Great Doctrines of the Bible
Special English Version
Lesson 27
LAW AND GRACE – FAITH AND WORKS
INTRODUCTION
Faith and works both have their place in the Christian life. God justifies
a believer by grace through faith. God will reward him according to
his works. This is a simple and plain truth. However, many churches
do not teach that God saves individual people by grace and faith alone
without works. Almost every religion and almost every liberal denomination
demands something in addition to faith for salvation. They demand such
things as baptism and/or obedience to certain rules and laws. Demanding
works for salvation places the sinner under law again. The Bible says
we are no longer “under law” but “under grace.” The
solution of the different opinions is not as simple as some people
might think. The apostle James seemed to teach that God justifies us
by our works. Paul seemed to teach that God justifies us through faith
alone. People think this is a contradiction and have misunderstood
the teaching of the Bible on this subject. Even the great reformer,
Martin Luther said that the book of James was “a letter of straw.”
Our most important purpose in this lesson is to make the biblical meaning
of “law and grace” or “faith and works” very
clear. This will help you to be able to recognize and understand the
special place and purpose of these two doctrines.
IMPORTANCE OF THIS LESSON
- Millions
of Christians do not know for certain that God saves them forever.
When someone asks them, “Did God save you?” they
answer, “I’m doing the best I can.” This shows
that to them their salvation depends on their good works. They
never know
if their good works satisfy a holy God. Therefore they are not
completely sure that they will go to heaven. If you want to make
sure that you
will go to heaven, you must fully understand what faith and works
are. You must understand their purposes too.
- There is the matter
of law and grace. The Bible states that Moses gave the law, but
grace and truth came by Jesus Christ. Does God
save a believer
by pure grace completely apart from the law? If this is true, why
did God give the law? What place does the law have in the believer’s
life? How must the believer act towards the law? If God turned from
law to grace, what was wrong with the law? What is grace? What
does it mean
to “fall from grace”? Can law and grace ever mix? What
is the connection between grace and salvation to the Christian life?
- This lesson is very important because it will help you to understand
law and grace. You must understand the truth of these words in
order to understand that you are eternally secure and know that you
are
complete in Christ. This will give you absolute assurance of your
eternal salvation.
THE LESSON
I. IS THERE A CONFLICT BETWEEN
JAMES AND PAUL CONCERNING OUR JUSTIFICATION?
- Read and study James
2:14-26.
- Now read Romans 4:2-5; Ephesians 2:8-9; Titus 3:5-6;
and Romans 8:1.
- This is what these verses seem to say when you read
them without paying close attention and do not
try to understand their meaning.
• James – Faith alone cannot save you.
• Paul – Faith alone can and does save you.
• James – God justifies a person by his works.
• Paul – God does not justify a person by works because then that
person will be proud.
•
James – “Faith without works is dead.”
•
Paul – Faith that depends on works defeats the grace of God.
II. THE SOLUTION TO THE PROBLEM
Here are three key words to note and understand: Faith, Works, and Justify.
- Faith
- Paul wrote about faith in a very personal way. Paul talked
about a real faith in the sacrifice of Christ on the cross. He
talked about
a
faith that changes your life (Acts 16:31). Paul preached and taught
about a faith that involved repentance (Acts 17:30; 20:21). He
preached about
a faith that comes from the heart and includes a person declaring
Christ as Lord and Savior
(Romans 10:9-10). Paul preached about a faith that provides salvation
only through Christ’s death and resurrection. Read and study
Romans 3:27-28; 4:5; 5:1-2; Galatians 2:16; 3:24; 2:20; Ephesians
3:17; 1 Thessalonians
1:3; and 2 Timothy 1:5.
- James talked about a weak, uncertain faith.
James wrote about a faith that is only in the mind, and is not
real and does not
bear fruit.
He
wrote about a dead faith and asked the question, “Can that
kind of faith save you?” Of course, the answer is NO!
• It will help you to understand the situation if you add “that
kind of” in the verse every time James says “faith that is dead” or “faith
that cannot justify.”
- Works
- Paul recommended good works as the normal duty of a believer.
Good works are not necessary for our salvation. A passage in
the Bible that
many people know is Ephesians 2:9-10. In verse 9 the Bible says
that salvation is not by works, because then any person can boast.
In verse
10 the Bible says that God made us new people in Christ Jesus
to do good works. Paul destroyed the idea that God saves a sinner
by his
works or
observing the law (Galatians 2:16; Titus 3:5-6; Romans 4:5).
Nevertheless:
- Paul spoke highly of widows who had a good report because
they did good works.
