of the false gospel and apostatize
into the false religions of Babylon, or lose belief in religion generally, becoming irreligious
and worldly. Here is a revelation about a misleading chart in the same book. The chart
that is reproduced on the page before.
43. At the side of the chart can be found the following explanation:
“Christ’s imputed righteousness not only brings about pardon of sin on the virtue of Jesus’
DEATH but applies the merits of Christ’s perfect LIFE to the sinner. The difference
between imparted righteousness (A) and the level of the perfect norm (difference (B) that
implies a deficiency in the life of man), is supplied by Christ by His imputed
righteousness.” Fernando Chaij, Preparation for the Final Crisis, p. 45.
44. The point we can see in the chart and its comment are fatal to sinless living, the best it can
create is a lukewarm state.
These points are to be observed:
a. The chart will imply that at this so-called conversion, the believer receives more
imputed righteousness than imparted righteousness to be taken as true, it would mean
that God only sees the believer as righteous more than he really is righteous. This is
self-deception on God’s part.
b. The level of the perfect norm is not the believer being really righteous within, but
merely being counted as righteous by an imputed righteousness. If the believer has
reached the level of the perfect norm by an imputed righteousness which is as easy as
just repentance and believing, why should he be really motivated to struggle so hard in
sanctification under imparted righteousness to reach that same norm which he is
already at? This concept is fatal to sinless living.
c. If, according to the comment that accompanies the chart, deficiency in living righteous
under imparted righteousness is supported by Christ’s imputed righteousness, then the
imputed righteousness causes God to view the morally deficient believer as “perfect
norm”. Why does God need to do that at all? After all, He still sees the man as not at
the level of the perfect norm, this is why He has to give him more imparted
righteousness to grow to that level. So the chart represents God as deceiving Himself,
yet seeing the facts. How is this clear contradiction possible in God’s perfect mind? We
do not know!
45. In answer to the chart, we need to understand the following points, as we have touched
already. a. Justification is God non-imputing the sins of the heart which are idol-values to the
penitent believer. (Romans 4:6-8; Ezekiel 36:25).
b. It is also the imputation of the Righteousness of God, the divine Nature to the person.
(Jeremiah 23:5, 6; Romans 4:3; Romans 3:22).
c. This imputation is God counting Righteousness to the person, and is the imparting or
gift of Righteousness to the person. The Righteousness is present in him. (Romans 4:5,
11; Psalms 40:10).
d. This salvific act of God really makes the believer sinless since it is also the new birth. (1
John 3:9; 1 Corinthians 15:34).
e. As he is righteous within as God is righteous, he in fact does works of righteousness.
(Psalms 40:10; 1 John 3:7).
f. Daily God imputed/imparted Righteousness, to him that he obeys from the heart that
doctrine and remains free from sin. (John 17:17; Romans 6:17, 18).
g. Since Justification by imputed/imparted Righteousness, the new birth, makes the man
sinless, he is to keep himself so that he does not fall into sin. (I John 5:18; John 3:5-8;
Galatians 3:7-9, 14; Galatians 4:6).
h. The justified man (by imputed/imparted Righteousness) does not sin. 1 John 3:5, 6, 9.
i. But if while justified he does sin, it is the man who builds again the carnal values he
destroyed making himself a sinner again. Galatians 2:17, 18.
j. Those who have been justified from sin by imputed/imparted Righteousness cannot live
in sin any longer. Romans 6:1, 2.
46. The chart (on page 21) helps explain the real nature of Biblical imputed/imparted
Righteousness:
47. God sees the above reality as change or conversion or justification (in God’s sight) and
need not to pretend as if it is so. Romans 3:20; 2 Corinthians 4:2; Galatians 3:11;
Colossians 1:21, 22; 1 John 3:22.
48. The chart on the previous shows the nature of Second Sanctification.
49. First Sanctification is separation from sin, or being holified by Justification which is being
made righteous. 1 Corinthians 6:9-11.
50. But Second Sanctification is the maintenance of the change, or the gift of Righteousness
within by abiding in the Truths of Jesus Christ. 1 John 2:24; John 15:7, 10.
