You mean the need to obey by believing the Gospel, the Gospel that is the power of God unto salvation?
Romans 1:16
For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is God’s power for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.
Ephesians 1:13
And when you heard the word of truth (the gospel of your salvation)—when you believed in Christ—you were marked with the seal of the promised Holy Spirit,
Looks to me like we are saved and sealed when we believe.
Funny how you accuse me of ignoring verses that call for obedience which you fail to supply but ignore the verses I show you saying we are saved when we believe. I love irony.
Romans 10:16 - But they have not all
obeyed the gospel. For Isaiah says, "Lord, who has
believed our report?" We
obey the gospel by
choosing to believe the gospel by
trusting in the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ as the ALL-sufficient means of our salvation. Which is not to be confused with multiple acts of obedience/works which "follow."
Folks who teach we are saved by believing
and obeying are teaching salvation by faith and works. Prior to my conversion several years ago while still attending the Roman Catholic church, I basically defined faith "as" obedience and any act of obedience accomplished I would simply call it faith. Back them I would have said faith "is" baptism, faith "is" multiple acts of obedience, faith "is" works which is a critical error that culminates in works salvation/works righteousness.
I once shared
Ephesians 2:8,
9 with a Roman Catholic and told him we are saved by grace through faith, not works and that Roman Catholic answered, "I know that." But as we discussed it further, I could tell he misinterpreted
Ephesians 2:8,
9 as saved by grace through faith "infused" with good works and just not saved by works of the law. That same Roman Catholic denied that the Roman Catholic church teaches salvation by faith AND WORKS and then he contradicted himself by sharing this with me below in
blue.
We are saved by faith - as long as you properly define "Faith". Faith is not simply "believing". Faith INCLUDES: Being water baptized, eating His body and drinking His blood/partaking the Lord's Supper during Mass, works of mercy and charity, obeying his commandments etc..
His argument about faith being
defined as and
INCLUDES these works above (yet at the same time denying that Roman Catholicism teaches salvation by faith and works) is just sugar-coated double talk and equates to salvation through faith (his version of faith) and works. Roman Catholics basically teach that we are saved by faith "infused" with works and I hear people who attend the church of Christ say that we are saved by faith "conjoined" with works. Both groups re-define faith to "include" works and end up trying to "shoehorn" works "into" salvation through faith, not works. (
Ephesians 2:8,
9)
The Greek words for faith "pistis" and believe "pisteuo" are two forms of the same word. "Pistis" is the noun form, "pisteuo" is the verb form. Nothing in the root meaning of either word carries any concept of works. If you believe in/have faith in Jesus Christ for salvation, then you are trusting in Him alone to save you. Now although this belief/faith results in actions appropriate to the belief/faith (to one degree or the other/all genuine believers are fruitful, yet not all are equally fruitful --
Matthew 13:23) the actions are NOT INHERENT in the belief/faith.