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Obedience to the Faith
Romans 1:5
by Bob Wilkin
When I was six years old my parents enrolled me in a religious
boys club. We played football, basketball, and baseball each
weekend. One day each week after school we would meet for
practice and for our "club meeting." At the meeting we
would receive religious instruction.
I was taught that in order to be saved we had to prepare
ourselves morally. We had to come to the point where our lives
were essentially characterized by obedience. While we would not
be perfect, we would have prepared ourselves for Christ to
forgive what little sin we had left.
I tried very hard to obey God. I remember my agony in 9th
grade as I kept realizing that I was falling far short of
perfection. I couldn't achieve a level of obedience that I felt
would be acceptable to God.
I didn't know at the time that I was struggling with a issue
which plagues many people. What is the role of obedience in
salvation? Must a person promise to obey God to have eternal
salvation? Or, must one actually begin obeying God? Or, must one
achieve a certain level of obedience in order to qualify him for
salvation?
Paul used an expression in the book of Romans which has been
used by some in an effort to prove that to go to heaven one must
obey God as a pattern of life. Unfortunately, Paul only gives a
bare expression without any explanation:
Through Him we have received grace and apostleship for
obedience to the faith among all nations for His name (Rom
1:5).
(The same expression for obedience to the faith occurs in
Rom 16:26. There, too, there is no contextual help to clarify
what Paul meant.)
Our understanding of the expression for obedience to the
faith clearly affects our view of the Gospel and of assurance
of salvation. As we shall see, some find in it support for the
idea that wholehearted devotion to Christ and ongoing obedience
are necessary to go to heaven.
Three Possible Interpretations
The expression obedience to the faith is a translation of
an extremely flexible Greek construction (eupakoen
pisteos). The construction clearly links obedience and faith
in some way. The grammar, however, does not nail down the
connection. Actually the grammar essentially allows for three
different understandings of this connection.
Option #1:
Obedience to the faith refers to faith that obeys-that all
who believe in Christ obey God. This takes the noun faith
essentially as the subject of the verbal noun
obedience-faith obeys. This could refer to absolute
obedience (sinless perfectionism), to characteristic obedience,
or even to occasional obedience. However, most who hold this
understanding adopt the characteristic obedience understanding.
According to the characteristic obedience view there is no sharp
distinction between evangelism and discipleship. To be saved
people must produce lives that are characterized by obedience.
While temporary moments of disobedience may occur, the overall
pattern of life is holy.
The late Reformed theologian John Murray wrote the following
concerning this expression:
Hence the implications of this expression `obedience of
faith' are far-reaching. For the faith which the apostleship was
intended to promote was not an evanescent [i.e., quickly fading]
act of emotion but the commitment of wholehearted devotion to
Christ and the truth of his gospel. (John Murray,
Romans, Two Volumes in One, The New International
Commentary on the New Testament [Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans
Publishing Co., 1959, 1965], pp. 13-14.)
Reformed pastor and radio teacher John MacArthur similarly
comments:
Faith is by nature turned and toned toward obedience ...
so good works are inevitable in the life of one who truly
believes. (John F. MacArthur, Jr., Faith Works
[Dallas, TX: Word Publishing, 1993], p. 142.)
Option #2:
Obedience to the faith refers to obeying the teachings of
Scripture. In this understanding faith is essentially the
object of the verbal noun obedience. Paul was
trying to get Gentiles to obey the faith. If the faith is
understood to refer to all of the teachings of the Christian
faith, then discipleship is in view.
Lange writes,
An Epistle, sent to Rome by the ambassador of a Lord and
King, who declared himself appointed to call all the peoples of
the Roman Empire to obedience or allegiance, must have been
planned in full consciousness of the antithesis, as well as of
the analogy, between the earthly Roman Empire and the Kingdom of
Christ. Therefore the Apostle expresses the analogy when he
characterizes himself as an ambassador who appeals to the nations
to be obedient to his Lord. But the antithesis lies in his
denoting this obedience as an obedience to the faith. (J. P.
Lange and F. R. Fay, Lange's Commentary on the Holy
Scriptures, Vol. 5: The Epistle of Paul to the Romans [Grand
Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1960], p. 63.)
Govett appears to hold this view as well (though his wording
allows for the possibility that he might hold some form of the
first view). He says,
The receivers by faith of the message are to obey it. For
with the gospel go forth commands. Faith is to show itself by
obedience. (Robert Govett, Govett on Romans
[Hayesville, NC: Schoettle Publishing Company, 1981], p. 4.)
Option #3:
Obedience to the faith refers to believing the Gospel.
This view understands the faith to refer to the Gospel
message. Grammatically this view is arrived at either by
seeing the faith as the object of obedience or by
seeing faith as appositional to obedience, that is, the
obedience which is faith. Thus in this view the obedience in
question is obedience to the Gospel message.
Commenting on our expression in Rom 1:5, Anders Nygren writes,
One receives in faith that which God proffers us through
Christ. This is "the obedience of faith." Paul is aware
that he is to bring the Gentiles thereto. (Anders Nygren,
Commentary on Romans [Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1949],
p. 55.)
Similarly, Zane Hodges comments,
An expression like "obedience to the faith"
(Rom. 1:5; 16:26) has nothing to do with works that follow
salvation...Naturally, God demands that men place faith in His
Son and is angry with them when they do not (John 3:36). Faith is
an obedient response to the summons of the Gospel. But the man
who exercises faith is reaching out for the unconditional grace
of God." (Zane C. Hodges, The Gospel Under Siege,
2nd ed. [Dallas, TX: Redención Viva, 1992], pp.
