Three Ways Our Deeds Relate to Our Salvation
December 22, 2020
December 22, 2020
One effect of close attention to Scripture is that sweeping generalizations become problematic. This is notably true of the way our works (including our attitudes and words and behavior) relate to our salvation.
The biblical texts relating to this issue are many and diverse, but not contradictory. If you take any one of them and treat it as the whole picture, you will almost surely lead people astray.
For example, Paul rejoices that we are “justified by faith apart from works of the law” (Rom. 3:28). I take that to mean that anything we bring to Christ other than faith has no part in the ground (Christ) or the instrument (faith) of our justification. This is a glorious truth, and our life hangs on it.
But if we carelessly speak of justification as having no relationship to works, or if we generalize about salvation being apart from works of the law, we lead people away from the Scriptures.
Justification does have a relationship with works. It secures the removal of God’s wrath so that his Spirit flows freely in a union where works are possible and necessary.
And salvation is a larger reality than justification. Justification is one aspect of salvation. There are other aspects of it that are not “apart from works” but are, in fact, dependent upon (though not merited by) works.
I invite you to ponder the following three ways of speaking about our works in relationship to our salvation. And if you agree that these are biblical, let’s strive to speak with the kind of care that does not nullify one when affirming another.
When we are united to Christ by faith alone, God counts Christ’s perfect deeds as ours. He is our righteousness (1 Cor. 1:30). Thus, in a real sense, we have performed perfectly in Christ the good deeds required of us (Matt. 5:48; Jas. 2:10). Christ’s deeds are counted as ours. On this basis, God may be trusted, from the point of faith forward, as one hundred percent for us.
In union with Christ by faith alone, as we enjoy God’s being one hundred percent for us, we now, by the power of the Holy Spirit (Rom. 8:13), through faith in God’s future grace (2 Thess. 1:11–12; 1 Cor. 15:10), “work out our salvation” (Phil. 2:13), bearing “the fruit of the Spirit” (Gal. 5:22) in a life of practical righteousness, and we thus confirm our saving faith and our union with Christ, and in this way obtain the inheritance of salvation. Our inheritance is not earned by our lived-out righteousness (Rom. 8:15–17 ; Gal. 4:7), but belonging to the family and being an heir is confirmed by it.
United to Christ by faith alone, enjoying God’s being one hundred percent for us, and walking in practical obedience by faith in his future grace (2 Cor. 9:8), not self-reliance (Heb. 13:21; Phil. 2:12–13), we “serve the Lord Christ” (Col. 3:24), and “make it our aim to please the Lord” (2 Cor. 5:9; Phil. 4:18; Col. 1:10; 1 Thess. 4:1), “not by the way of eye-service, as people-pleasers, but . . . doing the will of God from the heart,” so that we will receive back from the Lord varying degrees of reward corresponding to the good we have done.
These rewards are not earned, but freely given in response to our “works of faith” (1 Thess. 1:3 ; 2 Thess. 1:11) — that is, works that rely on God’s grace so that, when we are done, we say, “I worked harder than any of them, though it was not I, but the grace of God that is with me” (1 Cor. 15:10). Thus God rewards the kinds of works that call attention to his all-sufficiency (2 Cor. 9:8).
If this thought of varying degrees of reward and happiness in the age to come is new to you, and you would like to hear one of the most profound descriptions of it, I once recorded a section from Jonathan Edwards who explains it beautifully.
We can apply these relationships between our works and our salvation in the following ways:
Let us speak with the same degree of differentiation that the Bible does about our works and our justification and our entrance into the final kingdom and our rewards there.
Let us glory in the gospel that no works we perform are the ground of our justification.
Let us be “diligent to confirm our calling and election” (2 Peter 1:10) by the love we show in the power of the Spirit.
In all our vocations, let us work heartily as to the Lord, knowing that “whatever good anyone does, this he will receive back from the Lord.”
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Editor’s note: This article has been reprinted with the permission of Desiring God.