The Kind of Faith
in God That Destroys
There is a faith, a so called Christian faith,
that destroys. Those who hold
such a faith, while sincere, do not understand faith from a scriptural point of
view. Faith is all too often defined as
"what I believe." There is
more to saving faith than just believing in Jesus, believing he is the Son of
God.
If faith alone, defined as what one believes, could save by
itself then even the demons could be saved for James says, "even the demons believe--and tremble!" (James
Another example is found in Luke 4:33-34 (NAS), "And
there was a man in the synagogue possessed by the spirit of an unclean demon,
and he cried out with a loud voice, 'Ha! What do we have to do with You, Jesus
of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy
us? I know who you are -- the Holy One
of God!'"
Yet another example is Luke
But,
it is not just demons who have faith that has not
availed. In Mark 10:17-23 we have the
account of the man who is generally referred to as the rich young ruler. It is too long to quote in its entirety so I
quote only the relevant verses. (Mark
And
then (Mark 10:21-23 NAS), "And looking at him, Jesus felt a love for him,
and said to him, 'One thing you lack: go and sell all you possess, and give to
the poor, and you shall have treasure in heaven; and come, follow Me.' But at
these words his face fell, and he went away grieved, for he was one who owned
much property. And Jesus, looking
around, said to His disciples, 'How hard it will be for those who are wealthy
to enter the
Here
was a man Jesus loved and a man who certainly believed in Jesus. Did his faith save him? His faith failed when he was asked to act
upon it. There is a message in that and
yet he did believe Jesus was the answer.
John
In
the late chapters of the book of Acts we find Paul being examined by one
official after another on his way to
Paul
preached faith in Christ Jesus and things that are entailed in that. If Felix did not believe why was he
frightened? Are you afraid of what you
do not believe? Did the faith of Felix
save him?
In
the Parable of the Sower you find 2 of the 4 types of men who hear the word
that believe and yet end up being condemned.
Luke 8:13-14 (NAS), "And those on the rocky soil are those who,
when they hear, receive the word with joy; and these have no firm root; they
believe for a while, and in time of temptation fall away. And the seed which fell among the thorns,
these are the ones who have heard, and as they go on their way they are choked
with worries and riches and pleasures of this life, and bring no fruit to
maturity.
In
verse 13 Jesus says specifically that these men believe. Are they saved? How about that class of believers represented
by the seed that fell in the thorns? Are
they saved?
The
Bible clearly teaches men can be believers and yet remain unsaved. Other examples could easily be given of men
who believe but will be condemned for they have the faith that destroys and not
the faith that saves.
There
are many passages that teach we are saved by faith and yet it is certain many
believers have been lost. How do we
explain lost believers? How do we
explain those many passages that specifically say that believers are saved and
yet find believers that are not?
There
are two answers to this troubling question.
(1) The word "faith" and its synonyms can be and are used from
time to time as a figure of speech called a synecdoche. What is a synecdoche? It is where one puts the part to represent
the whole. In speaking of salvation when
it is said one is saved by faith and nothing else is mentioned then it is
understood that faith is used in an all inclusive sense to include everything
that naturally follows from the belief.
In
his book entitled Hermeneutics, D. R. Dungan says, in discussing synecdoches,
"This is many times the case with the salvation of sinners. The whole number of
conditions are indicated by the use of one. Generally the first one is mentioned-that of
faith-because without it nothing else could follow." (Page 305)
Faith
is the basis of Christianity. Surely, a
man lacking faith in Jesus will not be concerned with obeying Jesus or keeping
any commandments so why proceed with anything else? There is no reason to until faith is first
established. But, when faith alone is
mentioned as the saving factor it is a use of the word as a synecdoche. It includes everything that flows from a
living faith.
(2)
There are two types of faith - the kind that leads a person to take action on
his beliefs (a living faith) versus the kind that is merely mental assent (a
dead faith). The latter kind can never
save. James says, "But are you
willing to recognize, you foolish fellow, that faith without works is
useless?" (James
When
the Bible talks about being saved by faith it is talking about the kind of
faith that has works (works of obedience), the kind of faith where the word is
used to stand for and represent everything that Christ requires of us (the word
faith used as a synecdoche).
It is
the kind of faith where if God told you to go out and offer your only begotten
son as a sacrifice, as he did Abraham, you would do it. It is the kind of faith where if you were
told to go build an ark for there would be a worldwide flood you would believe
it enough to do it. It is not the kind
of faith that questions God and tries to reason out ways to disobey and yet remain
justified while doing so.
