| 
			 
			Print 
			Salvation by Faith 
			John 3:16-18 
			16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, 
			that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have 
			everlasting life. 
			17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but 
			that the world through him might be saved. 
			18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth 
			not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name 
			of the only begotten Son of God. 
			Everyone claiming Jesus Christ as their 
			savior agrees that belief or faith is essential to one's salvation.  
			Hebrews 11:6 teaches us that without faith it is impossible to please him.  For he who 
			comes to God must believe that he is.  We must have faith, we 
			must believe in God and we must believe that Jesus Christ is 
			His Son.  Nobody I know of questions the fact that faith is essential for 
			Salvation.  But in the ranks of those who claim Jesus Christ as 
			their savior there is disagreement as to whether anybody must do 
			anymore than believe in order to be saved.  Much of the 
			denominational world believes and teaches that a person is saved 
			when they "only believe" that Jesus is the Christ.  They teach 
			that salvation is by faith only.  They teach that all that a 
			person has to do to have the salvation that Jesus offers is just to 
			believe in Jesus and to believe in Him for who He is.  In fact 
			many believe that it is wrong to teach that salvation is dependant upon 
			any act of obedience on their part.  They teach this because 
			they really do believe the Bible 
			teaches that.  And it is true that Jesus says in John 11:26 that 
			whosever liveth and believeth in me shall never die.  And years 
			later in Acts 16:31 Paul told the Philippian Jailor to "Believe on 
			the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house." 
			 
			Now the question is, in the Biblical sense, 
			what does it mean to believe?  Those who think and teach that 
			we are saved at the point of belief have concluded that "belief" in 
			these verses means "belief only", or "faith only".  When they 
			read these verses and other ones similar to these they add in their 
			minds the word "only".  In their understanding they believe 
			that John 3:16 means that "whosoever ONLY believes in him should not 
			perish, but have everlasting life."  When they read acts 16:31 
			what they hear in their mind is Paul saying "ONLY" believe on the 
			Lord Jesus Christ and you and your house shall be saved. The word 
			"ONLY" is not there but that is how they understand those 
			verses.  
			
			 
			But salvation by "faith" and salvation by "faith only" are two 
			completely different things just like playing football with a 
			"quarterback" and playing football with a "quarterback only" are two 
			different things.  All football teams play with a quarterback.  
			But none of them play with a only a quarterback.  There are 
			other players on the field.  Or similarly, a fisherman might go 
			fishing with "worms", but does he use "worms only"?  What about the 
			fishing pole and the hooks and the other accessories?  There is 
			a big difference between fishing with "worms" and fishing with "worms 
			only".  There is a big difference between playing football with 
			a "quarterback" and playing football with "only a quarterback".  
			And, likewise, there is a big difference between being saved by 
			"faith" or "belief" and being saved by "faith only" or "belief only". 
			 
			 
			So the question now is, in the Bible, does "saved by faith" 
			mean saved by "faith only"?  You might be surprised how easily 
			that question can be answered.  Because that is a question we 
			can put to the test.  One of the rules of language 
			interpretation is that when a word is properly defined, its 
			definition can be 
			substituted for that word in a sentence and the sentence would 
			convey the same meaning and still make sense.  For example, if I define a shoe as an 
			article of clothing for the feet and then take the sentence "I sell 
			shoes", then I should be able to substitute that definition for the 
			word shoes.  I could then say, "I sell an article of clothing 
			for the feet".  The sentence still communicates the same 
			meaning and makes sense because a proper 
			definition was substituted for the word.  This is a very simple 
			and effective means of putting the concept of salvation by "faith 
			only" to the test. 
			In Hebrews chapter 11 we read of the men 
			and the women who displayed great faith during their lives.  
			Hebrews chapter 11 is often referred to as the great hall of faith.  
			The people listed in this chapter of Hebrews are the Biblical 
			posterchildren 
			of faith.  Inspiration specifically named them as shining 
			example for us to live by.  If anybody throughout Biblical history could have 
			been saved by faith only, surely it would have been this list of 
			the heroes of faith.  So if in the bible "faith" can be 
			properly defined as "faith only" we 
			should be able to substitute the word "faith" for the words "faith 
			only" and the statements therein should still make 
			sense and they should still mean the same thing they meant before. 
			 
