Saving
Faith in Focus
Confusion over the gospel abounds. I hear it from people all over the
country and around the world. They don’t know what to believe. They aren’t
sure what God requires. Is it turning from sins or commitment of life?
Inviting Jesus into their hearts? Obeying the Golden Rule? Confessing their
sins? Being baptized?
There is only one true gospel. The key is to discover and believe it.
However, that isn’t necessarily easy to do, because many different gospels
are being preached and it is hard to determine which one is correct.
Most forms of the gospel being preached today are what I call faith-plus
gospels. These say that faith in Christ for eternal life is necessary,
but that it is not enough.
Works must accompany faith, according to faith-plus gospels, in order for a
person to make it to heaven. There are two versions of the faith-plus gospel.
¨
Salvation by faith plus
works. Some say that one must
have faith plus works in order to obtain salvation. A person lacking
sufficient good works, or guilty of major sins, will not make it to heaven,
even if he believes in Christ.
¨
Salvation by faith that
works. Others say that one
must have faith that works. They claim that one is saved by faith in Christ
plus nothing, but that true faith
in Christ results in commitment, obedience, turning from sins, etc.
This may sound significantly different than salvation by faith plus works.
However, it is actually another way of saying the same thing.
There is no real difference between saying that to be saved you must
turn from sins, commit your life to Christ, and believe in Him, and saying
that believing in Christ necessarily results in turning from your sins and
committing your life to Him. Both insist that turning from sins and commitment
of life is necessary to obtain final salvation.
¨
Salvation apart from
faith or works. In addition to
faith-plus gospels, there is one gospel requiring no faith at all! That is the
gospel of universalism, which teaches that all are already saved, or will
ultimately be saved. According to this view no one will spend eternity apart
from God, even those who never believed in Christ. This view can surface
anywhere, even in very conservative, evangelical churches. The motive may seem
to be good—an abhorrence of people going to hell—but it is a direct
contradiction of God’s Word. The way to keep people from hell is by
proclaiming the true gospel that they might believe it and be saved, not by
distorting the gospel.
Understanding the gospel is not a matter of taking a poll. The majority
is rarely right and that is especially true in terms of the gospel. Jesus
said, “Enter by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate and broad is the way
that leads to destruction, and there are many who go in by it. Because narrow
is the gate and difficult
is the way which leads to life, and there are few who find it” (Matthew
7:13
-14). Jesus unequivocally said that the majority of people are on the wrong
road. Many are on the broad way. Few
are on the narrow way.
The gospel
is contrary to our expectations. Very few things in life are received simply
by believing. (Actually, I can’t think of anything, other than eternal life,
which is received by faith alone.) Thus, the gospel seems to be “foolishness
to those who are perishing” (1 Corinthians
1:18
).
To be saved you must resist the impulse to follow the crowd. There is
only one reliable guide to spiritual truth and that is the Bible.
When the apostle Paul went to the city of
Berea
, he began teaching in the Jewish synagogue. Paul’s traveling companion,
Luke, reports that the Bereans “were more
fair-minded than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with
all readiness, and searched the Scriptures daily to find out whether these
things were so” (Acts 17:11).
Every person should study the Scripture to see whether the gospel they
are hearing is correct. We should all be like the Bereans,
searching the Scriptures, so that we will know what to believe.
The only condition of eternal salvation is faith in Christ. Even a
casual reading of the Gospel of John, the only book in Scripture whose purpose
is evangelistic (John
20:31
),
makes this clear. “He who believes in Me has everlasting life” (John
6:47
). “He who believes in Him is not condemned” (John
3:18
). “Most assuredly, I say to you, he who hears My word and believes in Him
who sent Me has everlasting life, and shall not come into judgment, but has
passed from death into life” (John
5:24
). “Whoever lives and believes in Me shall never die [spiritually]” (John
11:26
).
The Bible is God’s Word. As such, it is without contradiction. We can
be sure that if these and many other passages list faith in Christ as the sole
condition of eternal life and freedom from condemnation, this is indeed true.
There are no other conditions.
What Is Faith in Christ?
Let’s begin by considering what faith
is. Once we determine that, we will consider what faith
in Christ is.