51. It is also the maintenance of the change by doing the works of the Law through Faith.
(Hebrews 10:38; 1 John 2:5, 6; 1 John 3:24; 1 john 5:4).
52. So much we can say that First Sanctification or Justification is a subjective change, and that
this proves that it is imputed/imparted Righteousness, and this is separation from sin,
that the Scriptures reveal Justification to be accomplished by the word of God, which
cleans or sanctifies. (Isaiah 53:11; John 15:3; John 17:17).
53. In Second Sanctification, it is when the believer abides in Christ that he keeps the Law of
God. (John 15:4, 5; John 14:15).
54. The following quotation is an excerpt taken from the explanation of another chart from
the book by Fernando Chaij. The chart is titled the “righteousness of Christ”.
“Nevertheless, in his progressive march, the converted man may fall. Every time this
occurs, the experience of the imputed righteousness is repeated and the penitent is
forgiven. So, man arises to continue his ascending march. This way, the process of
imparted righteousness, which brings him always closer to the ideal, is combined with the
experience of imputed righteousness, which reconciles him with God every time he falls
into sin.” Ibid, p. 43.
a. Now if this is true, something is verily wrong with how God saves mankind. If every
time the man falls into sin he is given imputed righteousness to “cover … [his] moral
nakedness …” (Ibid, p. 44), and this is “Heaven’s provision for covering our moral
nakedness …” (Ibid, p. 44), so that “… God does not see the spiritual wretchedness of
the penitent prodigal … nor the shame of his nakedness …” (Ibid, p. 44), this means that
with the cover of imputed righteousness, sin still remains with the believer; how then
can he be presented as “falling into sin”? Since he is already covered while in sin,
(although he is also presented as changed), if he falls into sin, he is already covered and
does not need to be recovered with imputed righteousness. (Psalms 25:4, 5; Psalms
104:1).
b. If when the believer was justified so that God viewed him as if he were righteous even
though he still had “spiritual wretchedness”, then sin was still with him, and he was
covered with imputed righteousness; why then, if he falls into sin again, does God need
to impute righteousness to see him as if he were righteousness again? Being covered
under imputed righteousness should already cater for the fall, so that God would not
be represented as imputing more righteousness to him to see him as more righteous
than He sees him already. This is the exact way this concept, as presented by Mr.
Chaij; makes God turn out to be, dishonoring Him. But the Bible says: Deuteronomy
32:4.
c. But if we say that this is not the way to look at it, if we look at it another way, will God
still not be dishonored? If we say the fact that the man falls into sin and thus needs
imputed righteousness all over again, means that he was not in sin, or that sin did not
remain with him when righteousness was first imputed to him when he repented, this
would obviously mean that the first reception of imputed righteousness and its follow up “imparted righteousness” made him SINLESS. Why then did not God see him that
way? Why does He have to need an imputed righteousness to cover up the man’s
“moral nakedness”, or to blind His eyes to the man’s “spiritual wretchedness” and
“shame of … nakedness …”? God is here represented as fooling Himself that the man
has nakedness (which means sin) and so have to cover the man’s wretchedness
(Romans 7:23,24) with an imputed righteousness, to see him sinless, when he was
already sinless under the first imputed and imparted righteousness before he fell into
sin. This shows how this concept of imputed and imparted righteousness as taught by
Mr. Fernando Chaij is not true, and is dishonoring to our great God. (Psalms 95:10;
Psalms 96:6-9; Psalms 138:5).
55. The erroneous concepts presented by Mr. Chaij that has caused either confusion and
disillusionment or dogmatic unintelligent acceptance by many Seventh-day Adventist are
greatly dishonoring the Lord, and do not represent His way as being just and true. His
concepts of imputed and imparted righteousness is therefore no part of the gospel of
Christ, but is rather the gospel of the apostate Protestants, and must be given up. (Isaiah
55:8-11; Revelation 15:3). Revelation 18:1-4.