			 
			Let's start with the very first hero in the 
			hall of faith.  Hebrews 11, verse 4,  reads, "by faith 
			Abel offered a more excellent sacrifice than Cain".  Now if 
			"faith" really means "faith only" then we should be able to read 
			this verse as "by faith only, Abel offered to God a more excellent 
			sacrifice than Cain".  Abel did not just think about that 
			sacrifice and it happened.  Abel did not simply believe and have his sacrifice just suddenly appear out of thin air.  
			Abel had to kill and he had to prepare the sacrifice.  We don't 
			see inspiration handing out any accolades for Cain do we?  Cain 
			obviously believed in God yet his sacrifice was rejected.  If 
			Abel's sacrifice had not have been done properly, meaning "by faith" 
			then he would not have been mentioned in Hebrews 11 as a great man of 
			faith.  He 
			indeed offered his sacrifice by "faith" but he certainly did not offer 
			that sacrifice by "faith only".  The sentence no longer makes 
			sense when you substitute the definition of "faith only" for the word 
			"faith".    
			 
			How about Noah in verse 7?  If faith really means faith 
			only, then this verse would properly read "by faith only, Noah 
			prepared an ark for the saving of his household.  Does that 
			make sense?  If anything, this is worse than Abel's example.  
			We know very well that the ark did not just appear there because of 
			the faith of Noah.  That ark required a lot of gopher wood, 
			tools and a century of hard labor.  It was not by faith only 
			that the ark was built.   
			 
			What about the walls of Jericho in verse 30?  If faith 
			really means faith only then this verse would mean that by faith 
			only the walls of Jericho fell down.  But we know better than 
			that.  The walls of Jericho fell down after they were compassed 
			about for seven days.  If the Israelites would not have marched 
			around the walls as God commanded then the walls would not have 
			fallen.  It was indeed by "faith" that the walls of Jericho 
			fell but it certainly was not by "faith only".    
			 
			Let's look at Rahab in verse 31.  If "by faith" means "by 
			faith only" then this verse could say by "faith only" the harlot 
			Rahab did not perish with those who did not believe when she 
			received the spies and took care of them and protected them.  
			From the story in the Old Testament we know that Rahab, at great 
			personal risk, received those Israelite spies into her home.  
			What prevented her from perishing with those who did not believe was 
			more than just her belief.  She was saved from destruction 
			because of the care she took of those Israelite spies.  Without 
			the action she took towards those spies she would have died along 
			with everybody else.  Her salvation was not by "faith only".  
			So "faith" in Hebrews chapter 11 does not mean "faith only"  
			When we try to plug "faith only" into those sentences they cease to 
			make sense.  We're going to move onto other scriptures from 
			Hebrews 11 for the time being, but keep your place marked there 
			because we are going to come back later and develop another thought.   
			 
			 
			So many passages in the Bible say we are saved by faith.  
			So many passages say that if we believe we will be saved.  Many 
			people who teach we are saved by faith only make the claim that  
			if we are not saved by belief only then God lied to us.  But 
			the difficulty with that is, if we are indeed saved by faith or 
			belief only then Jesus lied to us when He said in Matthew 7:21 that 
			only those who do the will of the Father will enter the kingdom of 
			Heaven.  We know that Jesus cannot lie in either event so there 
			must be a relationship between belief and obedience in the Bible 
			that goes beyond faith only.  And to illustrate that we are going 
			to start with a hypothetical story.  And when this story is 
			finished, we are going to ask and answer three questions. 
			 
