Divinely Given Faith
Really Works!
The first premise
of the Christian gospel is that man is a sinful creature
and guilty of sinning before his holy and righteous
creator. All of mankind is depraved according to the
Gospel of Jesus. For all have sinned and fallen short
of the glory of God. (Romans 3:23) We are all sons
and daughters of Adam and Eve. When Adam sinned, sin
entered the world and all fell in Adam. (Romans 5:12-21)
Without the premise of a sinful and corrupt world,
there would be no gospel.
The second premise of the Gospel
of Jesus is that God has taken the initiative to reconcile
mankind to Himself through the miraculous incarnation
of His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. (1 John 4:10) In
times prior to the coming of Immanuel--God with us--(Matthew
1:23), God spoke in various ways. He revealed Himself
through the Patriarchs and Prophets of Israel. (Hebrews
1:1,2) He gave Israel His law and a sacrificial system
through Moses until the long awaited Messiah would
come. The Christian gospel teaches that Jesus Christ
was that long awaited Prophet, David's son yet David's
Lord. (Acts 2:29-35)
This God/Man Jesus came in a miraculous
manner and announced that He was God incarnate having
been sent from the Father to proclaim the Gospel of
God.(John 6:37,38) After being recognized from on
high, "Thou art My beloved Son, in thee I am
well-pleased" (Mark 1:11), Jesus came into Galilee,
preaching His Father's Gospel. (Mark 1:14)
On more than one occasion Jesus announced
that He had come to do the will of His Heavenly Father.
He did not come to do His own will but the will of
Him who sent Him: "For I did not speak on My
own initiative, but the Father Himself who sent Me
has given Me commandment, what to say, and what to
speak. And I know that His commandment is eternal
life; therefore the things I speak, I speak just as
the Father has told Me." (John 12:49,50)
During His earthly ministry Jesus
did a lot of things, not all of which were chronicled.
John supposes that if everything Jesus did was carefully
detailed, the world could not contain the books needed
to record it all. (John 21:25) We are to be content
with what has been written and to strive to understand,
faithfully interpreting and applying it to our lives.
This is precisely where the problem
begins when it comes to witnessing the Gospel of Jesus
to those outside of an understanding of God's revelation
to this world. There are many religions vying for
the ear of an increasingly secular society. Many of
these religions are using the Bible as a basis of
their authority. They claim to have sorted out the
meaning of the Bible and now come speaking and preaching
their understanding of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
All manner of chaos has broken out since the ascension
of the Lord Jesus Christ into Heaven. Most every major
religion and religious movement in the world has had
something to say about the Gospel of Jesus.
In our debates with the Roman Catholic
religion we have found it particularly frustrating
to get them to see what we believe is the heart and
soul of the Gospel of Jesus. The problem stems from
their understanding of Jesus' message preached during
His incarnation. The life of Jesus is recorded in
four testimonies of four different authors--Matthew,
Mark, Luke and John. Each author presents Jesus in
a unique way with particular emphasis on an aspect
of Jesus. But the accounts are a harmonious blend
of history and theology. It is God's unique way of
presenting for us the multifaceted ministry of Jesus.
Like most religious organizations,
the Roman Catholic religion relies heavily on the
sayings of Jesus to formulate their version of the
Gospel of Jesus. There is nothing wrong with this.
We do the same. However, the severe and insurmountable
difference we have with Rome is in the interpretation
of the data. This is where the frustration level reaches
its zenith when witnessing to a Roman Catholic or
debating one of their representatives. Rome finds
in the words of Jesus a performance-based salvation.
We find in the words of Jesus the impossibility of
a performance-based salvation. Rome's position is
stated clearly by the Council of Trent:
"If anyone says that a man
who is justified [in Rome, this means Roman Catholic
Baptism] and however perfect is not bound to observe
the commandments of God and the Church, but only
to believe, as if the Gospel were a bare and absolute
promise of eternal life without the condition
of observing the commandments, let him be anathema."
