What is the relationship between faith, works and obedience in salvation?

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UnitedWithChrist

Well-known member
Aug 12, 2019
3,739
1,928
113
#1
This question seems to be a preoccupation in this site:

What is the relationship between works and salvation?

For me, it's an easy question to answer, and involves union with Christ.

Works oriented people seem to think their status before God is dependent on works, one way or the other.

Some claim works justify you before God. Some claim works don't justify you, but if you don't do good works, you will lose your salvation.

Others claim that works aren't even a necessary fruit of salvation.

The truth is pretty plain in the Reformed perspective.

No works or personal merit can justify you. You are justified, or accounted righteous, by God through being united with Christ. Because of this union, God views you the same as Christ, in terms of his righteousness and acceptability.

This aspect of union with Christ is legal. It doesn't depend on behavior. It is a legal status conferred upon sinners who deserve eternal death. Peiod.

It is not earned by faith or repentance. In fact, God must give the person a heart of flesh to replace their heart of stone, so that they can respond in faith and repentance.

This is a truth denied by all free-willers, though. They believe in decisional regeneration. In other words, they believe that your personal decision of faith and repentance causes you to be regenerated, and to receive a heart of flesh to replace your heart of stone. Some don't even believe in regeneration, claiming that the saved man is still basically the same after salvation. This is why I reject their theology.

What about sanctification?

Scripture is plain in teaching that those who are saved are being made holy. In fact, this is a product of union with Christ, too. Believers become branches that are attached to the vine, who is Christ. They produce fruit because they are joined to the vine. Christ's presence is in them, being mediated by the Holy Spirit, and fruit is produced by necessity.

This aspect of union with Christ is called vital, because this union with Christ gives spiritual life to the person, which defeats sin and death in the person's life over time. Ultimately, sin and death is totally defeated at the resurrection.

Additionally, I think dispensational teaching has caused a lot of these issues. For instance, some dispensationalists on this site outright deny that Scriptures related to God giving the believer a new heart are specific to Israel and the Millennial kingdom. I would suggest that they are correct if dispensational hermeneutics are true, but their hermeneutic is flawed. So, dispensationalism creates a half-baked cake if their theology is consistently applied.

I believe that all the arguments regarding the place of works in salvation, in essence, are based on a misunderstanding or rejection of the believers' union with Christ. In many cases, they are related to a denial of God's sovereignty in salvation, too.

Anyways that's a summary of my thoughts on this issue. What about yours?

Here are the questions I have:

1. Is justification, in terms of being accounted righteous by God, by faith alone, or faith and works?
2. What other senses can the word "justification" or "sanctification" involve?
3. Is justifying faith provided by God, or by man?
3. If by God, is it provided to all men?
4. If all men receive this justifying faith, why is it ineffective in some?
5. Are good works and obedience a necessary fruit of salvation, or an optional fruit of salvation?
6. How does union with Christ result in both justification and sanctification?

Note: I am discussing justification in the sense of being accounted righteous by God at the moment of salvation, and sanctification as being progressively transformed by Christ over the person's life.

I am not discussing justification or sanctification in other senses. I know that justification can be used in the sense of being vindicated in the eyes of man by good works (such as James 2) and sanctification can also be used in a positional sense (being set aside by God for holy purpose at the moment of salvation), but I am not referring to those senses.

Please provide Scriptures to support your assertions.

I would produce a poll on this, but there are so many dimensions to the question.
 

JaumeJ

Senior Member
Jul 2, 2011
21,433
6,708
113
#2
You will know the tree by the fruit it bears.

If a tree bears no fruit, it is only good for the fire.
 

UnitedWithChrist

Well-known member
Aug 12, 2019
3,739
1,928
113
#3
You will know the tree by the fruit it bears.

If a tree bears no fruit, it is only good for the fire.
I was going to say, I think we can all agree on that...

however there are some who don't believe that..including antinomians from the "Free Grace" and "Grace Evangelical Society" groups...and many Independent Fundamentalist Baptists who deny that leaving one's sinful lifestyle is necessary.
 

JaumeJ

Senior Member
Jul 2, 2011
21,433
6,708
113
#4
In all fairness to all who believe Jesus, Yeshua, once they are convinced of His Salvation their own nature will change and they will follow what they believe, that is, they will follow Jesus in the manner given or allowed . Each person is a different "tree," so each person will appear differently.