¨
Faith is the conviction
that something is true. We all
exercise faith every day. For example, most of us believe that George
Washington was the first President of the
United States
because we have recognized that the evidence is convincing.
Do you believe that you exist? That is, are you convinced
that you are alive? I once met a college student who doubted his existence and
that of everything in the universe. I was tempted to pinch him to give him
some tangible evidence! Most rational people are certain they exist, no doubt
about it. The evidence is overwhelming.
Though long past her childbearing years, Abraham’s wife Sarah
believed that she was going to have a son. God had said she would: “By faith
Sarah herself also received strength to conceive seed, and she bore a child
when she was past the age, because she
judged Him faithful who had promised” (Hebrews
11:11
, italics added). Ninety-year-old Sarah was positive that God would keep His
promise, and would do what He said. Abraham too was “fully
convinced that what [God] had promised He was also able to perform”
(Romans
4:21
, italics added). Faith is being convinced or persuaded (the kjv
has “fully persuaded” here) of the truth of something—in this case, the
promise that a son would be born to an elderly couple.
The key to believing something is the proof in favor of it. Thus,
despite popular opinion, faith is not really a choice. You don’t
“choose” to believe that George Washington was the first President, that
you exist, that two plus two equals four, etc. Similarly, Sarah and Abraham
didn’t “choose” to believe that God would keep His promise to them
regarding a son. When the evidence that something is true persuades people,
they believe it. When they aren’t persuaded, they don’t believe it.
Let’s say you were on a jury. After listening to all of the evidence,
you concluded that the defendant was guilty. Could you choose
to believe that he was innocent? Of course not. You could vote
not to convict, but that would be acting dishonestly, contrary to what you
believed. The only way you could move from belief to unbelief or the other way
around is if you came to perceive the testimony differently.
Doesn’t this mean, then, that the evidence traps us? In a sense, yes.
However, two people can look at the same evidence and draw different
conclusions because they have different opinions on whether the evidence is
trustworthy. We are guided by our perception of the evidence. We believe
evidence that we perceive as true. We don’t believe evidence that we
perceive as false.
Therefore, faith is not a decision. It is the conviction that something
is true. It is especially important that we understand this, for much
confusion about the gospel has resulted from the mistaken idea that we can be
convinced that the gospel is true and yet not be saved until we decide to
believe it.
¨
Faith in Christ is the
conviction that He is the Guarantor of eternal life for every believer.
Faith in Christ is sometimes called saving
faith, since the Bible teaches
that all who believe in Him have eternal salvation. There are many things that
Jesus promised. When the Bible speaks of “faith in Christ,” it is talking
about believing a specific promise that He made. Jesus explained that saving
promise to His friend, Martha:
Jesus
said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me,
though he may die, he shall live. And whoever lives and believes in Me shall
never die. Do you believe this?” She said to Him, “Yes, Lord, I believe
that You are the Christ, the Son of God, who is to come into the world.”
—John
11:25-27
“Do you believe this?” Jesus’ question to Martha cuts to the
heart of the gospel. While Jesus promised many things in the course of His
ministry, this one promise is the key to gaining eternal salvation. Jesus is
claiming to be “the resurrection and the life.” Anyone who believes that
has eternal life and will never die.
First, as “the resurrection,” He guarantees, “He who believes in
Me, though he may die, he shall live.”
That is, He insures bodily resurrection from the dead to all who believe
in Him. Since we know from other Scriptures that both believers and
unbelievers will be resurrected (Daniel 12:2; John
5:29
; Acts 24:15), this must refer to the resurrection of the righteous, also
called the first resurrection (Revelation 20:5-6). Jesus is promising that
death will not keep a believer from bodily participation in His eternal
kingdom. All believers will live eternally in glorified bodies in Jesus’
kingdom.
Notice that this promise has no other conditions. Many add to what
Jesus said and end up with this distorted gospel: “He who believes in Me and
turns from His sins and perseveres in good works, though he may die, he shall
live.” That is not what Jesus promised. A person who believes this altered
message does not believe what Jesus said.
