The gospel declares God’s grace comes to us
through faith. So if you wanted to undermine the gospel, there are two ways you
could do it:
1. attack grace – put price tags on it or
obscure it by referring to grace as a “doctrine”
2. attack faith – either make it a work or
diminish it, belittle it
I usually talk about grace but today I want
to talk about faith because grace without faith is worthless:
For we also have had the gospel preached to
us, just as they did; but the message they heard was of no value to them,
because those who heard did not combine it with faith. (Heb 4:2)
The gospel is true whether you believe it
or not but it won’t benefit you unless you believe it. For instance, if you
don’t believe Jesus has forgiven you, you won’t walk in his forgiveness. And if
you don’t believe that in Christ you are already holy and acceptable, you will
feel pressure to make yourself holy and acceptable.
Faith does not compel God to forgive us or
sanctify us. Faith doesn’t make God do anything. Rather, faith is a positive
response to what God has done. Faith is acknowledging every good thing that is
already ours in Christ (2 Pet 1:3).
Faith doesn’t make things real that weren’t
real to begin with, but faith makes them real to you. For instance, if you
battle with guilt and condemnation, you don’t need Jesus to come and take away
your sin. You need to believe he already did. Jesus is the cure for guilt, but
until you believe it, you won’t be cured.
Faith
is a noun
Why am I saying this? Because there is a
teaching going around that says, “Everyone is saved whether they believe it or
not.” Never mind that the apostles preached, “Believe and be saved” (Acts
16:31, Rom 10:9). Suddenly, encouraging people to “repent and believe the good
news,” as Jesus did, is politically incorrect. It’s discrimination. It’s
putting barrier gates in front of the kingdom.
Perhaps you’ve heard this: “Believing is a
work and grace and works don’t mix.” What a strange thing to say. It’s like
saying “grace and faith don’t mix” or “grace comes through unbelief.” I
wouldn’t waste your time with this but I’m hearing this a lot. Maybe you are
too. So how do we respond? What does the Bible say?
Now we who have believed enter that rest….
(Heb 4:3)
Faith is not work, faith is a rest. Faith
is a noun, not a verb. Faith is a persuasion that God is who he says he is, has
done what he said he’s done, and will do what he has promised to do. Consider
Abraham, who…
…did not waver through unbelief regarding
the promise of God, but was strengthened in his faith and gave glory to God,
being fully persuaded that God had power to do what he had promised. (Rom
4:20-21)
Faith is being fully persuaded. When you
are fully persuaded, you can rest. The issue is settled. Your mind is made up
and your heart is at ease.
We are creatures of persuasion. We are
designed to operate from our convictions. Either you will be convinced that
Jesus is true or you won’t be. If you’re not convinced, you will waver and
stagger in indecision but don’t panic, for the Holy Spirit will be right there
to convince you about Jesus so you can be persuaded and enter his rest. This is
what the Holy Spirit does – he points us to the Prince of Peace so that we may
find peace for our weary souls.
Unbelief
is a work
When you have seen the beauty of Jesus,
faith comes easily. Unbelief is the harder choice. To fold your arms and lock
your jaw as the goodness of God assails you from every direction requires real
commitment.
Unbelief is not passive ignorance. Unbelief
is hardening your heart to the manifest goodness of God. Unbelief is cursing
that which God has blessed and hating that which he loves. Unbelief is
resisting the Holy Spirit and clinging to worthless idols (Acts 7:51, 14:15,
19:9).
I am not talking about people who haven’t
heard the gospel. I’m talking about those who encountered the love and grace of
God and have rejected it. Instead of opening the door to the One who knocks
(easy), they’ve locked it, pushed the chairs and table up against it, and shuttered
the windows (hard). Instead of reclining at the table of his abundance (easy),
they’re scrounging for food in the pig pen (hard).
Look at how unbelief is described in the
New Testament and you will find plenty of verbs or action words. Unbelief is
rejecting Jesus (John 3:36) and denying the Lord (Jude 1:4). It’s thrusting
away the word of God and judging yourself unworthy of life (Acts 13:46). It’s
suppressing the truth (Rom 1:18) and delighting in wickedness (2 Th 2:12). It’s
turning away (Heb 12:25), going astray (2 Pet 2:15), and trampling the Son of
God underfoot (Heb 10:29).
And how does Jesus describe unbelievers? As
evildoers and workers of iniquity (Mat 7:23).
Do you see? It takes hard work to succeed
as an unbeliever. You need to apply yourself with religious dedication. It’s a
life-time commitment with no days off. You cannot afford to drop your guard
even for a moment or Jesus might sneak up and hug you. If faith is a rest,
unbelief is restlessness:
And to whom sware he that they should not
enter into his rest, but to them that believed not? So we see that they could
not enter in because of unbelief. (Heb 3:18-19, KJV)
Faith
is a gift
There are two ways to get this faith-thing
wrong. Tell people they must work to prove their faith or tell them they need
no faith at all. The first is the message of graceless religion, the second is
the message of faithless universalism. In contrast to both, the gospel declares
you need faith and God will provide it. Indeed, the good news of Jesus comes
wrapped in faith (Rom 10:17). Unwrap the gift of grace and you are left with
faith lying all over the place.
Take my yoke upon you and learn from me,
for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For
my yoke is easy and my burden is light. (Mat 11:29-30)
In a world of heavy burdens, Grace comes
offering rest. Unbelief says, “Leave me alone, I’m busy.” But faith responds,
“Rest, you say? I’ll have some of that, thank you very much!”
- Paul Ellis
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