			 
			My son comes running into the house one day, breathless and 
			excited.  He says "DAD!!! DAD!!! There's a man in a truck 
			outside in the driveway and he's giving away free money and he says 
			you can have all you want, it's free for the asking and he says all 
			we have to do is bring an empty box and he'll fill it up for us".  I look 
			at my son and say, "Son, what have I told you about watching too 
			many cartoons and playing too many video games"?  But he 
			insists that it is true and I give him the very best "yeah right" 
			look that I can muster.  I'm not even going to bother to go 
			outside and see for myself and I dismiss my son with a wave of my 
			arm.  So my son then says to me, "Dad, if you 
			will just believe me, we can be rich".   So after 
			thinking about it and realizing that I'm not rich, and I'd like to 
			be, I grab a BIG!!! empty box and I go out there 
			to see for myself and I get a box full of money out of the deal.  Interesting statement that my 
			son made to me, "Dad, if you will just believe me, we can be rich." 
			Now the three questions we want asked and answered are: 
			1)  When I believed and said that I 
			believed, was I rich?  No I wasn't.  I still had something 
			I had to do.  My belief in my son was worthless until I acted 
			on that belief.  So when I grabbed my box and headed out the 
			door, it could be rightfully said that, "by faith" I grabbed my box 
			and went outside to get the money.  Just like the Biblical 
			heroes of faith mentioned in Hebrews 11 acted by faith and not by 
			faith only.  I did not grab the box and head out the door by 
			"faith only".   If I had not gone outside with the box 
			then I would not have gotten the money and it would have been 
			because I did not believe my son.   Keep that in mind, we 
			are going to develop more on this later.      
			2)  Did my son lie to me when he said "if 
			you'll just believe me we'll be rich?"  No he did not lie 
			to me.  In the story my son had the real expectation that if he 
			could convince me that the man was outside and giving away money 
			that I would then do what was required to get it.   
			3)  Why wasn't that a lie?  He said "if you'll just believe me and you'll be rich" I was not not rich 
			when I just believed him, so why was that not a lie?    
			It wasn't a lie because of the way we use the word 
			believe.  In the story my son had the reasonable understanding 
			that if I believed him that I would take the necessary steps to 
			get the money.  My son knew the actions were easily within my capabilities. 
			He knew the money was right outside and he knew the reward was enormous.  
			Getting the money was easy, the difficult part was getting me to 
			believe him.  The conclusion anyone would reach is that if I 
			could be made to believe then the required actions would immediately 
			follow and I would be rich.  That's the way my son used the 
			word "believe" in the story when he said "if you'll just believe me, 
			we'll be rich".   
			In the stated need to believe, the taking of any necessary 
			action is understood.  Let's say that again like this.  In the 
			stated need to believe, the taking of any necessary action is 
			implied.  Action was implied by my son when he said it and 
			action was 
			understood by me when I heard it.  That is exactly the way we 
			use the word "believe" many times today.  And it is exactly in 
			that same way that we find the word "believe" used in the 
			scriptures.    
			With the enormous blessings that awaited and the relative ease 
			of their attainment, those who preached the gospel knew that if they 
			could get others to believe, and have faith, then they 
			would readily and quickly do whatever they needed to do to lay hold on 
			the promised salvation.  Faith does not obtain the reward until 
			it has taken the understood, the implied, actions.  Just as it 
			was in the case of getting the free money.  Faith will obtain 
			the reward, but only the right kind of "faith" will.  "Faith only" 
			will not.  The faith that saves is the faith that does 
			something.   In Galatians 5:6, Paul says the faith that 
			avails is the faith that works by love.   By love means 
			because of love.  Jesus said "If ye love me, keep my 
			commandments" (John 14:15).  
			 
			And now, let's go back and look some more 
			at faith in Hebrews chapter 11.  We have another thought to 
			consider that is very significant.  Everyone mentioned in the 
			hall of faith did something to obtain their blessings.  So when 
			we try and go back and plug the words "faith only" in for the word 
			"faith" it just does not make any sense.  They did not get any 
			kind of blessing the moment that they believed.  Only when they 
			obeyed "by faith".  "By faith" means because of their faith.  
			Their honor, their justification, their salvation came only when 
			they obeyed God because of their faith and not before.  
			 