Second, as “the life,” He certifies, “Whoever lives and believes
in Me shall never die.” This is another way of reinforcing what He has just
said. In verse 25 He confirms that physical
death cannot keep the believer from bodily participation in the eternal
kingdom. In verse 26 Jesus affirms that no believer will ever experience spiritual
death. As “the life,” Jesus is the Guarantor of eternal life:
“Whoever lives and believes in Me shall
never die.” He guarantees the believer will never lose eternal life. All
who believe in Him are secure forever.
Some say, “Yes, He is the Giver of eternal life; however, to be saved
takes more than just believing. You must also commit your life to Him, turn
from your sins, confess Him, obey Him, be baptized, etc., etc., etc.” Once
again, if a person is convinced that this distorted message is true, then he
doesn’t believe what Jesus is saying. Jesus made it clear that the only
condition is being convinced that He guarantees eternal life to all who
believe in Him. Add anything to that and you have a different gospel.
Martha believed Jesus’ promise. In answer to the question, “Do you
believe this?” she said, “Yes, Lord, I believe.” She then went on to
acknowledge Him as “the Christ, the Son of God, who is come into the
world.” She knew that Jesus was the Messiah and as such, He certainly
fulfills His promise to give eternal life, life that is forever secure, to
every believer (compare John 20:31). Martha understood that there were no
strings attached. She knew that she had eternal life and that she would never
lose it because Jesus, as the Son of God, was trustworthy.
The apostle Paul sums up what Martha, and every Christian, believes
when they come to faith in Christ: “However, for this reason I obtained
mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might show all longsuffering, as a
pattern to those who are going to believe on Him for everlasting life”
(1 Timothy 1:16). In order to
be saved, we must believe on Jesus for
everlasting life. On the basis of His death and resurrection, He always
fulfills His guarantee to give everlasting life to all who believe in Him for
it.
Martha did not decide to
believe in Jesus for eternal life. She was convinced of the truth of what
Jesus said and hence she believed in Him in the biblical sense.
¨
Faith in Christ does not
erase every problem. It
greatly saddens me when I hear some evangelists tell the unsaved to believe in
Jesus for benefits other than eternal life. “Believe in Jesus and He will
heal your broken marriage.” “Believe in Him and He will turn your finances
around.” “Become a Christian and all your depression will vanish.”
People who believe in Jesus for a better marriage, for financial prosperity,
or for emotional well being, are not guaranteed eternal salvation.
Many today
think they are saved because they went forward at some meeting and gave Jesus
their life, believing in Him for something other than eternal life. While it
is true that He can help us with all issues in life, that is not the promise
of the gospel, and the help He gives is not necessarily the deliverance we
want. He doesn’t guarantee a happy marriage, good finances, or freedom from
depression to every believer. There are many factors other than faith in
Christ, which influence these things. However, the only condition of eternal
life is faith in Christ!
What Saving Faith Is Not
It is sometimes helpful to consider what something is not.
This is particularly true of saving faith. Contrary to popular understanding,
none of the following are a part of or a synonym for saving faith: believing
general Bible truth, promising to serve God, praying, walking an aisle, being
sorry for your sins, turning from your sins, inviting Jesus into your heart,
believing with a special kind of faith, doing good works, or having heart
faith.
¨
Believing general Bible
truth. You can believe many
biblical concepts and still miss the one truth that is saving—the truth of
the gospel. For example, you can attest to Jesus’ deity, His virgin birth,
and His bodily resurrection, and yet not believe Jesus’ promise to give you
eternal life freely if you just believe in Him for it. There is only one truth
that will save: Jesus’ guarantee that anyone who believes in Him for eternal
life has it.
¨
Promising to serve God. Promises,
promises! Almost every child who goes to a Christian camp makes some sort of
commitment in front of a campfire. If all the young people who promised to
become missionaries had done so, there would never be a lack of workers on any
mission field in the world.
Many have vowed to serve God in the hope that their commitment would cause God
to save them. Because it is possible to promise sincerely to serve God, and
yet not be convinced that Jesus freely gives eternal life to all who just
believe in Him, commitment isn’t an absolute indicator of saving faith.
(Many cult members are radically committed.) Pledges to serve God in hopes of
gaining salvation actually become a stumbling block, for to be saved one must
believe in Christ alone for eternal
life, not Christ plus commitment.
¨
Praying.