56. Another way one can see the evident folly of the imputed and imparted righteousness
scheme of Mr. Chaij is to ask the question: Is it not true, that if righteousness is imparted
to the person so that, as Mr. Chaij says. “… Thus, a new birth is produced and a new life of
ascension towards perfection begins …” (Ibid, p. 43), or “… It sanctifies us, or changes us
into saints transforming our characters …” (Ibid, p. 43), or it “… embraces habitual victory
over sin, gradual [ly] transform [ing] … character …” (Ibid), p. 44), or the imparted
righteousness achieves a “… transformation of life which makes us hate sin and love
righteousness …”, so that “… This new life enables us also to bring forth therefore fruits
meet for repentance …” (Ibid, p. 44), then the man is really righteous according to 1 John
5:7, so that there is no need in fact for any imputed righteousness to cover up or hide any
“shame of nakedness” or “wretchedness” of the believer. If imputed and imparted
righteousness is the way Mr. Chaij says it is, then once the imparted righteousness is
given, the need for any imputed righteousness totally disappears. All this clearly shows
how wrong this imputed and imparted righteousness concept of Mr. Chaij and apostate
Protestantism is, and can be presented as one gigantic theological enterprise in justifying
sin in the justified. But imputed Righteousness given in Justification according to the Bible
makes a man truly righteous or sinless. Romans 6:1, 2, 6, 7.
57. As we have already shown, imputed Righteousness is just a way of showing how God
imparts Righteousness. He imparts or actually gives by imputing or counting. If He
declares the penitent righteous, he is really given inner Righteousness who is Christ, and
thus God’s word (His declaration), will not return unto Him void. (Jeremiah 23:5, 6;
Romans 4:11; Romans 3:22; Isaiah 55:11).
58. The chart on the previous page illustrates what the imputed and imparted righteousness
concept of Mr. Chaij is really saying, and thus brings to view its folly in attributing it to the
all-perfect God who really saves from sin. 1 John 2:29.
59. The following statement by Mr. White is used to justify the false imputed and imparted
righteousness concept.
“The righteousness by which we are justified is imputed; the righteousness by which we
are sanctified is imparted. The first is our title to heaven, the second is our fitness for
heaven.” Ellen G. White, Messages to Young People, p. 35. (Emphasis according to Mr.
Chaij).
60. The way Mrs. White’s statement is presented and emphasized gives a wrong impression
to her statement, the following points is an explanation of the real meaning of her
statement.
a. When she says “the righteousness by which we are justified is imputed”, and that it is
“our title to heaven”, Mrs. White is referring to whose Righteousness that saves us as
against works. It is God’s Righteousness, or YHWH’s Righteousness (Jeremiah 23:5, 6),
not our works; it is through His (God’s) Righteousness (the title) that is imputed to us
to justify us that is our title to heaven, since we cannot work God’s Righteousness
which is His nature. This is what saves us, because it is the source of any good we do.
This title is the source of the Righteousness of the Law which we also do. (Jeremiah
23:5, 6; Romans 3:21, 22, 28, 31).
b. The word “title” as used by Ellen White is to show us that it is God’s, YHWH’s
Righteousness that can only be imputed to us to save us, thus it is our title to heaven,
or it is by God’s name title that we are justified. (1 Corinthians 6:9-11; Jeremiah 23:5,
6).
c. When Mrs. White tells us that the “Righteousness by which we are sanctified is
imparted”, and it is “our fitness for heaven”, what she is saying is that this
Righteousness is the right doing of the Law which is caused in us by Faith being given to
us with the Righteousness of God. (Romans 2:26; Romans 8:4; Philippians 3:9; Romans
3:22, 28, 31).
d. The two Righteousness that saves us are (1). The divine Nature of God called the
Righteousness of God which is apart from and different to the Law, and (2). The
Righteousness of the Law, or good works of the Law as is done by Faith. The first can
only be imputed while the second can only be imparted. (Jeremiah 23:5, 6; Romans
3:21, 22; Romans 9:30-32; Romans 3:28, 31.