105-106.)
Which Interpretation Is Correct?
The Context, and Other Passages
Rule Out Option #1
While the grammar here is extremely flexible and it allows for
the first view, the context and other passages rule out the
characteristic obedience view. Murray and MacArthur read their
theology into the text, rather than allowing the text to speak
for itself.
The context. All we have in both places is a bare
expression without explanation. Nothing in the immediate context
suggests that all believers always have wholehearted devotion to
Christ and that they are always set on obeying God. In fact,
other passages in Romans clearly contradict this. In other places
in Romans Paul exhorts believers to obey God and holds open the
possibility that they might not. "Shall we continue in sin
that grace may abound? (Rom 6:1)." "Do not let sin
reign in your mortal body, that you should obey its lusts (Rom
6:12)." "I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the
mercies of God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice,
holy, acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service. And do
not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the
renewing of your mind...( Rom 12:1-2)." And, "Let us
walk properly, as in the day, not in revelry and drunkenness, not
in lewdness and lust, not in strife and envy (Rom 13:13)."
Other passages. In addition, other NT passages do not
support the understanding that Paul was talking about
"wholehearted devotion to Christ" or "good works
[which] are inevitable in the life of one who truly
believes." In 1 Corinthians Paul chided the believers at the
church of Corinth for being "carnal and behaving like mere
men [like unbelievers]" (1 Cor 3:3). In that same chapter he
also said that it is possible for a believer's works to be burned
up in God's fire of judgment, "but he himself will be saved,
yet so as through fire" (1 Cor 3:15). In 1 Cor 11:17-34 Paul
further rebuked the Corinthian believers for abusing the Lord's
Supper. Some of them actually became drunk as part of their
so-called worship! He said that as a result of this some of them
were sick and some had died (v 30). Both James and John also
spoke of believers dying as a result of God's judgment due to sin
in their lives (Jas 5:19-20; 1 John 5:16).
Romans 1:5 does not teach that saving faith always results in
ongoing obedience to God. Rather, it merely says that whenever
anyone trusts in Christ for eternal life, he has obeyed God's
command to do that, as we shall now see.
Parallel Passages Rule Out Option #2
and Confirm Option #3
The context and other passages allow for both the second and
third options. Therefore, the decisive factor in understanding
what Paul meant is parallel passages. While there are no other
passages in the New Testament which use this exact
expression (other than Rom 16:26 which is equally vague), there
are quite a few which use nearly the same expression. These
parallel passages refer to believing the Gospel and hence confirm
option #3.
Paul linked obedience and the Gospel elsewhere
in Romans, "They have not all obeyed the gospel" (Rom
10:16). Possibly the closest parallel to Rom 1:5 is Rom 15:18-20.
There Paul indicates that Christ has sent him "to make the
Gentiles obedient" and so he concludes that "I have
made it my aim to preach the gospel." Likewise, in 2 Thess
1:8 Paul referred to unbelievers as "those who do not obey
the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ."
In addition, many other New Testament passages outside of
Paul's writings refer to faith as an act of obedience to God's
command to trust in Christ. In referring to the growth of the
early church, Luke-Paul's traveling companion and fellow minister
of the Gospel-wrote in Acts 6:7 that "many of the priests
were obedient to the faith (emphasis added)." That,
of course, is almost the exact expression Paul used in Rom 1:5.
Luke was referring in that summary statement to the fact that
many Jewish priests obeyed God's command to believe the Gospel.
John 3:36 says "He who believes the Son has eternal life;
but he who does not obey the Son shall not see life, but
the wrath of God abides on Him" (NASB, emphasis added). Here
disobeying the Son is clearly the opposite of believing Him. In
other words, disbelief is an act of disobedience.
The apostle Peter made this same contrast: "Therefore, to
you who believe, He is precious; but to those who are
disobedient, `The stone which the builders rejected has become
the chief cornerstone'" (1 Pet 2:7). Similarly, Peter spoke
of believing the Gospel as "obeying the truth" in 1 Pet
1:22.
This interpretation fits the grammar, the context, the rest of
Paul's epistles, and parallel passages.
Implications Regarding Assurance of
Salvation
Jesus called people to believe in Him. Thus whenever anyone
believes in Him, he is obeying Him. Saving faith is an act of
obedience.
Assurance of salvation is linked to God's promise to those who
believe in Christ, not to ongoing obedience. The expression
obedience to the faith does not refer to ongoing obedience
to all that God has commanded. No one but the Lord Jesus has done
that. If a person thought he had to obey all of God's commands to
go to heaven, then he would know he could never make it. He could
never have assurance he was saved. In fact, he could be
absolutely sure that he could never be saved!
We are all sinners who fall short of the glory of God (Rom
3:23). Only by God's grace manifested in the death and
resurrection of Christ can anyone be justified before God (Rom
4:1-8).
Obedience to the faith specifically refers to obeying the
command to believe the Gospel. If you've done that, you can be
sure that you've exercised the obedience of faith. And,
since God desires that all men to be saved (1 Tim 2:4), whenever
anyone trusts in Christ and is saved, God is pleased. That is why
evangelism is something which is close to God's heart.
This article is adapted from an upcoming book which bears the
same name as this newsletter, Grace in Focus.
Return to Grace in Focus Newsletter
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