The
book of Romans begins and ends talking about the “obedience of
faith” (Rom. 1:5 and Rom. 16:26). In chapter 1 Paul says, “We
have received grace and apostleship to bring about the obedience of
faith among all the Gentiles.” (Rom. 1:5 NAS) In Rom. 16 he speaks
of the gospel being made known to all nations with the purpose being
“obedience of faith.” (Rom. 16:26 NAS)
Obedience
of faith is simply the obedience that grows out of or is the result
of faith. No man obeys God who does not first believe in God and
believes what God says. Without faith, there is no motivation for
obedience. Where there is no faith the natural man prevails--our
fleshly human nature. We do what pleases us without thought of God.
Faith
is always the first step in pleasing God. “Without faith it is
impossible to please him, for he who comes to God must believe that
he is, and that he is a rewarder of those who seek him.” (Heb. 11:6
NAS)
Jesus
said, in speaking of himself in John 8:24, “Unless you believe that
I am he, you shall die in your sins.” (NAS) Jesus again, “he who
has disbelieved shall be condemned.” (Mark 16:16 NAS) We might say
disbelieved what? The gospel message (1 Cor. 15:1-4, Mark 16:15-16),
the fact that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God (Acts 8:37,
Philippians 2:11, 1 John 3:23), that he is Lord and Christ (Acts
2:36).
So,
faith is essential to salvation. Where there is no faith salvation
is impossible. We must always remember, however, that “faith
without works is useless.” (James 2:20 NAS) “Faith without works
is dead.” (James 2:26 NAS) Thus in John 12, we find a group of
believers who could not be saved. “Nevertheless many even of the
rulers believed in him but because of the Pharisees they were not
confessing him, lest they should be put out of the synagogue; for
they loved the approval of men rather than the approval of God.”
(John 12:42-43 NAS) We do well to remember even demons believe
(James 2:19).
The
faith Paul spoke of in the book of Romans was that which led to
obedience. It was an obedience of faith. It was a living faith and
not a dead faith.
I
have said all of that to get to this point. Why is it that men use
Rom. 5:1-2 in such a way as to make void works (obedience) of faith?
Rom. 5:1-2 reads as follows:
“Therefore
having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our
Lord Jesus Christ, through whom also we have obtained our
introduction by faith into this grace in which we stand; and we exult
in hope of the glory of God.” (NAS)
It
is widely taught that man is saved by faith alone and this passage is
often used as one proof text. Of course, we are justified by faith
but not faith alone or faith only. “You see that a man is
justified by works, and not by faith alone.” (James 2:24 NAS)
Faith must be accompanied by obedience for it is the obedience of
faith that saves--a living faith and not a dead one.
In
Acts chapter 2 Peter preaches the first gospel sermon ever to be
preached not long after Christ’s ascension back to heaven. All
agree that he spoke by inspiration as the Holy Spirit had just fallen
upon the apostles. He argues that the Jesus whom they had
not long ago crucified was and is the Christ of God. What is the
result? Does he convince them? He most certainly does for they cry
out being “pierced to the heart … ‘Brethren, what shall we
do?’” (Acts 2:37 NAS)
Would
you dare say these men lack faith? According to our saved by faith-alone friends, the mission has been accomplished. Nothing else to be
done. They are saved. Oh, they might, according to the teaching of
our times, offer a prayer to God confessing to him--a confession of
faith--but that is it.
Did
Peter tell them they were saved when he realized they believed? If they did not believe they would not have asked what they must do, Acts 2:37. Did he tell them to offer a prayer of confession to
God? He neither told them they were saved nor to pray. I emphasize
this--he did neither. With Peter, the Holy Spirit being in Peter,
they were not yet saved, not yet forgiven of their sins. What was
left to be done? Obedience of faith, repentance and baptism. In
Peter’s own words, “repent, and let each of you be baptized in
the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins.” (Acts
2:38 NAS)
Paul’s
conversion was similar as found in Acts chapters 9, 22, and 26. When
the Lord appeared to him on the road to Damascus there was no doubt
but what faith came instantly to him. Salvation by faith only
advocates have Paul saved at this point. They have him saved by
their human doctrine but God does not.
Paul
(called Saul at that time) spends the next 3 days in Damascus neither
eating nor drinking, strange behavior for a man who should be
rejoicing in his salvation if he is saved (Acts 9:9). He prays (Acts
9:11). Now, according to the salvation by faith alone people, he has
to be saved. He has faith. He has prayed. It is a done deal.
Not
so with the man sent from God to Paul, the man Ananias. Ananias
tells him to “Arise, and be baptized, and wash away your sins,
calling on his name.” (Acts 22:16 NAS) Jesus had already told all
who would believe him, a long time before Paul’s conversion, that
water was involved in salvation. In Jesus’ words, “Unless one is
born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of
God.” (John 3:5 NAS) He said, “He who has believed and has been
baptized shall be saved.” (Mark 16:16 NAS)
What
is baptism? It is one aspect of obedience of faith. In Acts 2 on
the day of Pentecost when Peter preached that first sermon would
there have been obedience of faith had those he spoke to failed to
heed his admonition? What if Paul had refused to heed the words of
Ananias? Would there have been obedience of faith?
Justification
by faith is dependent on obedience of faith. The book of Romans was
not written to people who had not been baptized. I want to emphasize
that point. Those to whom Paul wrote were baptized people.