(Trent, 6th Session, Canon 20. Brackets and emphases
added)
We read in Matthew that, "From
that time Jesus began to preach and say, 'Repent,
for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.'"(Matthew
4:17) Luke expands on the initial stages of Jesus'
public ministry. Upon entering the synagogue in Nazareth,
He opened the scroll and read from Isaiah 61:
"The Spirit of the Lord is
upon Me, because He anointed Me to preach the
gospel to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim
release to the captives and recovery of sight to
the blind, to set free those who are downtrodden,
to proclaim the favorable year of the Lord."
(Luke 4:18,19)
We realize that the ministry of Jesus
Christ was to set people free from their spiritual
bondage. We understand that Jesus came to proclaim
the forgiveness of sin and the hope of eternal life.
The question that separates us from the Roman Catholic
religion is simply, "How?" How is one set
free? How is one delivered? How is one made a child
of God? How is one reconciled and justified? How is
one saved?
Roman Catholicism insists that Jesus
has set up a system of grace-dispensing sacraments,
a system which calls down grace from heaven through
the works of men. This grace is said to enable man
toward moral improvement. Moral improvement, says
Rome, is a condition man fulfills for entrance into
heaven. Thus, salvation is conditioned upon
obedience to the Gospel. Obedience to the Gospel,
in turn, is conditioned upon receiving the
grace of God. Receiving the grace of God, in turn,
is conditioned upon obedience to the Roman
system through which that grace is dispensed. This
is why Roman Catholics assert that they are "saved
by grace," a 'grace' which produces enough moral
improvement for them to eventually qualify for heaven.
In 1988 John MacArthur, a noted evangelical
pastor, wrote a book entitled, The Gospel According
To Jesus. This book took the Christian community
by storm. It attempted to answer the plague of modern
evangelicals who were promoting a salvation so divorced
from works that fruit was seen as optional in the
Christian walk. The issues of MacArthur's book are
analogous to our struggle in presenting the gospel
to Roman Catholics. John MacArthur was forced to showcase
the ethical implications of Jesus' teaching in order
to dislodge those who were intent on reducing the
call of the gospel to bare intellectual assent with
no corresponding life change. MacArthur could have
borrowed the 20th Canon of the Council of Trent (above)
in his diatribe against what he calls, "an insidious
easy-believism that makes no moral demands on the
lives of sinners." John MacArthur says this separation
of the Lordship of Christ--and the morality
demanded by Him--from the Gospel of Christ,
is not the same message Jesus proclaimed.
We bring this up because John MacArthur
had to walk a fine line between the moral commandments
of Jesus on the one hand, and the Gospel of salvation
through faith alone on the other. We mention this
to point out how easy it would be to slip into a works
salvation while trying to protect the integrity of
the Gospel and its life-changing force. We do not
believe that, in his zeal, Dr. MacArthur crossed the
line. However, Rome has long decided that all moral
commands of Jesus are part of a performance prerequisite
for eternal life. But in Rome, precious few ever become
good enough to actually go straight to heaven, and
few are considered so bad as to deserve hell. This
is why the erroneous doctrine of Purgatory is so essential
to Rome and is viewed by her as God's graceful provision.
Rome clings to its system of a grace-aided, performance-based
salvation relying upon the many ethical commands of
Jesus, holding out Purgatory as a safety net for those
who cannot meet them, and Heaven as a reward for those
who do.
Rome, thinking this is the true "good
news," perceives a failure in the professing
evangelical community to take the moral commands and
ethics of Jesus seriously. Rome sees what MacArthur
saw: "The gospel in vogue today holds forth a
false hope to sinners. It promises them they can have
eternal life yet continue to live in rebellion against
God. Indeed, it encourages people to claim Jesus as
Savior yet defer until later the commitment to obey
Him as Lord. It offers false security to people who
revel in the sins of the flesh and spurn the way of
holiness." (The Gospel According To Jesus,
pp. 15,16) Rome could have borrowed from MacArthur
in its formulation of the 20th Canon of the Council
of Trent.