			For example, earlier we considered Rahab.  
			Hebrews 11:31 says that by faith, the harlot Rahab did not perish.  
			Rahab is also used as an example by James in chapter 2 verse 25.  
			James explains Rahab's salvation in words that are difficult to 
			misunderstand.  In James 2:25, he said, "likewise was not Rahab 
			the harlot also justified by works "when" she received the messengers 
			and sent them out another way.  The writer of Hebrews indeed 
			said that Rahab was saved by faith, but James tells us "when" her 
			faith saved her.  Faith brought salvation when she acted and 
			not a moment before.    
			In a very similar way Paul says in Romans 4:9 that faith was 
			accounted to Abraham for righteousness, but again James speaks 
			of Abraham too.  And James tells us exactly when that favorable 
			accounting occurred.  In James 2:21, James says, "was not 
			Abraham, our father, justified by works when he offered his son 
			Isaac on the alter?"  Faith produces salvation, there is no 
			doubt about that, but the critical question which must be asked and 
			answered is 
			"when?".  When is it that faith produces or brings salvation?  
			And the answer is, "when" faith obeys.  And not a moment 
			before.   The faith without works, the faith does not 
			obey, is dead.  And a dead faith will not produce a saved soul.  
			  
			And in opposition against those who would advance the "faith 
			only" doctrine James says in chapter 2 and verse 19, "you believe 
			that there is one God, you do well.  Even the demons believe 
			and tremble.  The demons believe, but they failed to take the 
			necessary actions of obedience.  The question is, do we want to 
			spend an eternity with those people who only believed?  And 
			then so clearly James makes his point in verse when 24 when he says 
			by inspiration, "Ye see then how that by works a man is 
			justified, and not by faith only." 
			Some people are confused by that verse 
			because the word works is used in the Bible in a number of different 
			ways.  Sometimes the word "works" is used to described things 
			done under the law of Moses.  Sometimes the word works is used 
			to describe things that man might devise for himself to do.  
			But sometimes the word works is used in the Bible to refer to acts 
			of obedience to God's will.  And it is in this way that James 
			uses the word here, "Ye see then how that by works a man is 
			justified, and not by faith only."  So as we did earlier, 
			we can define the word "works" in James 2:24 as "obedience to God's 
			will" and then substitute it in James 2:24 just like we substituted 
			the words "faith only" for "faith" in Hebrews 11.  And if the 
			definition is correct then the sentence should still say the same 
			thing and it should make perfect sense.    "Ye see 
			then how that by "obedience to God's will" a man is justified, and 
			not by faith only."    
			The difference between the substitution of 
			faith only for faith in Hebrews 11 and the substitution we just did 
			is that this one makes perfect sense, and there is scriptural 
			support for it elsewhere.  And what did the Hebrew 
			writer teach by inspiration in chapter 5 and verse 9?  "And 
			being made perfect, he became the author of eternal salvation unto 
			all them that obey him."  What did Peter say to Cornelius 
			at his conversion as recorded by Luke in  Acts 10:35?  "But 
			in every nation he that feareth him, and worketh righteousness, is 
			accepted with him."  Paul says in Romans 6:17-18 that the 
			Romans were set free from sin by their obedience to the doctrine.  
			Peter says in 1 Peter 1:22 that the Christians had purified their 
			souls by obeying the truth.  Time after time in the scriptures 
			we are taught that salvation is dependant upon obedience.  We 
			cannot be saved without obedience.  Our salvation is indeed by 
			faith, but that word "faith" in the Bible does not mean "faith 
			only".  There is no verse that says that and there have been a 
			number of scriptures presented so far that demonstrate that it does 
			not mean that in any way.  Faith saves, but when does faith 
			save?  Faith saves when faith obeys. 
			Remember the hypothetical story where I got 
			rich when I believed my son?  Remember that I said if I had not 
			gone outside with the box that I did not believe my son?  Does 
			the Bible contrast obedience and belief in that fashion?  Does 
			the Bible ever say someone who does not obey did not believe?   
			 
			Peter wrote of belief and obedience in 1 Peter 
	2:7-8, "Unto you therefore which believe he is precious: but unto them 
	which be disobedient, the stone which the builders disallowed, the same is 
	made the head of the corner, and a stone of stumbling, and a rock of 
	offence, even to them which stumble at the word, being disobedient: 
	whereunto also they were appointed".  Peter draws a contrast 
	between those who believe and those who do not by being disobedient.  
	Peter equates Belief as the opposite of disobedience, therefore Peter 
			had the reasonable understanding that those who believed would take 
			the necessary steps to get salvation. 
			
