Thoughts on Works
and Salvation
Rev. Dr. Tom
Sorenson
June, 2015
A parishioner recently gave me a
written piece with the premise that while works do not bring about “salvation,”
works are required to keep one’s salvation once one has it. This piece claims
to support this thesis with several quotes from the New Testament, all of them
more or less taken in isolation from the context in which they appear. The
piece raises, or perhaps better points to, profound issues about the meaning of
Christianity and how the faith shapes our lives and our relationship to God.
There are also foundational issues here that we must address before turning to
the specifics of the matter.
The first issue we must address
is the issue of methodology. It is so common for Christians to support some
position by throwing Bible verses at it. Yet the simple truth is that we can
“prove” almost anything with carefully selected Bible verses. We can cite Paul
for the proposition that justification (whatever that means) comes as God’s
free and unmerited grace that we access through faith, and we can cite James
(as this piece does) for the proposition that works are necessary for our faith
to mean anything. We can “prove” that Jesus was born in a house in Bethlehem
where Mary and Joseph already lived by citing Matthew, and we can “prove” that
he was born in a stable in Bethlehem where Mary and Joseph did not live by
citing Luke. We can “prove” that God created the world in six days by quoting
Genesis 1, and we can “prove” that God created the world in one day by quoting
Genesis 2. We can “prove” that God wants strict adherence to Torah law by
quoting Deuteronomy or Leviticus, and we can prove that God cares nothing about
robotic obedience to the law but wants us to treat vulnerable people with
justice and compassion by quoting the great eighth century BCE prophets like
Isaiah, Micah, and Amos. The Bible says so many different things that we can
find a text to support most any proposition. Trotting out a string of Bible
quotes to prove some point only proves that the person doing it found some
quotes he or she likes. It very probably doesn’t prove the point being argued
at all.
So what are we to do? We need to
step back from the specific verses we find in the Bible and discern just what
the Bible is really about. It is of course about a lot of things, but mostly it
consists of the accounts of their experience and understanding of God by many
different people in different historical and cultural settings. Despite its
great variety of views, the Bible does have certain big themes that course
through its pages. These include the themes of God as the Creator of a good
world, human beings as being made in the image and likeness of God to serve as
stewards of God’s creation, God as love, God as a God of both law and grace,
Jesus Christ as the Son of God come to proclaim a new understanding of God, and
salvation (whatever that means) coming from God for us Christians through Jesus
and for Judaism through the revelation of God’s law. These themes have spoken
powerfully to a great many people in a great many historical-cultural-linguistic
contexts, and they still do.
So in general terms the question
of whether salvation requires works either to obtain it in the first place or
to keep it once we’ve got it comes down to understanding how the question of
salvation fits with the Bible’s great themes, not whether proof texts can be
found to support any particular position. I am convinced that the question of
salvation comes down to a question of grace, but before we can examine that
contention in more detail there is another preliminary matter we need to deal
with.
It is the matter of definition.
Before we can have any meaningful discussion of anything we need to make sure
that we’re all understanding the same things by the terms we use. The most
basic definition issue this document raises is the meaning of the word
“salvation.” The piece never defines that basic term. It seems to assume the
common definition of salvation as being in right relationship with God so that
your immortal soul goes to heaven after you die. The first thing we have to
understand in this context is that your soul going to heaven when you die is
mostly not what the New Testament means by salvation. There are to be sure
passages that fit with that understanding. For example, the Gospel of John has
Jesus say to his Disciples “In my Father’s house are many rooms; if it were not
so, I would have told you. I am going there to prepare a place for you.” John
14:2 NIV The Gospel of Matthew has the famous judgment of the nations scene in
chapter 25 in which a resurrected Christ separates the sheep from the goats.
Christians usually understand this passage to be about judgment for salvation
or damnation after death. Whether that is really the most important thing about
that passage is another matter altogether, but we need not go into it here.