A very popular evangelistic technique today is to ask unbelievers to pray
to become Christians. However, there is not one biblical example of anyone
ever praying to be saved. Jesus never led anyone in a prayer of salvation, nor
did any of the apostles or evangelists mentioned in the Bible. A person is
saved by believing in Christ for
eternal life, not by praying.
¨
Walking an aisle.
Asking unbelievers to come forward—to walk the aisle or come to the
front of the auditorium—in order to be saved is another popular evangelistic
practice without biblical precedent. A person may stand before others with
complete sincerity and with a strong desire to be saved and yet return to his
seat not having believed in Christ for eternal life. Coming forward will not
save. Only believing in Christ will save.
¨
Being sorry for your
sins. A popular song of years
past contained the phrase, “Cry me a river.” You may indeed shed many
tears, be extremely sorry for your sins, and yet not believe in Christ for
eternal life. No amount of anguish over sin can open the way to heaven. Only
believing in Christ alone can.
Recognition of one’s sinfulness shows a person that he needs a
Savior, and this acknowledgment may result in tears. But the presence or
absence of tears is not the point. Nowhere does the Bible say that being sorry
for your sins is a condition of eternal life. There is but one requirement:
believing that Jesus is the Guarantor of eternal life to all who just believe
in Him.
¨
Turning from your sins.
Can someone undergo radical changes in his or her life without believing
the gospel? Of course. Often, for example, unbelieving alcoholics give up
drinking. Moral reform is certainly possible. And it is a good thing to do in
the sense that it is always best to follow God’s blueprint for living,
whether or not you are a Christian. Yet, moral reform will not save.
In fact, if people think that turning from sins is a condition of
salvation, their faith in moral reform can actually prohibit
them from being saved. To be saved, a person must believe that Jesus
guarantees eternal life to all who believe in Him.
¨
Inviting Jesus into your
heart. Another very common and
unfortunate evangelistic appeal is telling people to invite Jesus into their
hearts in order to be saved. The problem here is that they can invite Jesus
into their hearts and yet not believe in Him for eternal life.
Some individuals have invited Jesus into their hearts hundreds of
times. Whenever they doubt the efficacy of what they did (with good reason),
they just repeat the invitation, thinking: Maybe
I didn’t invite Him in sincerely enough the last time.
Jesus enters the lives of people the moment they believe in Him for
eternal life.
¨
Believing with a special
kind of faith. Some pastors
today teach that saving faith is different than everyday faith.
This, however, is just not true. All faith is the conviction of the truth of
some proposition. What makes saving faith saving
is not the uniqueness of the faith, but its object. Saving faith results
instantly in eternal salvation because it believes in the right object: the
guarantee of life made by Jesus Christ to every believer.
¨
Doing good works.
Saving faith should not be confused with doing good works.In their zeal to call people to godliness, some pastors and theologians
today mingle the two.
A desire for godliness is admirable. However, it is simply not true
that in order to believe in Christ for eternal life you must also do good
works and forsake bad works. Works have no place in saving faith. Saving faith
is based solely on what the Lord Jesus has already done and promises to do for
us. It is not based even in part on what we might do for Him.
The thief on the cross was a terrible sinner who was at death’s door.
He had only hours left to live. He couldn’t offer Jesus any good works, any
service, any moral reform. He could only believe in Him, and that he did. Even
though Jesus’ own disciples were disheartened and had lost faith in His
return to set up the kingdom, the thief boldly said, “Lord, remember me when
You come into Your kingdom” (Luke 23:42). Jesus’ response shows the
freeness of the gospel for all who believe in Him: “Assuredly, I say to you,
today you will be with Me in
Paradise
” (Luke
23:43
).
Head Faith, Heart Faith, and Mind Games
How do you convince someone that saving faith is not just faith in the
gospel, that it includes commitment, turning from sins, perseverance in
obedience, and the like? Since there is no verse in Scripture that identifies
saving faith as anything other than believing the gospel, you’d have a hard
time proving your view from the Bible. However, there is an easier way.
The best way to sell the idea that saving faith includes the kitchen
sink is through the use of pejorative terms like intellectual
faith or head faith. Some
preachers and teachers tell people that just believing the facts of the gospel
is intellectual faith or head
faith. Then they espouse the idea that the Bible teaches that the faith
that truly saves is heart faith.