  This lesson was introduced with John's famous 
	scripture on belief.  John wrote in 3:16 that "God so loved the 
	world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on him 
	should not perish, but have eternal life" and in a few sentences later, 
	he wrote, "He that believeth on the Son hath eternal life; but he that 
	obeyeth not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him" 
	(John 3:36, ASV).  
	Just like Peter, John contrasted believers and those who are disobedient.  
	It is clear from a Biblical perspective that John had more in mind than 
	simple belief in the facts.  In John's stated need to believe, the 
	taking of any necessary action is understood, it is implied.  
	 
			A study of Hebrews 4:9-11 
	reveals some insight as to the nature of Biblical belief; "There remaineth 
	therefore a rest to the people of God.  For he that is entered into his 
	rest, he also hath ceased from his own works, as God did from his.  Let 
	us labour therefore to enter into that rest, lest any man fall after the 
	same example of unbelief."  The Greek word for unbelief is "apeitheia" 
			which means "rebellious disbelief".  We see that those whom the 
			Hebrew writer is addressing are instructed to labor lest they fall 
			into an example of unbelief.  So we see from this example it 
			requires effort, or a commitment of oneself in order to avoid 
			Biblical disbelief, it also requires the same to believe.  
			Simply stated, those who labor are true believers and those who fail 
			to labor fail to believe.  Those who fail to obey fail to 
			believe.   
			In the hypothetical story we used as an 
			illustration, I believed my son and acted.  If I had not acted 
			it is obvious that I would not have believed him.  In the same 
			sense today if we believe Jesus Christ and act we will obtain the 
			blessings.   
			If we are going to believe Jesus and believe in Him then we are going to have to believe His teachings.  
			If we are going to believe Jesus Christ then we have to believe it 
			all.  We can't pick and choose what we want to believe and what 
			we don't want to believe.  We can't accept Jesus as our savior 
			and king but refuse His teachings.  Jesus Christ said Himself 
			"And why call ye me, Lord, Lord , and do not the things which I 
			say"?  Then He went on to teach the parable of the foolish 
			builder who failed to obey, thus building his house on a sandy and 
			uncertain foundation and the wise builder, who because of obedience 
			had built his house on rock.    
			Luke 6:47-49 
			"Whosoever cometh to me, and heareth my sayings, and doeth them, 
			I will shew you to whom he is like: He is like a man which built an 
			house, and digged deep, and laid the foundation on a rock: and when 
			the flood arose, the stream beat vehemently upon that house, and 
			could not shake it: for it was founded upon a rock. But he that 
			heareth, and doeth not, is like a man that without a foundation 
			built an house upon the earth; against which the stream did beat 
			vehemently, and immediately it fell; and the ruin of that house was 
			great." 
			 
			Do we believe Jesus' teaching about the wise and the foolish 
			builders?  If we reject Jesus teaching then we obviously don't 
			believe Him.  How can we believe in Jesus but not believe His 
			teachings?  We cannot believe what we want and reject the rest.  
			It doesn't work that way.  If we are going to believe in Jesus 
			then we must believe all of His instructions.  In the account 
			of the wise and foolish builders as recorded by Matthew, Jesus 
			introduced the parable by saying "Not every one that saith unto 
			me, Lord, Lord , shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that 
			doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven" (Matthew 7:21).  
			People who simply believe that Jesus is who He said He is will cry 
			"Lord Lord".  They know who He is.  They know what He did 
			for us, they know and believe in Him for who He is.  But those 
			who fail to obey Him believe in the man but not in His teachings. 
			 
			And Jesus taught in the parables of the 
			wise and foolish builders that only those who do His will have built 
			their houses on Rock.  Jesus said that.  Do you believe 
			Him?  Do you believe He meant what He said in Matthew 7:21?  
			"Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord , shall enter into 
			the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father". 
			If you do not believe that, then you are guilty of unbelief. 
			 
