Do it Yourself Salvation?
As I share Christ with people, I come to see more and more just how "works-based" everyone really is. In my neck of the woods, if you ask the average person on the street about the afterlife, most are pretty sure there's a Heaven, or hope there is, and they are pretty sure they'll get there because they've generally been a "good person." Some list off a resumé of things they do, like go to church or pray or read their Bible or be kind to others. Or, as I did as a good moralist, they'll bring up all the things they don't do like smoke or chew or hang with anyone else who do... uh, does that kind of thing.
People really do want to do, or maybe avoid doing, something in order to please God, if we even believe there is such a Person. And we all want to save ourselves. Even Christians have no intention of letting ourselves truly realize, much less letting anyone else know, how sinful we really are. We have to be the masters of our fate. Somehow. Some way. There must be something we have to do.
We Really are Saved by Works
The truth is, Christians are saved by works, just not our own. Unfortunately, God says our own works are as good as "filthy rags" or a "polluted garment" (Isaiah 64:6). And we all start out as dead in our sins (Ephesians 2:5). We can't bring anything to this equation on our own.
But by God's grace, believers in Christ are saved by the work of Christ. Jesus lived the perfect life we couldn't, died in the place of His people, rose from the dead and is praying for us right now in Heaven.
And yet, while we are not saved by our own works, we are saved to good works. (Thanks to Mark Driscoll for that clarification.) There is something God will give each of His people to do here on Earth to further His Kingdom and His glory. Ephesians 2:10 says, "For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them." There we see that even the work God will have us do He already decided for us.
Examine Yourself
As God was powerfully calling me to Himself in my late 20s, I remember
being confused about basically everything. I wasn't sure what was real,
or what I really believed. In my quest for answers, I remember driving to my grandparent's house one night and hearing John MacArthur on the radio speak about examining
one's self to see if we are truly in the faith (2 Corinthians 13:5).
One of the most helpful tools I have used to aid people in examining themselves and understand the difference between our own human works and God working through us can be found in the back of the MacArthur Study Bible, and now online here:
"The Character of Genuine Saving Faith"
(To best honor copyrights, I'll simply share the link. You can also print their PDF version.)
List I is often the type of material I hear people recite when we discuss God and Heaven. I'm behaved. I know about God or Jesus. I go to church/pray/read my Bible. I help people when I can. I don't do or like bad things (as I define them). I'm good with God. I walked an aisle or prayed a prayer.
These aren't all necessarily bad things. The problem is when they are all focused on "me" and what I've done rather than on Jesus and what He did and is doing. In Matthew 7:21-24, Jesus says such people will hear Him say, "Depart from me, I never knew you," which is a terrifying thought. And, on their own or collectively, none of List I really indicates that a person knows Christ at all.
List II, however, is a different story. These things ignore "what I did" and move to things only Christ can do through us and enable us to do. Our motivations are different. There is an intangible quality to some of these things, but they are often seen by others in ways people may have difficulty expressing.
I also appreciate that it mentions if list II is true, list I will be also. (FYI, even if you don't have a "date" regarding your conversion, you will see in hindsight where God was working to draw you to Him.) We are no longer trying to perform. We are motivated by the love and grace of Jesus.
Spend some time with that page and study the accompanying Scriptures. Examine yourself, asking God to show you the motivations of your heart in whatever you do, and asking Him to help you trust Him where you don't. And pray He clearly shows you the difference between your useless and frustrating trying and His perfect and saving doing.
10.30.2011
how does saving faith really look?
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