The exact meaning of justified is not always the same, and like any other word, it must be determined from the context (1 Timothy 3:16; Romans 2:13; Romans 3:20; Romans 3:24).1 In this case, to be justified is to be declared righteous in God’s sight,2 to enjoy a status of being in a right relationship with God, to be accepted by him.3 Paul affirms that it is impossible for human beings to be made right in God’s sight by observing the law. This is not because the law itself has problems (Romans 7:7–13),4 but because we are unable to keep it perfectly in all its parts as a result of our sinful nature (Romans 3:10–20).5 Peter’s later speech in Jerusalem (Acts 15:7–11) attests that he agrees with Paul that no man is justified by doing what the law demands.6
16 Néanmoins, sachant que ce n'est pas par les œuvres de la loi que l'homme est justifié, mais par la foi en Jésus-Christ, nous aussi nous avons cru en Jésus-Christ, afin d'être justifiés par la foi en Christ et non par les œuvres de la loi, parce que personne ne sera justifié par les œuvres de la loi.