			Jesus taught in John 3:18 "He that 
			believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is 
			condemned already , because he hath not believed in the name of the 
			only begotten Son of God".  Do you believe Him.  Do 
			you believe Jesus taught that?  If anyone rejects this teaching 
			of Jesus then they are guilty of unbelief.   
			Jesus taught in Matthew 10:32-33, "Whosoever 
			therefore shall confess me before men, him will I confess also 
			before my Father which is in heaven.  But whosoever shall deny 
			me before men, him will I also deny before my Father which is in 
			heaven."  Do you believe we must confess Jesus before men 
			in order to be confessed by Jesus before God the Father?  Do 
			you believe that Jesus meant that when He said it.  If you do, 
			then you cannot believe in salvation by faith only because faith 
			only has no room for any act of obedience whatsoever.  
			Salvation by faith only is either salvation without nothing but 
			faith or belief, or it isn't.  There's no middle ground.  
			Either you believe Jesus requires the act of confession or you 
			don't.  And if you don't believe confession is required then 
			you do not believe something Jesus taught and are therefore guilty 
			of unbelief.   
			Jesus taught in Luke 13:3, "I tell you, 
			Nay: but, except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish."  
			Do you believe we must repent in order to be saved?  Can we 
			continue in our sinful lives and live without repentance and expect 
			a home in heaven?  If you believe we must repent then salvation 
			cannot be by faith only.  Because salvation by faith only has 
			no room for action.  Repenting is doing something.  If we 
			are saved by faith only then we can be saved without repentance.  
			Do you believe Jesus' teaching that we must repent?  If you do 
			not and you insist that our salvation is by faith only then you do 
			not believe something Jesus instructed and are therefore guilty of 
			unbelief.   
  
			Jesus taught in Mark 16:16, "He that believeth and is baptized 
			shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned."  
			Do you believe Jesus?  Do you believe everything He instructed?  
			If you do believe Jesus then you must believe that baptism is 
			necessary in order to be saved.  If you do not believe that 
			baptism is necessary then you fall into the second group of 
			individuals mentioned by Jesus in Mark 16:16, those who do not 
			believe and will not be saved.  We already know from Jesus 
			teaching on confession and repentance that salvation is not by faith 
			only.  Why would baptism be any different?  If you are not 
			baptized then you do not believe and will be condemned.  We 
			cannot claim Jesus as our savior and claim we believe in Him if we 
			do not believe His instructions.  If we do not believe His 
			instructions then we do not believe Him.  Those who do not 
			believe Jesus do not believe in Him either.  Belief of Jesus 
			for who He is and belief in Him cannot be separated.  We can't 
			reject His instructions and believe in Jesus.  The parallel 
			verse for Mark 16:16 is Matthew 28:19, "Go ye therefore, and 
			teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of 
			the Son, and of the Holy Ghost".  Baptism is a command, it 
			is a divine instruction from the mouth of Jesus Christ.  The 
			baptism here is the baptism that can be administered by man and the 
			one that can be submitted to in obedience.  Jesus commanded it, 
			you must therefore ask yourself, do you believe in Jesus Christ?  
			Do you believe in what He taught?  Do you believe Jesus? 
			Jesus isn't done instructing us yet.  
			Salvation is not by faith only.  Salvation requires belief, 
			repentance, confession and baptism.  That is not faith only.  
			Faith only salvation, if it were true, would come without any of the 
			above mentioned acts of obedience from the mouth of Jesus Christ 
			Himself.  Jesus has more instruction to give.  We saw in 
			Matthew 28:19 that Jesus commanded baptism for every man on earth, 
			he wasn't finished.  He had another instruction on the heels of 
			baptism.  Jesus went on to say, "Teaching them to observe all 
			things whatsoever I have commanded you" (V20).  If obedience is 
			commanded surely it is expected.  When Jesus addressed the 
			church in Smyrna He gave this instruction, "Be thou faithful unto 
			death, and I will give thee a crown of life" (Revelation 2:10).  
			If any Christian in any church anywhere in the first century had to 
			remain faithful unto death, then they all did.  And if they 
			did, we must be faithful unto death today.  John taught that "if 
			we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one 
			with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us 
			from all sin" (1 John 1:7).  This is a conditional 
			statement.  John began it with the word if.  In a 
			conditional statement if the condition is not true then the results 
			will not be forthcoming.  If we do not walk in the light, live 
			faithfully, there will be no fellowship with God.  There will 
			be no ongoing cleansing of sin by the blood of Jesus Christ.  
			What this means is that salvation is not by faith or belief only. 
			 
