By Faith Alone
As
Lutherans we summarize our beliefs with three phrases: FAITH ALONE,
GRACE ALONE, and SCRIPTURE ALONE. That’s Lutheran. But what do we
mean when we say that we are saved by FAITH ALONE?
First, we need to understand what faith is.
Perhaps you have heard someone say, "Keep the faith!" or
"You’ve got to have faith!" Those expressions equate
faith with optimism. When people say those things, they view faith
as a warm feeling that "everything will be okay." Is that
the way the Bible uses the word faith? Is that what we mean when we
teach that we are saved through "faith alone"? Not at all.
If faith isn’t just an optimistic hope that
everything will be okay, then what is it? What does the Bible mean
by faith? Paul tells us everything we need to know about faith when
he writes, "[I do not have] a righteousness of my own that
comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ—the
righteousness that comes from God and is by faith" (Philippians
3:9).
Paul tells us what faith is and what faith
does.
Saving faith is "in Christ." Faith
is trust in Jesus Christ and his work.
What does faith do? It receives Christ’s
righteousness. You can think of faith like an organ of the body.
Through your eyes you receive visual images. Through your ears you
receive sound. Through your nose, smells. And through your faith you
receive God’s righteousness.
What is righteousness? Another way to describe
righteousness is "holy perfection." God tells us that we
receive holy perfection though faith. But no one has such
perfection, except Jesus Christ. When we believe, God gives us the
holy perfection, or righteousness, of Jesus. Faith is the organ that
receives this great gift from God.
Therefore, when we teach that we are saved
through FAITH ALONE, we are teaching that we need only Christ’s
righteousness to be saved.
The whole Bible says the same thing. We find
it in the Old Testament: "Abram believed [that is, he had faith
in] the Lord, and he credited it to him as righteousness"
(Genesis 15:6). Jesus teaches the same thing. Jesus says, "For
God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that
whoever believes in him [that is, has faith in him] shall not perish
but have eternal life" (John 3:16). Jesus does not say,
"Whoever believes and tries his hardest to be a good person . .
." He says, "Whoever believes."
Our salvation depends on Christ’s
righteousness, that is, his holy perfection, given to us through
faith. Jesus taught FAITH ALONE. And, therefore, so do we.
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