- Paul told Timothy to advise believers
to be “rich in
good works” (1
Timothy 6:18).
- Paul wrote to Titus about deceivers who
said they knew God but their works showed that they never accepted
Him
(Titus
1:16).
- James wrote about people who say they are believers,
but their lives bear no fruit. Their lives are empty. James
said
that when
there are
no works there is no real faith. James said that faith
without works is dead. In James 2:18 he said, “I
will show you my faith by my works.” To James, works
were the natural fruit of faith. Faith and works are two
witnesses that show that
God justified
a person.
• Dr. Harry Ironside wrote, “God has not done a work
of grace in the heart when there is no act of grace in the life.”
- Justified
- Paul looked at salvation from the standpoint that God
is ruler over everything. God puts the righteousness of Christ
on the person
who
believes. God justifies the ungodly because of faith
alone (Romans 3:21-22, 25-28;
4:5-6; 5:1).
- James looked at a person’s responsibility
to show his faith to others by his works. He saw salvation
as man
sees it
(James 1:18-26).
- Paul wrote about justification the
way God sees it. James wrote about justification the way man sees
it.
• Dr. A.T. Robertson wrote, “God justifies no man by
faith unless faith caused that he live a just life (unless the man’s
faith makes him to do the right thing).”
III. WORKS - SALVATION
- The place of works in connection with salvation:
- Because a person
believes, God credits righteousness to his account (Romans 4:5-6).
- Your works did not save you because then you could boast (Ephesians
2:8-9).
- The works of the law do not justify a person (Galatians
2:16).
- If righteousness came by the law (works), then Christ died for
nothing (Galatians 2:21).
- Since God saves us by grace then it is
not by works (Romans 11:6).
- Our righteous works did not save
us (Titus 3:5-6).
• Even though we studied the way James looked at works, I want you to
note how clearly these verses teach that works do not save us. Nevertheless,
since God saved us, we must be “...rich in good works...” (1
Timothy 6:18). “...be careful to maintain good works...” (Titus
3:8).
- The place of faith in connection with salvation:
• Faith is the key to salvation
- God saves you by grace through faith (Ephesians
2:8).
- God justified you by faith (Romans 5:1).
- Believe...and God will save
you (Acts 16:31).
- The gospel is the power of God to everyone who believes
(Romans 1:16).
- Christ lives in our hearts by faith (Ephesians 3:17).
- God justifies
a person by faith (Romans 3:28).
- It is by faith that we receive the
righteousness which comes from God (Philippians 3:9).
• In simple words, God saved you and me by grace through faith, plus nothing!
IV. THE PLACE OF WORKS IN CONNECTION TO THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
- Good
works show that a person has real faith (James 2:14, 17, 20, 22).
- At
the time Christ rewards every believer, a Christian will receive his
reward according to the works that he did by using his body (2
Corinthians 5:10).
- Salvation is by grace through faith alone. In heaven
God will give us rewards according to our works (1 Corinthians 3:12-15).
- Galatians 5:6 talks about “faith that works by love.” We
show our faith by doing acts of love.
- Revelation 14:13 talks about
believers who have died. This verse says, “their
works do follow them.” You cannot take your possessions into
heaven. You cannot take your wealth, your good name or your money into
heaven.
The only thing you can take to heaven is your works. What you do here
on earth influences your rank in heaven!
V. THE PLACE OF FAITH IN CONNECTION WITH THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
- God saves
us by faith, and God’s power protects us through our
faith (1 Peter 1:5).
- In Galatians 2:20 Paul says that he lives this
present life through faith in the Son of God.
- 2 Corinthians 5:7 says, “For
we walk by faith, not by sight.”
- The Christian life is a life
of faith. Faith is the key to everything that the believer does.
- Through faith in Christ we win over the world with its demands,
attractions and temptations (1 John 5:4).
- Through faith we defeat
Satan with all his power, fiery arrows and tricks (1 Peter 5:9;
Ephesians 6:16).
- Through faith God gives us all the promises. We
trust Him for these promises. By faith we accept these promises
as our
own (Hebrews
6:12).
- Furthermore:
- Faith frees us from worry about the things we think
we must have (Matthew 6:30-33).
- Faith gives us the
courage to face the storms of life (Matthew 8:26).
- Faith
makes us free from doubt (Matthew 14:31-32).
VI. THE PERSON WHO BELIEVES THAT HIS WORKS
SAVED HIM, PUTS HIMSELF UNDER LAW AGAIN AND HE “FALLS FROM
GRACE”
- Read Galatians 5:1-6.