“Or
do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ
Jesus have been baptized into his death? Therefore we have been
buried with him through baptism into death, in order that as Christ
was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, so we too
might walk in newness of life.” (Rom. 6:3-4 NAS) Who gets to walk
in newness of life? Paul tells you. It is the man or woman who has
been baptized.
How
is it, do you suppose, that the Romans came to know about baptism?
Do you suppose it was taught to them in the same way Peter taught
those in Jerusalem on the Day of Pentecost? Paul also tells how the
Romans got into Christ. He says, “All of us who have been baptized
into Christ Jesus.” (Rom. 6:3 NAS) He said the same thing in Gal.
3:27 in writing to the Galatian Christians.
Of
grace, Paul says “We have obtained our introduction by faith into
this grace in which we stand.” (Rom. 5:2 NAS) He is talking to us
all but in context, the message is to the Romans. Where is grace
found? We are to “be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus.”
(2 Tim. 2:1 NAS) We enter into Christ by the obedience of faith.
Our faith leads us to be baptized per Mark 16:15-16. When we have
done so we have been saved by grace for we are then found in Christ
where grace is found.
I
know a lot of people have a hard time with grace and law. Any effort
to be obedient, especially being baptized, is seen as a work and thus
working one’s way to heaven. What people fail to understand is man
has always been and always will be under law to God.
If
there has been no law there has been no sin for John defines sin as
being lawlessness, “sin is lawlessness.” (1 John 3:4 NAS) Were
Adam and Eve under law to God? How about the people in the time of
Noah? Why did they die if not because of lawlessness? How about the
people of Sodom and Gomorrah? I remind the reader all of this was
before the time of the Law of Moses. Then later we have a long
period of time when the Jews were under the Law of Moses.
Well,
how about today? Are we under law today? Paul says if we “bear
one another’s burdens” we “fulfil the law of Christ.” (Gal.
6:2 NAS) To the Corinthians he speaks of himself as “not being
without the law of God but under the law of Christ.” (1 Cor. 9:21
NAS) Being under grace as we are today does not mean lawlessness.
If Paul was under the law of Christ so are you and I. In Romans, the
very book from which this article is drawn, Paul says “The mind set
on the flesh is hostile toward God; for it does not subject itself to
the Law of God.” (Rom. 8:7 NAS)
Yet,
the reader of the book of Romans will recall that a good portion of
the book deals with the teaching that one cannot be saved by the
works of the law. “By the works of the Law no flesh will be
justified in his sight.” (Rom. 3:20 NAS) One thing that is often
overlooked as people read through books such as Romans, Galatians,
and Hebrews is that what the writer is combating, generally speaking,
is the idea held by many Jews that keeping the Law of Moses was the
road to salvation.
Paul
often had to deal with Judaizing teachers within the church for even
when converted to Christ many still believed keeping the Law of
Moses, to one degree or another, was essential and were happy to try
and bind that upon others. Thus there was an attempt by some to bind
things like circumcision (Gal. 5:3) and it is said of Peter that he
feared “the party of the circumcision” (Gal. 2:12 NAS). Had this
group had their way it would have eventually destroyed Christianity.
It
is true no man can be saved by law-keeping apart from grace.
Salvation by law requires perfection in law-keeping. Thus Paul says,
“For as many as are of the works of the Law are under a curse; for
it is written, ‘Cursed is every one who does not abide by all
things written in the book of the Law, to perform them.’” (Gal.
3:10 NAS) One mistake and you are not saved but condemned by law.
That
being the case James says, “Whoever keeps the whole law and yet
stumbles in one point, he has become guilty of all.” (James 2:10
NAS) When one breaks a single law he has convicted himself as being
a lawbreaker. A criminal is a criminal. It matters not what one
specific law he broke.
James’
statement is as applicable to the law of Christ as to any law. With
regards even to the law of our land, you became a lawbreaker the
first time you exceeded the speed limit by even a single mile per
hour. You will always be guilty of having done that. You were a
lawbreaker and there is no going back and undoing it.
This
is why to be saved we must be saved by God’s grace. God being
perfect himself demands perfection in us if we are to be saved by
works of law. For us that is an impossibility.
But,
does salvation by grace mean salvation by disobedience? Does it mean
disregard for the law of God? Paul says, “May it never be!”
(Rom. 6:2 NAS) Please listen now carefully to what Paul has to say
and mull it over in your mind.
“How
shall we who died to sin still live in it? Or do you not know that
all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus have been baptized
into his death? Therefore we have been buried with him through
baptism into death.” (Rom. 6:2-3 NAS) We have been baptized into
his death where he shed his blood, the blood that redeems us.
Baptism is the place where that blood is contacted. In baptism, we
experience our own death to sin. Thus Paul says, in the conclusion
of verse 3, “So
we too might walk in newness of life.” (Rom. 6:3 NAS)
God
has always saved man the same way--by faith and obedience, “obedience
resulting in righteousness.” (Rom. 6:16 NAS) Other versions say
“obedience to righteousness” (NKJV), “obedience, which leads to
righteousness” (ESV), and so on.
The
beginning of salvation is found in the beginning of the obedience of
faith, not in a non-acting faith that resides in the mind alone.
That is why Peter demanded of believers that day so long ago that
they “repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus
Christ for the remission of sins.” (Acts 2:38 KJV) That is the
obedience of faith, the faith that saves.
[To download this article or print it out click here.]