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Salvation By
Faith
Ephesians 2:8-9
by Paul
George
“For by grace you have
been saved, through faith, and that not of yourselves,
it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, so that
no one may boast.”
All the blessings which God has bestowed upon mankind
flow from His grace or favor; His free, undeserved
favor. We can not lay claim to the least of His mercies.
There is nothing we are, or have, or do, which can
deserve the least of the gifts we receive from the hand
of God. Whatever righteousness may be found in us is a
gift from God. The greatest gift we can receive from God
is salvation. A gift that was given to us “while we were
yet sinners.” By grace we are saved through faith. Grace
is the source, faith the condition, of salvation.
In order that we do not fall short of the grace of God
we need to know:
I. What faith is it through which we are saved.
II. What is the salvation which is through faith.
The faith by which we are saved is not the belief God is
a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him and that He
is to be sought by glorifying Him as God, by giving Him
thanks for all things, and by a careful practice of
moral virtue, of justice, mercy, and truth, toward our
fellowman.
Secondly, it is not the faith of demons. Satan and his
demonic force believe there is not only a wise and
powerful God, gracious to reward, and just to punish;
but also, that Jesus is the Son of God, the Christ, the
Savior of the world. We find demons confessing, "I know
who You are, the Holy One of God" (Luke 4:34). The great
enemy of God and man believes, and trembles in
believing, that God was made manifest in the flesh; that
He will "tread all enemies under his feet;" and that
"all Scripture was given by inspiration of God."
Thirdly, it is not the faith the Apostles had while
Christ was yet upon earth; though they believed on Him
and left all to follow Him. Although they had the power
to work miracles, to "heal all manner of sickness, and
all manner of disease;" even "power and authority over
all devils;" and, were sent by their Master to "preach
the kingdom of God."
What faith is it then through which we are saved? It may
be answered; first, in general, it is a faith in Christ
and God through Christ. It is the faith that is
sufficiently, absolutely distinguished from the faith of
the Apostles while Christ was on earth and from the
beliefs of demons. It is the faith that is not merely a
speculative, rational thing, a cold, lifeless assent, a
train of ideas in the head. It is a disposition of the
heart. It is written in the Scripture, "With the heart
man believeth unto righteousness;" and, "If thou shalt
confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus, and shall
believe in your heart that God hath raised Him from the
dead, You shall be saved."
This is the difference of the faith which the Apostles
themselves had while our Lord was on earth, that it
acknowledges the necessity and merit of His death, and
the power of His resurrection. It acknowledges His death
as the only sufficient means of redeeming man from death
eternal, and His resurrection as the restoration of us
all to life and immortality; inasmuch as He "was
delivered for our sins, and rose again for our
justification."
Christian faith is then, not only an assent to the whole
gospel of Christ, but also a full reliance on the blood
of Christ; a trust in the merits of His life, death, and
resurrection; a dependence upon Him as our atonement and
our life, as given for us, and living in us; and, in
consequence hereof, a relation-ship with Him, and
cleaving to Him, as our "wisdom, righteousness,
sanctification, and redemption," or, in one word, our
salvation.
II. What salvation it is, which is through this faith,
is the Second thing to be considered.
First, whatsoever else is implied it is a present
salvation. It is something attainable on earth, by those
who are partakers of this faith. The Apostle told the
believers at Ephesus, and the believers of all ages,
not, you shall be (though that also is true), but, "You
are saved through faith."
We are saved from the consequences of sin. This is the
salvation which is through faith. This is that great
salvation foretold by the angel, before God brought His
First-begotten into the world: "You shall call His name
Jesus; for He shall save His people from their sins."
And neither here, nor in other parts of the Bible is
there any limitation or restriction. All His people, or,
as it is elsewhere expressed, "all that believe in Him,"
He will save from all their sins; from original and
actual, past and present sin, "of the flesh and of the
spirit." Through faith that is in Him, all mankind are
saved both from the guilt and from the power of sin. We
are delivered from the guilt of all past sin, for all
the world is guilty before God, insomuch that should He
"be extreme to mark what is done amiss, there is none
that could escape the guilt of sin for "by the law is"
only "the knowledge of sin," but no deliverance from it,
so that, "by" fulfilling "the deeds of the law, no flesh
can be justified in his sight." Now, "the righteousness
of God, which is by faith in Jesus Christ, is manifested
to all that believe." Now we "are justified freely by
His grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus
Christ." God has sent Him forth to be propitiation
through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness
for the remission of the sins that are past. Now has
Christ taken away "the curse of the law, being made a
curse for us? He has "blotted out the judgment that was
against us, taking it out of the way, nailing it to His
cross. “There is therefore no condemnation now to them
which" believe "in Christ Jesus."
Being saved from guilt, we are saved from fear. Not
indeed from a filial fear of offending; but from all
servile fear; from that fear which has torment, from
fear of punishment, from fear of the wrath of God, whom
we now no longer regard as a severe Master, but as an
indulgent Father. We have not received again the spirit
of bondage, but the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry,
Abba, Father and the Holy Spirit also bears witness with
our spirits, that we are the children of God. We are
also saved from the fear, though not from the
possibility, of falling away from the grace of God, and
coming short of the great and precious promises. We have
peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. We rejoice
in hope of the glory of God. And the love of God is shed
abroad in our hearts, through the Holy Spirit which is
given to us. And hereby we are persuaded (though perhaps
not at all times, nor with the same fullness of
persuasion), that neither death, nor life, nor things
present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor
any other creature, shall be able to separate us from
the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Through this faith we are saved from the power of sin,
as well as from the guilt of it. So the Apostle
declares,
"You know that He was manifested to take away our sins;
and in Him is no sin. Whosoever abides in Him sinneth
not" (1 John 3:5ff.). Again, "Little children, let no
man deceive you. He that commits sin is of the devil.
Whosoever believes is born of God. And whosoever is born
of God does not commit sin; for His seed remains in him:
and he cannot sin, because he is born of God." And, "We
know that no one who is born of God sins, but He keeps
him, and the evil one does not touch him (1 John 5:18).
Those who are by faith is born of God does not sin, by
any habitual sin; for all habitual sin is sin reigning
in the heart and sin cannot reign in any that believe.
Nor by any willful sin: for his will, while he abides in
the faith, is utterly set against all sin and abhors it
as deadly poison. Nor by any sinful desire; for he
continually desires the holy and perfect will of God.
Nor does he sin by infirmities, whether in act, word, or
thought; for his infirmities have no concurrence of his
will and without this they are not properly sins. Thus,
"he that is born of God does not commit sin": and though
he cannot say he has not sinned, yet now he does not
sin.
This then is the salvation which is through faith, even
in the present world. A salvation from sin, and the
consequences of sin, both often expressed in the word
justification; which, taken in the largest sense,
implies a deliverance from guilt and punishment, by the
atonement of Christ actually applied to the soul of the
sinner now believing in him, and a deliverance from the
power of sin, through Christ formed in his heart. So
that he who is thus justified, or saved by faith, is
indeed born again. he is born again of the Spirit to a
new life, which "is hid with Christ in God." And as a
new-born babe he gladly receives the sincere milk of the
word, and grows in the might of the Lord his God, from
faith to faith, from grace to grace, until at length, he
comes to "a perfect man, to the measure of the stature
of the fullness of Christ.
Now, thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory
through our Lord Jesus Christ; to whom, with the Father
and the Holy Spirit, be blessing, and glory, and wisdom,
and thanksgiving, and honor, and power, and might,
forever and ever. Amen
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