The remedy to this, for Rome, is
the insistence that we are going to be judged eternally
on the basis of how good we can become through the
help of God's grace dispensed through the sacraments.
John MacArthur, on the other hand, understands the
tensions which exist between salvation by faith apart
from personal righteousness and the call for personal
righteousness inherent in the preaching of Jesus and
His apostles. This tension can be highlighted by focusing
on one chapter of Scripture. Notice how closely the
two concepts are aligned:
"Truly, truly, I say to you,
he who hears My word, and believes Him
who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come
into judgment, but has passed out of death into
life." (John 5:24, emphasis added)
"Do not marvel at this; for
an hour is coming, in which all who are in the tombs
shall hear His voice, and shall come forth; those
who did the good to a resurrection of life,
those who committed the evil to a resurrection of
judgment." (John 5:28,29, emphasis added)
How is eternal life to be determined?
Is it on the basis of believing or on the basis of
doing the good? MacArthur found some popular
professing evangelicals who so stressed faith
alone that works could not even be considered
to be a necessary evidence of regeneration! For these,
the individual's bare faith (as prompted by the Spirit
of God and not resisted, thus making it a
self-generated faith) is sufficient for salvation
regardless of any consequent obedience to the Lordship
of Christ. With MacArthur, we view this as truly an
error of great proportion. One must believe that Jesus
is Lord and Savior. Only self-generated faith wishes
to separate the Saviorship of Christ from His Lordship.
We believe this is the real issue. Any faith orginating
with man will attempt this unscriptural segregation.
The Roman Catholic answer is that
salvation is conditioned on individual faith (prompted
by the Spirit and not resisted) plus the
works produced by God's grace (again not resisted)
as dispensed from the Sacramental system. However,
this is nothing more than self-salvation. The Roman
Catholic is constantly warned to maintain his own
salvation through his non-resistance to alleged grace
offered through a positive adherence to a system,
and to a rigorous cult of religious obediences completely
foreign to the Bible.
The answer we believe to be the most
biblical, which does justice to the gospel and its
life-changing effect, is that salvation is by faith
alone. However, this faith is not of man, but of God.
Furthermore, this faith does not come to man without
simultaneously testifying to Christ and His moral
commands. To protect the integrity of the gospel,
which demands faithfulness to the Lord, is not to
summon men to their own self-generated faith. Rather,
it is to admit once for all that faith is given
by God and it therefore produces a fruit of righteousness
which cannot be divorced from ethical and moral transformation.
(Luke 8:15) Faith given by God produces the man who
"does the good." Faith self-generated by
man is only filthy rags. Such as these will not inherit
the Kingdom of God. Faith given by God is not intellectual
assent. It is a full confidence in the finished work
of God for salvation accompanied by a true desire
to please God. The miracle of regeneration is that
it produces faith in man that desires to obey after
having clutched onto the righteousness of Christ alone
as his only hope for deliverance. (Titus 2:14)
The Gospel of Jesus is to believe
on Him. This entails confidence that what He says
is true. The heart regenerated by God will produce
the good fruit. The evil heart will not. (Luke 8:12-14)
He whom God gives to Christ comes to Him by the faith
given. (John 6:37,65) He will be raised on the last
day. (John 6:39) He will have done the good by the
same faith that was given for his salvation. For if
one has faith without works he is lost. It is a faith
of his own. And if one has works without believing
the gospel, then he too is lost for they are works
of his pride and arrogance. But when, not if, one
shows forth God's gift of faith to him, then he gives
evidence of being saved to the uttermost. His confidence
is all in Christ and his works are a result of the
faith He has been given by God.
We say to the professing evangelical
who wishes to divorce himself from serious attention
to the moral commands of the Gospel of Christ, "No
fruit equals no root"! We say to the Roman Catholic
who wishes to place confidence in his ability to live
rightly through a sacramental system, "No root
equals no fruit"! Between the these two thieves--licentiousness
and legalism--hangs the Prince of Glory! |