			With all this talk about faith and works, 
			we need to give attention to what Paul wrote about Grace.  In 
			Ephesians 2:8-9, Paul wrote, "For by grace are ye saved through 
			faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of 
			works, lest any man should boast."  So is Paul saying here that 
			we do not have to be obedient to God?  Is he saying God's grace 
			makes obedience unnecessary?  Of course not.  What Paul is 
			saying is that our works will never be sufficient to earn our 
			salvation.  We can never rest on our works and boast that God 
			owes us anything.   There is no way we as Christians could 
			possibly hope to repay God what it cost Him to offer us salvation.  
			He was under no obligation to send His Son down here to die for us 
			and He would have been perfectly well within His rights to let us 
			perish.  Neither was Jesus under any obligation to die for us.  
			What He did for us, He did of His own free will and we can't earn it 
			with our works.  But this fact does not make obedience to God 
			unnecessary.   
			Saved by "grace" does not mean saved by 
			"grace only" any more than saved by "faith" means saved by "faith 
			only".  And this is just as easy to put to the test as saved by 
			faith was.  If we are saved by "grace only" then no act of 
			obedience whatsoever would be required for our salvation and we know 
			better than that because we have to believe and belief is a 
			conscious decision we make and is therefore a work of righteousness 
			on our part.  If any level of obedience to God whatsoever is 
			necessary to be saved, then we cannot be saved by "grace only".  
			It's just that simple.  The Hebrew writer taught that grace was 
			something that we could fail if we were not diligent in chapter 12 
			and verse 15.  If grace were not conditional, then it would not 
			be possible to fail it.  If it were not possible to fail it, 
			inspiration would not have warned against it.  And since it is 
			possible to fail of God's grace then salvation is not by "grace 
			only".     
			Faith saves, no doubt about it.  Those 
			who believe are saved, no doubt about it.  But not until that 
			faith or belief has resulted in obedience to God.  Faith saves 
			when and only when faith obeys.  Grace saves, no doubt about 
			it, but grace does not save until faith obeys.  If there is anyone here who 
			believes but has not obeyed then you are not saved.  By faith 
			the heroes in Hebrews 11 obeyed and they received the blessings when 
			they obeyed and not a moment before.   By faith, each and 
			every one of YOU must hear, YOU must listen to the word of God.  
			By faith YOU must repent of your sins and turn to Christ.  By 
			faith YOU must confess Jesus Christ as the Son of God before men.  
			By faith YOU must submit to baptism into Jesus Christ in the watery 
			grave of baptism for the remission of YOUR sins in the name of the 
			Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.  By faith YOU 
			must live an obedient, faithful life, walking in the light as Jesus 
			walked, remaining faithful until our last accountable breath of life 
			on earth.  These instructions came directly from the mouth of 
			Jesus, if you do not believe these instructions then you do not 
			believe Jesus.  Do you believe Him?  Do you believe in 
			Jesus, in what He said and in what He taught.  Do you believe 
			Him?   
			If you are and you have not been baptized 
			into Jesus Christ or if you have and you have not walked in the 
			light, faithfully and you need the prayers of the congregation then 
			I urge you now to take this opportunity to Believe in Jesus Christ.  
			If you are here and you have not believed in and obeyed the gospel, 
			then why tarriest thou?  Arise and be baptized now.  If 
			not at this invitation, then please stay after services and let your 
			need be known.   Behold here is water, what doth hinder 
			you to be baptized?  Today is the acceptable time, today is the 
			day of salvation.    Whatever your need is at this 
			time, please let it be known.  Your friends, your loved ones 
			stand ready and eager to assist you.  Come now as we stand and 
			sing.   
			   |