e. However when God imputes the first Righteousness, the Righteousness of God or His
divinity, He by this imparts or actually gives in us His very divine Nature or
Righteousness, showing that this Righteousness is imparted by being imputed, so that
God Himself through the Spirit dwells in us. (Romans 3:21, 22; Romans 5:17; Galatians
3:7-9, 14; 2 Corinthians 3:17; Galatians 4:6; Romans 8:9-11).
f. We must still never forget, however, that whenever we do the works of the Law
through the influence of divine Faith, that God counts or imputes or esteems us as
doing good works of the Law, this is justification by works, so that imputation also
occurs under Second Sanctification, again showing that imputation is nothing make
believe, but something real. (Romans 3:28, 31; James 2:18-25).
g. The chart on the previous page explains what has just been discusses about Mrs.
White’s statement.
Mrs. White’s use of the word Imputedr
61. The following quotations are from Mrs. White showing that she used the word
“imputation” in a subjective sense, which means that impartation was meant in the
term.
a. Grace and even power is imputed to the believer.
“His imputed grace and power He gives to all who receive Him by faith.” Ellen G.
White, Bible Commentary Vol. 7. Quoted in, Ellen White Agrees that Justification
Cannot Be Separated from Sanctification, or Imputed from Imparted Righteousness,
p. 1. (Emphasis supplied).
b. Here strength is imputed showing that it is used to mean imparted.
“Every true Christian will be strong, not in the strength and merit of his own good
works, but in the righteousness of Christ, which through faith is imputed unto him.”
Ellen G. White, Bible Commentary Vol. 7, p. 907.
c. In this quotation imputed Righteousness makes us become partakers of the divine
Nature, showing that imputation is in fact impartation.
“By keeping the law in humanity, He made it possible for man to keep it. He imputed
to us His righteousness, which we might become partakers of the divine nature.”
Ellen G. White, Signs of the Times, February 24, 1898. (Emphasis supplied).
d. Imputed Righteousness makes us keep God’s Commandments, because it is the
making of the believer a partaker of the divine Nature.
“… through the imputed righteousness of Christ, all who receive Him by faith can show
their loyalty by keeping the law. As the repenting sinner lays hold on Christ as his
personal Saviour, he is made a partaker of the divine nature.” Ellen G. White, Signs of
the Times, April 7, 1898. Emphasis supplied).
e. Again her imputed Righteousness makes us keep the Commandments of God,
showing it is not Righteousness on some heavenly account or outside of us, but the actual impartation of Righteousness.
“Through the righteousness of Christ, our substitute and surety, our obedience to
God’s commandments is made acceptable. Christ clothed his divinity with humanity
and endured the test upon the point of appetite, ambition, and love of the world, thus
making it possible for man to keep the commandments of God through his imputed
righteousness. Through faith in Christ man becomes partaker of the divine nature,
and is complete in him as long as he walks in the light. Ellen G. White, Signs of the
Times, June 11, 1894. (Emphasis supplied).
f. Here again is the same statement showing that imputation is in fact impartation.
“He who obeys the law through the imputed righteousness of Christ, meets every
claim that the Bible presents …” Ellen G. White, Signs of the Times, Oct. 1894.
(Emphasis supplied).
g. Imputed Righteousness makes us keep God’s Law again.
“Through His imputed righteousness, they are accepted of God as those who are
manifesting to the world that they acknowledge allegiance to God, keeping all His
commandments.” Ellen G. White, Review and Herald, Aug. 22, 1893. (Emphasis
supplied).
h. Imputed Righteousness brings us into harmony with the whole Law of God. This
shows that imputation is not followed by impartation, it is impartation in fact.
“Through the imputed righteousness of Christ, the sinner may feel that he is pardoned,
and may know that the law no more condemns him, because he is in harmony with all
its precepts.” Ellen G. White, Sons and Daughter of God, p. 240. (Emphasis
supplied).
i. Obedience to the Law through imputed Righteousness shows that the imputation
actually gave us something real, and within, that we may keep the law.
“He testifies that through His imputed righteousness the believing soul shall obey the
commandments of God.” Ellen G. White, Signs of the Times, Jan. 16, 1896.