So if another is not just as I am, I do not worry a lot for I do not know the hearts of men as does our Father. Thank you for this meditative and spiritually informative post...God bless you always..j
 

UnitedWithChrist

Well-known member
Aug 12, 2019
3,739
1,928
113
#5
I saw an article that proposed men begin to take on the nature of their wives, to some extent, through marriage over time.

Some even look similar to their wives.

It wasn't meant to be Christian, but I believe it is possible that this would be similar to the believers' union with Christ..they are joined with Jesus and begin to take on his attributes through this spiritual union.

I would relate this to 1 Cor 6.
 

ForestGreenCook

Well-known member
Jul 8, 2018
8,441
1,213
113
#6
This question seems to be a preoccupation in this site:

What is the relationship between works and salvation?

For me, it's an easy question to answer, and involves union with Christ.

Works oriented people seem to think their status before God is dependent on works, one way or the other.

Some claim works justify you before God. Some claim works don't justify you, but if you don't do good works, you will lose your salvation.

Others claim that works aren't even a necessary fruit of salvation.

The truth is pretty plain in the Reformed perspective.

No works or personal merit can justify you. You are justified, or accounted righteous, by God through being united with Christ. Because of this union, God views you the same as Christ, in terms of his righteousness and acceptability.

This aspect of union with Christ is legal. It doesn't depend on behavior. It is a legal status conferred upon sinners who deserve eternal death. Peiod.

It is not earned by faith or repentance. In fact, God must give the person a heart of flesh to replace their heart of stone, so that they can respond in faith and repentance.

This is a truth denied by all free-willers, though. They believe in decisional regeneration. In other words, they believe that your personal decision of faith and repentance causes you to be regenerated, and to receive a heart of flesh to replace your heart of stone. Some don't even believe in regeneration, claiming that the saved man is still basically the same after salvation. This is why I reject their theology.

What about sanctification?

Scripture is plain in teaching that those who are saved are being made holy. In fact, this is a product of union with Christ, too. Believers become branches that are attached to the vine, who is Christ. They produce fruit because they are joined to the vine. Christ's presence is in them, being mediated by the Holy Spirit, and fruit is produced by necessity.

This aspect of union with Christ is called vital, because this union with Christ gives spiritual life to the person, which defeats sin and death in the person's life over time. Ultimately, sin and death is totally defeated at the resurrection.

Additionally, I think dispensational teaching has caused a lot of these issues. For instance, some dispensationalists on this site outright deny that Scriptures related to God giving the believer a new heart are specific to Israel and the Millennial kingdom. I would suggest that they are correct if dispensational hermeneutics are true, but their hermeneutic is flawed. So, dispensationalism creates a half-baked cake if their theology is consistently applied.

I believe that all the arguments regarding the place of works in salvation, in essence, are based on a misunderstanding or rejection of the believers' union with Christ. In many cases, they are related to a denial of God's sovereignty in salvation, too.

Anyways that's a summary of my thoughts on this issue. What about yours?

Here are the questions I have:

1. Is justification, in terms of being accounted righteous by God, by faith alone, or faith and works?
2. What other senses can the word "justification" or "sanctification" involve?
3. Is justifying faith provided by God, or by man?
3. If by God, is it provided to all men?
4. If all men receive this justifying faith, why is it ineffective in some?
5. Are good works and obedience a necessary fruit of salvation, or an optional fruit of salvation?
6. How does union with Christ result in both justification and sanctification?

Note: I am discussing justification in the sense of being accounted righteous by God at the moment of salvation, and sanctification as being progressively transformed by Christ over the person's life.

I am not discussing justification or sanctification in other senses. I know that justification can be used in the sense of being vindicated in the eyes of man by good works (such as James 2) and sanctification can also be used in a positional sense (being set aside by God for holy purpose at the moment of salvation), but I am not referring to those senses.

Please provide Scriptures to support your assertions.

I would produce a poll on this, but there are so many dimensions to the question.
Salvation, according to the Greek means= deliverance. 1. We are delivered eternally by God's sovereign grace, without the help of man. 2. We are delivered, here in this world, almost daily. by our good works.

