Below are links and doctrinal notes for the hymn His Robes for Mine by Chris Anderson and Greg Habegger. Feel free to chime in with comments or questions.

_____

LINKS FOR HIS ROBES FOR MINE

Full Page / Half Page / Modulation / Text / MP3

_____

DOCTRINAL NOTES

Because God delights in worship that is biblical, thoughtful and passionate—what we often call intentional—please consider the following overview of the biblical texts and doctrinal themes behind the hymn His Robes for Mine:

The 4 verses focus on 4 major themes included in the doctrine of justification. Verse 1 addresses the hymn’s overriding theme of “The Great Exchange.” Jesus Christ was made sin for us in order that we might be declared righteous in Him. The great doctrine of imputed righteousness and unrighteousness grows out of a number of wondrous texts (2 Corinthians 5:21; Romans 3:19-4:8; Philippians 3:9) and is often pictured in Scripture by the exchange of garments (Isaiah 61:10; Zechariah 3; Matthew 22:1-14; Revelation 7:9-14). Hence, the theme of the song.

Verse 2 focuses on Christ’s active obedience—the fact that He mastered God’s Law in the place of sinners who could not, thus earning righteousness on our behalf. It was added essentially at the recommendation of my teacher and friend Michael Barrett, who has done a great deal to assist me in my understanding of justification. The key lesson here is that the righteousness imputed to me was Christ’s earned righteousness which He acquired by perfect obedience to God’s Law, not the inherent righteousness which He has eternally possessed by virtue of His deity. The great truth of Christ’s perfect obedience to the Father’s will and the imputation of that righteousness to repentant sinners is taught in Matthew 3:15; John 8:29; 1 John 2:1; Romans 1:17; 2:13; 3:22; 4:4-6, 11b and 5:17-19; 1 Corinthians 1:30, et al.

Verse 3 focuses on the grand doctrine of propitiation, the fact that God’s wrath was not merely deflected from us by Christ, but was rather absorbed by Him in our place. Jesus Christ bore the infinite wrath of God against sin, satisfying God’s wrath and enabling sinners to be forgiven—and justly so. Isaiah 53:10-11 describes it this way: God looks on the travail of Christ’s soul and is satisfied by it. His wrath has been exhausted on Christ. The doctrine of propitiation is taught Isaiah 53, Romans 3:25; 1 John 2:2 and 4:10, et al.

Verse 4 summarizes the hymn by describing the results of the Great Exchange—Christ forsaken and the sinner embraced by God. The role change of the sinner and Christ is amazing: the beloved Son of God was forsaken (Matthew 27:46) in order that the cursed enemy of God might be beloved (Romans 5:1-2; Hebrews 10:19-22; 1 John 4:9-14). Though I understand this doctrine biblically, I certainly cannot fathom it. It is astounding. It is wonderful.

Finally, we added a refrain which expresses our wonder at the cost of our salvation, then responds to Christ’s love with worship and consecration (Romans 6:19-20; Romans 12:1-2; Acts 20:28b). Thus, the song doesn’t really progress from verse 1 to verse 4, but instead moves toward and peaks at the refrain after each of the four meditations. Greg expresses the heartbeat of the refrain wonderfully with a gorgeous melodic line, and I trust that your congregation will delight to lift your voices and proclaim: “I cling to Christ and marvel at the cost!”

As with other projects, our greatest delight would be for the Lord to use this song to point people toward Christ. I pray that it will help you mine the infinite riches of the salvation won for us when Christ donned our filthy garments of sin and provided for us the robes of His own righteousness! What a Savior the Lord Jesus is! To Him be all glory, honor, and praise!

(The notes for His Robes for Mine were written by Chris Anderson.)

Tags: , , , ,

11 Responses to “His Robes for Mine: Notes and Discussion”

  1. Hello, My name is Chris Rea. I am a student at BJU. We sang your song “His Robes for Mine” in chapel yesterday. I was greatly moved by the words in the song. I am not one that usually will cry a lot, but when I started singing and thinking of the words I started to. The words of this song greatly moved me and blessed my heart. I want to thank you so much for it. I work at a summer camp during the summer. WE always do special music for the campers and I was wondering if I could have your permission to sing this song in the summer. Thank you very much. Have a great day. God Bless.

    In Christ
    Chris Rea
    Gal 2:20

  2. Hi, Chris. I’m so glad that the Lord used the song in your life. We have a wonderful Savior!

    Please use the song. Doing so is well within the terms we present here. I hope it will point many people Christ-ward!

    Chris Anderson

  3. Thank you very much! God Bless!

  4. Thanks for making His Robes for Mine available. We introduced it to our church yesterday. The music is beautifully written and the lyrics are so Christ honoring.

  5. Just wanted to make sure it was alright to sing your music for specials in a church setting. Thank you for this inspirational modern hymn. A very powerful message to both believers and the lost as to what Christ accomplished for us through His finished work of grace!

    May every blessing be yours!

  6. Hi, Abe. Please use it. Just don’t sell it. Or let us know if you intend to. :)

    Thanks for the encouragement!!

    Chris

  7. Thank you, Chris and Greg, for making this wonderful hymn available for wider use in the Body. I’m always looking for new hymns saturated with Scriptural truth. What a joy to find this text! And the tune heightens my glorying in these truths by stirring my affections towards the One Who made the Great Exchange. Meditating on these things through this hymn certainly does incite me to “cling to Christ.” I plan on introducing this to my church tomorrow. Thank you, again.

  8. We were introduced to this song at church in Kansas City and I love it. I was very excited and pretty much bought the new SoundForth CD entirely just to have this song. It is so rich with doctrine and I listen to the words and meditate on them often.

  9. I listened to this song for the first time yesterday. I immediately bought the Soundforth CD which it was on and have not stopped listening to it. This is such a powerful song. I thank you for putting it out. I was wondering if there are guitar chords for it as I love playing the guitar and would like to add it to my collection?

  10. This is a beautiful song. I first heard it on “Promises”. Thank you so much for allowing others to use it for congregational singing. Ours will be learning it soon. Praise the Lord for your ministry.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Michael Barrett’s “Complete in Him” Should Be Back in Print « My Two Cents

Leave a Reply

You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>