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The
following commentary was written by the late James
Burton Coffman - a pastor of the Church of Christ.
Though not a Christadelphian, his understanding
of the "faith/works" question was identical to
the Christadelphian view. Indeed, this is true
of the Church of Christ generally.
Here, Coffman examines a section of Romans 2,
proving beyond any shadow of a doubt that the
false doctrine of "Faith Alone" (Sola Fida)
is totally foreign to anything that the apostle
Paul ever taught or wrote.
The New Testament declares
definitely and positively that a man is justified
by faith and that he is justified by works.
That this is surely true appears from the following
two verses, both of them from the New Testament,
and here placed side by side for comparison:
'Being therefore justified by faith, we have
peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ'
(Romans 5:1). 'Ye see that by works a man
is justified, and not only by faith' (James
2:24).
In the light of the
above two verses, it is just as true that a man
is saved by works ALONE as that he is saved by
faith ALONE; but, of course, the word of God says
neither thing. Therefore, any proposition to the
effect that man is saved, or justified, by work
ALONE, or by faith ALONE, contradicts a plain
statement of the word of God.
Whatever the correct view may be, it must, of
necessity, be one that does not contradict any
statement of the scriptures; and from the two
verses cited, it is
revealed as a certainty that the justification
of sinners in Gods sight is contingent upon BOTH
faith and works.
Significantly, Paul brought both faith and works
together in a single text addressed to the Galatians:
'For in Christ Jesus, neither circumcision
availeth anything, nor uncircumcision; but faith
working through love' (Galatians 5:6).
First, attention is directed to a class of New
Testament statements which, upon first glance,
appear to contradict James' statement (James
2:24) that men are justified by works; but it
must continually be borne in mind that James did
not say people are justified by works ALONE. These
are statements to the effect that man's salvation
is 'not of works, lest any man should boast"
(Ephesians 2:8,9), 'not by works of righteousness
which we did ourselves" (Titus 3:5), and 'therefore,
by the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified'
(Romans 3:20).
In all such references to works which are alleged
to have no part in justification, different classes,
or kinds, of works are in view. Therefore, to
determine what kind of work entered into the justification
mentioned by James, it is necessary to classify
works in the same manner that they were classified
by the sacred writers.
Seven classes of works are distinguished in the
New Testament:
(1) Works of the flesh (Galatians 5:19-21), the
same being principally the indulgence of lusts,
passions, etc.
(2) The works of Satan, specifically, lying and
murder (John 8:44), all sins being in one sense
works of Satan, but these being specifically so-called
by Christ himself.
(3) The works of men, including all human achievements
from building of the Great Wall of China to walking
on the moon.
(4) The works of the law of Moses (Romans 3:20).
(5) The works of moral goodness. The moralist
follows a path of behavior parallel in many places
to the Christian life; but between the two ways
there is a river wide and deep, the river of the
blood of Christ. Both Cornelius and the rich young
ruler are New Testament examples of morally upright
persons who were unsaved.
(6) The works of human righteousness (Romans 10:3)
are those religious activities of people which
derive their authority from people alone and not
from God, being the ceremonies and doctrines people
themselves devised and having not the Creator
as their author. Such are the traditions, precepts,
and commandments of men denounced by Christ himself
(Matthew 15:9).
(7) A seventh New Testament classification of
works is called the "work of faith" (1 Thessalonians
1:3). This work is
clearly in a class by itself and may be defined
as any action whatever undertaken or discharged
by man in OBEDIENCE to a divine commandment.
Here is the key to untangling the most persistent
theological problem from the days of Martin Luther
and the Reformers until the present.
The doctrine of justification
by faith ALONE was first advocated by Martin Luther;
but he ran into what seemed an impossible contradiction
of his theory in James 2:24, which was said to
have raised some question in Luther's mind
for a while regarding the canonicity of James.
Modern reverberations of the supposed conflict
between Paul and James (though actually between
Luther and James) have continued to echo through
succeeding generations, the wide-spread heresy
that salvation "through faith" releases people
from the necessity of obeying the Lord's commandments,
especially the commands requiring baptism, the
Lord's supper, etc.
And how is the problem resolved? Quite simply.
Where Paul stated that people are not justified
by works, let it be
determined which works he meant; and where James
wrote that a man is justified by works, let it
be determined what kind of works he meant.
It is perfectly easy to discover both. Paul, in
his repeated affirmations that men are not saved
by works, never had reference to the work of faith
(No. 7, above); and James never had in mind anything
except the work of faith. Thus
Paul's teaching was directed against any notion
that keeping the works of the law of Moses could
save, or any personal morality apart from Christianity
could justify.
Another type of works which Paul categorically
rejected as being the basis of salvation was called
the work of human righteousness, and referred
to religious practices of mere human authority
(No. 6, above). A little diligence on the part
of any student will show what a vital distinction
this is. James gave examples of how certain persons
were justified by works; and in every case, the
"work" was an obedient act to a divine command,
as when Abraham offered Isaac, etc. That
Paul also accepted the principle stated by James
that justification is due to such actions of obedient
faith is clear from Rom. 2:6 in this chapter and
from Rom. 1:5 and Rom. 16:26. In fact, Rom. 2:6
here is absolutely equivalent to saying that man
is justified by works, not the other kinds, but
the works of faith.
Rom. 2:6 harmonizes absolutely with James 2:24.