In verse 1, Paul advised us to stand strong because now we have freedom.
Christ has made us free. This means that
God set us free from slavery to the Law of Moses through Christ.
In verses 2-4, Paul talked about the matter of circumcision. Circumcision
is the mark that shows that Jews are separate from the rest of the
world under the law. Some false teachers were insisting that under
grace, Gentiles and Jewish Christians had to submit to circumcision.
Paul made three arguments. He said that if you insist on this legal custom
the following things will result:
- Christ is no profit to you in anything
(verse 2).
- You make yourself a debtor to the whole law (verse 3;
James 2:10; Galatians 3:10).
- You have departed from grace
(verse 4).
• Many people misinterpret the phrase “fallen from grace” more
than any other verse of Scripture. People often use the verse to
teach that you can lose your salvation. By this phrase, Paul meant
that if
you place yourself back under the law by submitting to circumcision,
you reject grace as a means of salvation.
- This introduces us to the
matter of LAW versus GRACE in salvation and the Christian life.
VII. TWO TEXTS TO THINK ABOUT CAREFULLY
- John 1:17 – Moses gave
the law, but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ brought
with Him a whole new system and way
of life. In Christ, the Law of Moses, as a system of government, came
to an end.
- Romans 10:4 – This verse teaches us that Christ is
the final purpose of the law, which leads to righteousness for everyone
who believes.
The LAW reveals the righteous will of God but it cannot cause that
anyone become righteous (Romans 8:3). The righteousness available to
all believers
now is righteousness “apart from the law” (Romans 3:21).
It is the very righteousness of God that is put upon the believer in
and through Christ (Romans 3:22; Philippians 3:9).
VIII. A BRIEF STUDY OF THE LAW
- What is the Law?
- It is a period of time (dispensation) from the
giving of the Law of Moses until the death of Christ. Note Galatians
3:24, “...The
law was our schoolmaster...unto (until) Christ.”
- During
this period of Law, God worked with man in three ways. God gave
the Law to Moses in three parts:
- the commandments (Exodus
20:1-26).
- the judgments or social laws (Exodus 21:1-24:11).
- the religious
laws (Exodus 24:12-31:18).
The commandments showed God’s holy will. The judgments,
the social laws, told the Israelites how to live together.
The ordinances
told
Israel how to live the spiritual life.
- When Christ or Paul
talked about the law, they usually meant the Ten Commandments
(Matthew 5:17; 19:17; 22:37-40; Galatians 3:10-24).
- What was
the purpose of the law? Read Galatians 3:19-24.
- God added the law
because of sin (Galatians 3:19). God gave the law to show that
sin is doing wrong against a righteous
God (Romans
7:7).
Paul said that he would not have known sin except that
the law showed him what sin was (1 John 3:4; 1 Timothy 1:9-10).
- The law showed the entire world that it was guilty (Romans 3:19).
The law showed that everybody is a sinner and therefore
must die
(Galatians 3:22; Romans 3:9-20).
- The law was like a schoolmaster
until Christ came to this earth (Galatians 3:24). In Greek and
Roman households
a child
was placed
under the care
of a “child leader.” This person would take
care of the child until the father decided the child would
inherit
all
his belongings
(Galatians 3:25; 4:1-7). Until Christ came every one was
under the law (the teacher). Through Christ we are made
children
of God and we
receive
everything our Father has. We are no longer under the law
(Galatians 3:25; Romans 6:14).
- The law came that we
would see that our self-righteousness couldn’t
save us (Romans 10:2-4; Philippians 3:9).
- What are the
weaknesses of the law?
- It cannot make anyone right with
God (Galatians 2:16; Acts 13:39).
- It cannot set anyone apart for
God (Galatians 3:2-3).
- It can never produce righteousness in
the believer (Galatians 3:21; 2:21).
- It is weak because our sinful
nature is weak (Romans 8:3).
- It can only condemn us (Romans 3:19).
- It makes nothing perfect
(Hebrews 7:18-19).
- What does the law do?
- The law produces a religion that does not
see the truth (Galatians 1:13-14).
- The law places everyone under
its curse (Galatians 3:10).
- The law declares that every man is
guilty of sin (Romans 3:19; James 2:10).
- The law prepares us for
Christ by showing us that we are guilty and need a Savior
(Galatians 3:24-25).
- The law cancels out the death of Christ for
all believers (Galatians 2:21; 3:21-22; 5:3-4).
- The law is proud
of the sinful nature and of what the sinful nature did (Galatians
6:12).
- What must the believer know about the law?