(Emphasis supplied).
j. Imputed Righteousness makes us attain to the perfection of Christian character,
showing that imputation actually gave to us Righteousness within, thus it is
impartation.
“Through the merits of Christ, through His righteousness, which by faith is imputed
unto us, we are to attain to the perfection of Christian character.” Ellen G. White,
Testimonies for the Church Vol. 5, p. 744. Emphasis supplied).
k. If imputed Righteousness enables us to render perfect obedience to God, then it must
impart the Righteousness of God to us; thus imputation is impartation.
“Let perfect obedience be rendered to God through the imputed righteousness of
Christ, and we shall reveal to the world the fact that God loves us as he loves Jesus.”
Ellen G. White, Signs of the Times. May 28, 1896. (Emphasis supplied).
l. Here imputed Righteousness comes through the transforming power of the Holy Spirit,
showing that imputation is the impartation of the Spirit.
“By receiving His imputed righteousness, through the transforming power of the Holy
Spirit, we become like Him.” Ellen G. White, Bible Commentary Vol. 6, p. 1098.
(Emphasis supplied).
m. Imputed Righteousness restores, thus it has to be imparted.
“He would have us comprehend something of His love in giving His Son to die that He
might counteract evil, remove the defiling stains of sin from the workmanship of God
and re-instate the lost, elevating and ennobling the soul to its original purity through
Christ’s imputed righteousness.” Ellen G. White, Review and Herald, Nov. 8, 1892.
n. Observe how clear this statement is. Notice it is imputed Righteousness that becomes
the living principle in our lives, showing that God imparts by imputation.
“Though faith in His name He imputes unto us His righteousness, and it becomes a
living principle in our life.” Ellen G. White, That I May Know Him, p. 302.
o. Imagine, power from God is imputed to us. Why did she not say imparted but
imputed? Because imputation is the act of impartation.
“Through the divine power imputed to them they are to return to their allegiance.”
Ellen G. White, Mind Character and Personality, Vol. 1, p. 14. (Emphasis supplied).
p. Imputed Righteousness brings us back to loyalty to God, thus it must be imparted.
“The righteousness of Christ was brought in and imputed to him that he might be
brought back to his loyalty to God.” Ellen G. White, Morning Talks, Oct. 20, 1888.
(Emphasis supplied).
q. Imputed Righteousness makes us stand against the wiles of the devil.
“… put on the whole armor of God, open the soul to the righteousness so Christ; and this
alone, Christ’s imputed righteousness,—makes you able to stand against the wiles of the
devil.” Ellen G. White, Sons and Daughters of God, p. 346.
r. Imputed Righteousness is here presented as actually making us righteous. Why did Mrs.
White not say “imparted”? Because imputed means imparted.
“In ourselves we are sinners, but in Christ we are righteous. Having made us righteous
through the imputed righteousness of Christ, God pronounces us just, and treats us as
Just.” Ellen G. White, Selected Messages Book 1, p. 394. (Emphasis supplied).
Conclusion
62. When a deceived person teach that Justification is by imputed Righteousness alone, and
does not impart anything to the believer as imparted Righteousness does, it takes only a
short while for the person to deteriorate in his doctrines to eventually develop a concept
that states that (a). No change is in the justified person, (b). It is God’s attitude that
changes, not man’s state, and (c). The man is justified while in the state of sinning.
Observe these following quotations.
a. We are told that it is a mistake to claim that justification actually changes the believer
producing any righteousness in him.
“… the single most serious flaw in trying to understand justification is to suppose that it
means “to make righteous” in the sense of actually producing righteousness in the one
justified …” Philip De Courcy, Standing Room Only, p. 320.
“In fact, justification effects no actual change whatever in the sinners nature or
character. Justification is a divine judicial edict. It changes our status only …” John
MacArthur quoted in, ibid, p. 321.
b. Justification is blasphemously presented as God having to change His attitude and not
change man’s sinful state.
“In biblical terms, justification is a divine verdict of “not guilty-fully righteous.” It is the
reversal of God’s attitude towards the sinner. Whereas He formerly condemned, He
now vindicated
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