Examples of being saved here in this world; 1 Samuel 14:23, So the Lord saved (delivered) Israel that day. 1 Chronicles 11:14, And the Lord saved (delivered) them by a great deliverance. Romans 10:1-2-3, Brethren, my heart's desire and prayer to God for Israel is, that they might be saved (delivered from their lack of knowledge). For I bear them record that they have "a zeal" (evidence that they have been born again) of God, but not according to knowledge. For they being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their own righteousness (by the old law of Moses), have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God. 1 Tim 2:4, Who will have all men (who are babes in Christ) to be saved (delivered, from their lack of knowledge) to come unto the knowledge of the truth

Isaiah 28:9-10, Whom shall he teach knowledge? and whom shall he make to understand doctrine? them that are weaned from the milk, and drawn from the breasts. For precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept, line upon line, line upon line, here a little, and there a little.

All newly born again are babes in Christ, lacking in knowledge of the word of God, and are in need to be fed the milk of the word until they have grown mature enough to digest the meat of the word. this is why Jesus instructed his Apostles to go and preach to the "lost sheep" (babes in Christ) of the house of Israel.

The God called preachers in the church are to preach to the new born babes, as well as the spiritually mature sheep. If they were to preach to the natural man (1 Cor 2:14) he would not be able to understand what he was preaching about, because he cannot discern the things of the Spirit, and thinks they are foolishness.
 
Sep 3, 2016
6,344
530
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#7
Peter writes that the first thing to be added to our faith is virtue (2 Peter 1:3-5), and this virtue is here revealed as a faithful life full of good works (Ephesians 2:10), which are found “In Christ”, which always refers to one’s faith “In Christ” and His work at Calvary.

Pastor Curtis
 
Dec 27, 2019
30
26
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#9
I've always looked at it as faith produces works necessarily.
Besides, how can a person not act out of gratitude if they really believe that Jesus Christ died for all the sins they committed?
If a person does nothing in response to that, then they most likely do not believe it or have zero faith in it.
 

Adstar

Senior Member
Jul 24, 2016
7,585
3,616
113
#10
1) Believing Jesus and trusting in the Atonement He secured to Redeem you from the eternal Lake of Fire sees one saved..

2) Good Works like being loving, caring, helping others. Loving others as you would want them to love you, resisting sin as best as one can,, preaching in truth the Gospel and the standards of God like His moral law factor into building up treasures in heaven for a person.. There will be some who will be called great in the kingdom of Heaven and those who will be called least in the Kingdom of Heaven.. So there will be greater or lesser rewards that are dependant on your Works..

Only Believing Jesus and Trusting ( having Faith ) in His Atonement see's one saved..
Don't add your works into the mix and believe that The Atonement of Jesus + Your Works = Salvation Attained..
 
Sep 3, 2016
6,344
530
113
#11
Only Believing Jesus and Trusting ( having Faith ) in His Atonement see's one saved..
Amen.

Rev. 12

“11 And they overcame him by the Blood of the Lamb (the power to overcome and overwhelm the Kingdom of Satan is found exclusively in the Blood of the Sacrifice of the Son of God, and our Faith in that Finished Work [Rom. 6:3-5, 11, 14]), and by the word of their testimony (the “testimony” must pertain to the fact that the Object of our Faith is the Cross, and exclusively the Cross, which then gives the Holy Spirit latitude to work within our lives); and they loved not their lives unto the death. (This refers to the fact that the Believer must not change his testimony regarding the Cross to something else, even if it means death.)

As I have stated before, many are proclaiming Christ with zeal but not with the knowledge, while forsaking or adding (being ignorant to Gods Righteousness) to the Cross, i.e., "The Blood of Jesus." (Rom. 10:1-3)

The Church has already apostatized. The Church Age opened with Christ standing in the midst of the candlesticks, in which the candlesticks represent the Church (Rev. 1:12-13). At the close of the Church Age, which pertains to the present time, we no longer find Christ in the midst of the Church, but rather outside, knocking on the door, trying to get in (Rev. 3:17-20).

“If any man hear My Voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with Me” (Rev. 3:20). So, who presently is saved?"

JSM