- The believer must know
that the law does not save, nevertheless, the law was holy in the
past and it is now “holy, just and
good” (Romans
7:12).
- The believer must know that the law is not an evil thing.
Christ did not come to destroy the law. Christ came to fulfill
the law
(Matthew 5:17). He completely observed the law (John 8:46;
1 Peter 2:21). We too, should respect the law as being “perfect,
sure, right, and pure” (Psalm 19:7-8).
- As
believers we are no longer under law. The law does not condemn
us any more. God does not deal with us according to the
law (Romans
6:14; 10:4). We believers must know that the law still shows
us the righteous
judgment of God concerning sin in our lives (Romans 7:7).
- Christ
is the “end of the law for righteousness to everyone
that believes” (Romans 10:4). As believers our whole desire
now is to do what pleases Christ (Philippians 3:9).
IX. A BRIEF STUDY OF GRACE
- What is grace?
- God is love (1 John 4:8,16). Grace is like a river
of love that never stops flowing. It comes down to man from the
unending source
of God’s
love. Grace is God’s free favor toward man. Man does not
deserve this favor. This grace comes through Christ. Salvation
supplies everything
man must have in order to live the Christian life.
- Grace is
the kindness and love of God toward man (Titus 3:4-5).
- While
the law came by Moses, grace came by Jesus Christ (John 1:17).
- The time (dispensation) of grace began when Christ rose from
among the dead at Pentecost. The time of grace will continue until
Christ
returns on the clouds to take all believers to Himself (Ephesians
3:2-11; 1 Thessalonians
4:13-18).
- What is the connection between grace and salvation?
- Grace brought
salvation down to man (Titus 2:11).
- God saves us by grace entirely
apart from works (Ephesians 2:8-9; Romans 4:4-5).
- It is by God’s
grace that He justifies us (Galatians 2:16; Romans 3:24), and sets
us apart for Himself (Galatians
2:21).
- What is the connection between grace and the Christian
life?
- Grace provides freedom in Christ and the position of
a son in the family of God
(Galatians 4:5, 31).
- Grace makes the promise of the Spirit available
by faith in Christ (Galatians 3:22).
- Grace provides a life that
is filled with the Holy Spirit (Galatians 5:5, 22). This kind
of life defeats the
flesh (Galatians 5:16).
- Grace is sufficient for every need (2
Corinthians 12:9; Hebrews 4:16; 2 Corinthians 9:8).
- Can we ever
mix law and grace or faith and works?
- Concerning salvation or how
to live the Christian life, the two are as impossible to mix. They
are like oil and water or darkness
and light.
We cannot mix oil and water.
- Two clear passages should be enough
to prove this point:
- There are a few people that God chose by His
grace. And if God chose His people by grace, then their works
did not make them God’s
people. If God made them His people by their works, then God’s
gift of grace would not really be a gift (Romans 11:5-6).
- If
you say that the law can make you right with God, then your
life with Christ
ends. You have left God’s grace (Galatians 5:4).
X. SOME CONTRASTS OF LAW AND GRACE
A list of such contrasts could be quite long. Let me encourage you to
make your own list. The following is a partial list on which you can
build:
UNDER LAW
|
UNDER GRACE
|
The sheep died for the shepherd
|
The Shepherd died for the sheep
|
The Israelite said, “If you desire it”
|
The believer says, “I will”
|
The law demanded perfect obedience
|
Grace gives us power to obey
|
The law demanded righteousness
|
God puts His righteousness on the believer
|
Under the law even the best man dies
|
Under grace the worst sinner lives
|
The law brings a curse
|
Grace removes the curse
|
The law never justifies or sanctifies
|
Grace justifies and sets a person apart
|
The law brings a person to ruin
|
Grace forgives
|
The law causes that a person becomes a slave
|
Grace sets a person free
|
Moses brought the law and expects works
|
Christ brought grace and expects faith
|
The law makes nothing perfect
|
Grace makes every person perfect in Christ
|
The law made no one righteous
|
Grace put God’s righteousness on the believer
|
The law says, “You must not do”
|
Grace says, “Whosoever will”
|
 |
 |
XI. CONCLUSION
We say with Paul that God justifies a person by faith, not through the things
he has done to follow the law (Romans 3:28). One day God brought love and
grace to this world in the person of Christ. Through Christ the believer
kept the law and put it away. A whole new age of grace came into the world.
Remember that Christ bore the curse of the law on your behalf. Christ paid
your debt in full. Rest your faith in a work that Christ finished. Rejoice
in a redemption that is complete.
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