Therefore, Paul's frequent words, to the effect
that people are not saved by works, never have
reference to the "work of faith" which he himself
announced as one of the glories of the Thessalonian
church (1 Thessalonians 1:3). If
he had meant any such thing, he never could have
written Rom. 2:6.
When James spoke of justification by works, he
did not refer to any of the works set at naught
by Paul. When
James stated that Abraham was justified by works
when he offered his son Isaac upon the altar,
that inspired author made it impossible to misunderstand
the kind of works that justified Abraham. What
kind of work was the offering of Isaac? It
was an act of obedience to God's command;
had it not been that, it would have been murder,
hence a work of the devil; and that is exactly
the difference that turns upon the question of
who commanded a given action.
Specifically, this principle applies to every
humanly derived innovation in worship and to all
human religious ordinances without divine authority.
But for the Christian, the kind of works by which
he is justified are, as in Abraham's case,
the doing of what God has commanded. Such things
as repentance, baptism, the Lord's supper,
etc., are thus not acts of human righteousness,
nor works of human beings in any sense whatever,
but are the work of faith.
Thus there can be no excuse for minimizing the
great imperatives of the gospel of Christ on the
basis that people are saved by faith, for they
are also saved by the work of faith and will be
thus judged eternally (Romans 2:6). People
are saved by faith when they believe and obey
the gospel.
Titus 3:5 has this:
'Not by works done in righteousness, which
we did ourselves, but according to his mercy he
saved us, through the washing of regeneration
and renewing of the Holy Spirit.'
This passage is frequently cited in support of
the view that such acts of obedience as baptism
are not necessary, but
the specific reference to baptism in the last
clauses of that verse proves that the ordinance
of baptism, even when submitted to by believers,
is not to be considered a work of human righteousness
in any sense. It is, on the contrary, a work of
faith, having been commanded and required of all
people by none other than Christ himself.
'Works done in righteousness' is a reference
to religious actions outside of God's commands,
that is, to works other than those of faith. To
set aside one of Jesus' own commands on the
basis that such is a work of human righteousness
is to ignore distinctions made by the holy apostles
themselves.
Therefore, it is not out of harmony with the true
teachings of scripture to declare that people
are saved by faith and that they are also saved
by works, or the work of faith.
Note the following passages of the word of God:
'If thou wouldest enter into life, keep
the commandments'
(Matthew 19:17).
'Men and brethren, what shall we do? ... Repent
and be baptized for the remission of sins'
(Acts 2:38).
'Work out your
own salvation with fear and trembling,
for it is God that worketh in you, both to will
and to work' (Philippians 2:12).
'Repent and do
the first works,
or else I will come unto thee quickly and remove
thy candlestick out of its place' (Revelation
2:6).
'Faith without
works is dead, being alone'
(James 2:17).
Then may people trust God, believing in Christ
with all their hearts, and
obey the gospel.
Even when they have done that, and everything
else within their power to do, people do not become
their own saviour; although, in a sense, those
who obey are scripturally said to 'save themselves'
(Acts 2:40).
No amount of righteous
living, or of good works, can place God in the
position of owing salvation to any person. Salvation
is the free gift of Almighty God; but it is also
conditional, there being revealed in the New Testament
pre-conditions which must be fulfilled by people
in order to comply with the terms upon which the
free salvation is given. Faith is such a pre-condition;
and the obedience of faith is another.
Reference to these distinctions will be made throughout
this commentary.
Verses 7, 8
To them that by patience in well-doing seek for
glory and honor and incorruption, eternal life:
but unto them that are factions, and obey not
the truth, but obey unrighteousness, shall be
wrath and indignation.
Here is another unequivocal declaration of a master
principle underlying God's judgment, the fifth
in this passage:
God will reward well-doing
and punish disobedience.
These verses connect closely with Rom. 2:6 and
show the manner of God's judging people according
to their works. Together, these verses declare
dogmatically that well-doers
shall inherit eternal life and that the
disobedient
shall receive wrath and tribulation. Whiteside
saw a definition of eternal life in Rom. 2:7.
So far as this text shows, eternal life consists
of glory, honor, and incorruption - a happy existence
in the heavenly kingdom. ... Eternal
life is conditional, for eternal life must be
sought by patience and well-doing.
In the 8th and 9th verses, Paul affirms that tribulation
and anguish will be visited upon those who do
evil. If damnation
is conditional, then salvation also must be conditional.
One cannot be conditional and the other unconditional;
if doing wrong causes a person to be lost, then
to be saved, he must leave off the wrong and do
right. If being
lost is conditional, so is being saved.
'Doing' and
'obeying' are made to be the basis of
being saved, and 'obeying not' is established
as the basis of being lost;
and such was no new concept with the apostle Paul.
It invariably entered into all his letters.
For example, he wrote the Thessalonians:
'Rest with us at the revelation of the Lord
Jesus from heaven with the angels of his power
in flaming fire, rendering vengeance to them that
know not God, and to them that obey not the gospel
of our Lord Jesus, who shall suffer punishment,
even eternal destruction from the face of the
Lord and from the glory of his might' (2 Thessalonians
1:7,8).
It should be noticed
in the above reference that Paul did not set up
a special category for "disobedient believers,"
who through faith and nothing but faith would
be saved anyway! Nor yet was there provision
made for another class of disobedient who had
had God's forensic righteousness transferred
to them through faith only.
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