Heart faith can include
almost anything. However, heart faith raises potential problems. How
much commitment, turning from sins, obedience, and the like is enough? The
biblical evidence demonstrates that this supposed distinction between head
faith and heart faith is really a mind game.
First, the Scriptures never refer to the head
as the source of thinking and feeling. In addition, the word head
is never associated with faith in the Bible.
Second, of the two remaining words, heart
and mind, the Scriptures often
use them interchangeably.
Both refer to the inner self where one thinks and believes
and feels.
Third, the mind is not viewed as being inferior to the heart in
Scripture. In one of the most famous verses on sanctification in the Bible,
Paul exhorted the believers in
Rome
, “Be transformed by the renewing of your mind”
(Romans 12:2). Similarly, he exhorted the Ephesian
believers, “Be renewed in the spirit of your mind”
(Ephesians
4:23
). Paul spoke to the Corinthian believers of having “the mind
of Christ” (1 Corinthians
2:16
). Luke said that the Lord “opened [the disciples’] understanding
[literally mind in Greek], that
they might comprehend the Scriptures,” that is, the Old Testament
Scriptures, concerning His resurrection (Luke 24:45).
Fourth, while the words believe
and faith occur approximately 450
times in the Bible, only a few passages specify where belief takes place.They speak of believing as though the reader of Scripture knows what
that means and where it occurs.
Believing in Christ is the sole condition of eternal life. There is no
such thing as special types of faith called heart
faith and head faith. Saving
faith doesn’t include commitment, obedience, or turning from sins. It is
merely the conviction that Jesus is speaking the truth when He says, “He who
believes in Me has everlasting life” (John
6:47
).
There Is No
Additional Step
Many well-meaning people unintentionally introduce a lot of confusion
when they say something like this, “Do you believe that Jesus, by His death
and resurrection, freely gives eternal life to all who believe in Him? Great!
Now would you like to trust Him?”
This two-step approach to saving faith is confusing. How does a person
who already believes something choose to trust it? Say, for example, that you
believe that Jesus is God. Do you also need to choose to trust
His deity in order to really believe it? Of course not. You believe in
Jesus’ deity if the evidence convinces you that He is indeed the Second
Person of the Trinity. What you believe, you trust to be true.
The same is true with the gospel. If you believe it, you are saved.
Jesus guarantees it.
Sometimes
this supposed distinction is illustrated by means of a chair and belief in its
ability to hold one up. The illustration goes as follows.
“Do you believe that this chair will hold you up if you sit in it?”
“Yes, I believe it will.”
“Okay, then have a seat.”
“No, I won’t do that.”
“Then you don’t really
believe the chair will hold you up, for to truly believe it, you must
trust that it will hold you up. And you only trust it when you take a seat.”
The illustration is patently false. Only a masochist would sit in a
chair he didn’t “really believe” would hold him up. You sit in a chair because
you already believe it is dependable, not in
order to believe it is.
The only condition of eternal life is belief in Him for it. Once you do
that, you have eternal life. There is no additional step involved.
Yes, Believing the Gospel Is Enough!
Saving
faith means believing the gospel, believing in Christ alone for eternal life.
Nothing else is saving faith. Not only is believing the gospel enough, but it
is the only way to salvation. Jesus guarantees eternal life to all who believe
in Him for it. Do you believe this?
We hope that this booklet has helped you understand what saving faith
is. If you would like to purchase printed copies of this booklet for your
friends and family, please visit our bookstore at http://www.faithalone.org/bookstore
or call 940.565.0000.
.
For example, “Thus my heart was
grieved, and I was vexed in my mind”
(Psalm 73:21). There is synonymous parallelism here. That is, the two halves
of the verse are saying the same thing using synonyms. To be grieved in your
heart is to be vexed in your mind. The same thing is evident in Hebrews
8:10, “I will put My laws in their mind
and write them on their hearts.”
Mind and heart
are used synonymously there.
Another example is found by comparing Luke 24:25 and
Luke 24:45:
“O
foolish ones, and slow of heart
to believe in all that the prophets have spoken.”
“And
He opened their understanding [lit. mind],
that they might comprehend the Scriptures.”
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