Many Christians take the Gospel
of John in particular to be about the life of the soul after death. In support
of that notion they often cite John 3:16, easily the most frequently cited
verse in the entire Bible. There Jesus says (or perhaps it’s only John says,
but we needn’t jump into that briar patch): “For God so loved the world that he
gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not parish but
have eternal life.” NIV Christians most frequently understand John’s term
“eternal life” to mean unending life of the soul in heaven after death. The
Gospel of John itself, however, makes it quite clear that that is not what the
term eternal life means. John defines eternal life, only once to be sure, but
he does define it. In chapter 17 of John Jesus is praying before his arrest and
execution. He says to the figure he always calls Father in this Gospel “For you
granted him [Jesus] authority over all people that he might give eternal life
to all those you have given him. Now this is eternal life: that they may know
you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sent.” John 17:2-3 NIV
Notice: He doesn’t say you get
eternal life by knowing God and Jesus Christ. He says that knowing God and
Jesus Christ is eternal life. Given
this definition of eternal life we should understand John 3:16 as saying that
God gave us Jesus so that we might have life in the knowledge of God and Jesus
Christ. The life that is intended here is clearly life in this life on earth.
The Gospel of John isn’t primarily about how you get to heaven at all. It’s
about living in the knowledge of God in this life. That is the life that John
calls eternal.
That being said, the New
Testament has many different voices and many different views of what salvation is
and how one gets it. Christianity (or at least western Christianity) most
commonly sees Jesus as being about salvation of souls in the hereafter. Yet it
is a simple fact that in the Gospels Jesus talks about this life a whole lot
more than he talks about any next life. In the first three Gospels what Jesus
mostly talks about is something he calls “the kingdom of God.” In Matthew he
mostly calls it the kingdom of heaven, but that term means the same thing in
Matthew as kingdom of God means in Mark and Luke. For Jesus the kingdom of God
isn’t heaven. It is a vision for life here on earth. We know that because so
much of what Jesus says is about how God wants us to live in this life. One
powerful way in which the New Testament understands salvation is as liberation
from the ways of the world so that we can live into the ways of God.
Nonetheless, over the centuries
after New Testament times it has become much more common for Christians to
think of salvation as being about our eternal fate with God, more specifically
the fate of our souls after death. It is common for Christians grappling with
the issue of salvation understood in this way to reduce the Bible’s many views
of the matter down to two primary ones. The question usually gets reduced to
the ancient and contentious issue of faith versus works. Faith versus works is
the dominant issue in the authentic writings of St. Paul, the oldest Christian
documents that we have. The background of the issue over whether salvation
depends only on grace through faith or only on what is usually called works, is
the Jewish law. In first century Judaism salvation was mostly understood as
coming from strict adherence to the Torah law, those 613 laws (by the
traditional count) contained in the Torah, the first five books of the Bible. The
first Christians were Jews. They grew up with Torah law, and they retained
their Jewish training which said that to be right with God they had to obey the
law, meaning the Torah law, also called the law of Moses. That belief was no
particular problem as long as most Christians were Jews. It became a big
problem when word of Jesus Christ began to spread through non-Jewish areas,
mostly through the cities of the eastern half of the Roman Empire, where the
people were Greek not Jewish. Greek people, especially Greek men, were not
about to obey some of the Torah laws, especially the law of circumcision. Some
leading Christians, particularly St. Paul, began to preach that justification,
that is, right relationship with God, came not through obeying the Torah law
but by God’s unmerited grace accessed through faith in Jesus Christ. Paul
insisted that the works of the law were unnecessary and even harmful for people
seeking to be in right relationship with God. Paul believed, correctly I think,
that it isn’t even possible to obey all of the Torah laws. For him, the primary
function of the law was to convict people of sin, that is, to show us that we
are sinners in need of God’s grace. Paul is not always perfectly consistent on
the matter, but the thrust of his writing is that right relationship with God
comes through grace not through works.
Not all early Christian writers
agreed. The piece that has prompted this essay includes several quotes from the
Letter of James, the book that famously says that faith without works is dead.
I think that there is a sense in which James is right about that, but I don’t
think that works are necessary for salvation. The Protestant tradition of which
I am a part has long held that right relationship with God comes by grace through
faith, not by the works of the law. Martin Luther had that brilliant insight
after studying Paul’s letter to the Romans. He called James a “book of straw”
and would have thrown it out of the New Testament if he could have. He thought
it misleads people into relying on their own works for salvation rather than on
the grace of God. Grounding his theology in the writings of Paul, Luther taught
that we are saved by grace through faith and not by any of our own good works.
The basic Protestant teaching is that salvation is a free gift of God’s grace
that we neither merit nor can earn. God offers salvation simply because that’s
what God does, that’s who God is.