Many
want to be saved by their faith and good works all the while disobeying God in
refusing to accept clear statements of scripture. They may do many good works in the community
(and this is fine and good) and think they have the book of James covered by
the good works which they do.
The
trouble is they will not take God at his word.
They cannot accept that Jesus and the Holy Spirit said what they meant
and meant what they said. Forget baptism
for the remission of sins (Acts
Paul
says in Ephesians
The
kind of faith many have who call themselves Christians is the kind of faith
that says "yes, I know that is what it says but I don't believe it"
and that even when the words are directly spoken out of the mouth of
Jesus. I ask you do I truly believe in a
man when I will not believe what he says?
As
another example how about women preachers?
Paul, by inspiration says, "But I do not allow a woman to teach or
exercise authority over a man, but to remain quiet. For it was Adam who
was first created, and then Eve. And it
was not Adam who was deceived, but the woman being quite deceived, fell into
transgression." (1 Tim. 2:12-14 NAS)
Paul
gives his reasons for this prohibition - that which happened back in the time
of Adam and Eve. Can we rewrite
history? Have those reasons changed? If not why have we changed on this subject unless
it be we lack the faith that believes and obeys?
One
needs to understand that every word spoken in the New Testament, every word
written, is from Jesus. Speaking of the
Holy Spirit that the apostles were to receive Jesus said, "However, when He,
the Spirit of truth, has come, He will guide you into all truth; for he will not
speak on His own authority, but whatever He hears He will speak; and He will
tell you things to come. He will glorify
Me, for He will take of what is Mine and declare it to
you." (John 16:13-14 NKJV) In John
14:16-17 Jesus is talking about the Holy Spirit coming to the apostles and how
he will dwell within them and then he says in the very next verse, verse 18,
"I will not leave you orphans; I will come to you." Jesus was coming to them via means of the
Holy Spirit. See also John 16:25.
The
Holy Spirit spoke the words of Jesus.
There are those who do not like that for they want to lay the cause of
their troubles on Paul just being a man kind of out of step with the
times. The words Paul spoke were not his
own.
There
is a faith that will save. It is that
faith where if the Lord speaks (he does so today through his word) we will
believe it and obey it even if it causes us problems. When Abraham was commanded to go out and offer
his son Isaac as a burnt sacrifice that caused Abraham problems. When Paul was constrained to preach the word
it often caused him serious problems. It
is not faith alone as mental assent that saves us, that alone in fact destroys
us, but it is faith that obeys God while not seeking a way out to keep from
obeying.
Jesus
is "the author of eternal salvation of all who obey Him." (Heb. 5:9
NKJV) "If you love Me, keep My commandments." (John
Every
person that teaches or believes that one can go to heaven all the while denying
what Jesus said to do about baptism is simply fooling himself. How can he reconcile what he is doing based
on passages that have just been quoted?
The
faith that saves goes far beyond obedience to just one or two
commandments. The faith that saves is
willing to do whatever Jesus says no matter how tough that might be. We live in a type of Christian environment
today, if you want to call it that, that has
rationalized every sin away. They can
tell you why this passage no longer applies to us today, why that one does not,
and so on. Their faith is of the mental
assent kind. Obedience will have nothing
to do with their salvation - so they think.
We
are suppose to be "slaves of righteousness."
(Rom.
Paul,
in Romans 2:8-9 (NKJV) says, "but to those who
are self-seeking and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness - indignation
and wrath, tribulation and anguish, on every soul of man who does evil."
I
wonder if one was to be baptized for the remission of sins (see the wording of
Acts 2:38) would that be obeying the truth, would it be obeying Jesus, would it
be working righteousness, or would it be obeying unrighteousness? Many act and talk as though it would be an
act of unrighteousness.
One
who claims he will be saved by faith alone or just by faith and grace will not
be saved by either. Why not? Because he has no faith in what Jesus said
about other matters related to salvation and counts them as but wasteful words. When you have no real faith in what a man
says you have no faith in the man that said those things.
The
faith that saves is not a smorgasbord where you can go in and pick this or that,
as you choose, to believe and obey. One
must believe and obey all that Jesus taught directly or through the word of
inspiration as found in the New Testament scriptures.
One can be easily deceived by the faith that destroys. I hope you are not. I hope that you develop the kind of faith
that if there was another Hebrews 11 to be written you might be included and it
would be said of you that you believed and did this or that, whatever was
required.
It is really our own choice.
We can follow the herd mindlessly that discounts the faith that obeys,
that trusts in mental assent, or we can follow the examples of those who
believed and obeyed - faith leading to obedience. It is a personal choice. Abraham and Noah had choices to make. So do we.