It follows that if a gracious
and forgiving God extends salvation when we have neither deserved it nor earned
it, that God isn’t going to take it away when we continue to demonstrate that
we don’t deserve it. It’s not that God doesn’t make demands on us. God does;
but if our being put in right relationship with God didn’t depend on our works,
our goodness, in the first place, it only makes sense that any failure on our
part isn’t going to cost us our salvation later on.
Here’s how I and a lot of other
people understand the matter of salvation today. Our salvation, either for new
life here on earth or for eternity hereafter, is grounded in God’s grace. God’s
grace, that is, God’s love in action, is free and universal. God offers it
without condition to every creature. God never takes it away from anyone.
Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection reconciled God and creation. See 2
Corinthians 5:16-19 That work of reconciliation was God’s work through Jesus.
Since it was not the work of any mere human its effect applies either to all
people or to no people. Since that work is meaningless if it applies to no one,
it must apply to all. God has given us salvation through grace. God’s not going
to take it away.
God’s not going to take it away,
but that doesn’t mean that we humans have no role in the drama of salvation.
God extends unconditional grace, but we are free to acknowledge and live in
that grace or to ignore it, deny it, or reject it. God calls us to respond to
God’s free offer of grace with lives of faith and service to God’s people and
God’s earth. When we acknowledge that God has saved us through God’s grace, the
abundant life that Jesus came to bring us, John 10:10, opens before us. We find
peace, inspiration, and hope. Many people who are ignorant of God’s grace live
decent lives, but those of us who have felt God’s grace know that what John
calls eternal life, that is, life in the knowledge of God and Jesus Christ, is
far fuller and far deeper than mere earthly life. We live more abundantly now,
and we have good hope for the life to come.
I’m guessing that perhaps the
attempt that was recently shared with me to work both grace and works into the
economy of salvation is grounded in a belief that every verse in the Bible is
true and must be taken into account in our understanding of the faith. I’m
afraid I must say that that just isn’t correct. See the brief examples of
biblical contradictions above. It is undeniable that the Bible includes many
different points of view, and it simply is not possible to reconcile all of
them. Bible verses don’t always mean what they appear to mean at first blush,
and it is important to understand a verse deeply and in its original context
before accepting or rejecting it. Sometimes, even after we’ve done the work to
understand a passage deeply, we simply must conclude that it does not express
the will and nature of God for us. A good example from the Old Testament is the
command God supposedly gave King Saul to kill every living thing among a
foreign people called the Amalekites. See 1 Samuel 15:1-3 The God I know, love,
and seek to serve never gave any such order to anyone. God is a God of life not
death. God is the God of all people, even the Amalekites, not only of the
Hebrews. The claim that God told Saul to kill every living thing among the
Amalekites is simply false. An example of the same dynamic from the New
Testament is the directive in 1 Corinthians that women must be silent in
church. See 1 Corinthians 14:34 That directive, which almost certainly is a
later insertion into this letter and is not actually from Paul, is quite simply
patriarchal nonsense. It’s in the Bible, but it isn’t from God. It’s just plain
false. I make no effort to reconcile it with divine truth, for it is a satanic
lie that made it into the New Testament as cultural sexism reasserted itself in
the early Christian community against early Christianity’s radical acceptance
and inclusion of women. So it simply isn’t necessary to reconcile everything in
the Bible with everything else in the Bible. It isn’t necessary because it
isn’t possible.
So yes, the Letter of James is
in the Bible, and it seems to say that works are more important than faith in
the dynamic of salvation. I’m not so sure it really says that, but I’ll assume
for now that it does. I find that contention to be false, and I have no need to
reconcile it with anything. It contradicts my experience of God. It contradicts
other passages in the New Testament. It contradicts the dominant teaching of
the Protestant tradition of which I am a part. I am convinced that salvation
comes only from God and not from anything we do or don’t do or anything we
believe or don’t believe. That is the only way grace is grace, for if salvation
depends on something we do or believe then salvation is a reward, a payment,
and not a free gift of God.
So, to my parishioner who gave
me the piece that prompted this essay, I say that I believe that salvation is
God’s free and unmerited gift. I do not believe that we need to or even can do
anything to earn it, and I don’t believe that God ever takes it away. There
probably are Bible verses that say something different. It doesn’t matter. We
must always do our own discernment in dialogue with the Bible and the Christian
tradition and figure out what in the Bible rings true for us and what doesn’t. It
does not ring true to me that we must do good works to keep our salvation. If
it does to you, OK. We can talk about that. For me, salvation is God’s free
gift that never gets taken away. Thanks be to God!
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