What is the Nature of True Saving Faith?
Scripture is everywhere
clear--the one thing a person must do to be saved is exercise "true saving
faith" in Christ. Faith is the instrument that God uses to bring individuals
into a saving relationship with Himself. That is not to say that faith is
the basis of our salvation; rather, it is the channel by which God grants
salvation. Noted theologian B.B. Warfield said, "The saving power of faith
resides thus not in itself, but in the Almighty Savior on whom it rests…It
is not, strictly speaking, even faith in Christ that saves, but that Christ
saves through faith."
Faith comes to the believer as a
gift from God. It is not something that individuals are capable of mustering
up on their own. Were faith a work of man's own doing, man would be in a
position to take partial credit for his redemption. But such a concept is
foreign to the writers of Scripture. Paul anticipated that men would tend to
boast of their part in salvation when he wrote that faith (one of many
components of salvation) "is the gift of God…that no one should boast"
(Ephesians 2:8-9). As Charles Haddon Spurgeon was fond of saying, salvation
is "all of grace."
Faith comes
as a result of the regenerating work of the Holy Spirit-He quickens our
hearts to believe. Apart from the new birth, there can be no true faith.
Therefore, faith, though it manifests itself in action, comes as a result of
God's work in us. God grants us faith and that faith is evidenced by our
walking in the good works that "God [has] prepared beforehand" for us to
walk in (Ephesians
The Bible says that if we
believe on the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved. However, the Bible does
not present faith as simply "mental assent to the facts of the gospel." True
saving faith involves repentance from one's sin and a complete trust in the
work of Christ to save from sin and make one righteous. The Reformers spoke
of three aspects of faith: recognition of the truth claims of the gospel,
acknowledgment of their truthfulness and exact correspondence to man's
spiritual need, and a personal commitment to the Lord Jesus Christ who, by
virtue of His death, provides the only sufficient sacrifice for one's
personal sin. Any one of these three aspects of faith, taken by
themselves, is insufficient to meet the biblical
definition of saving faith. However, the presence of all three components
together results in saving faith. In other words, saving faith consists of
mental, emotional, and volitional elements. Saving faith involves both the
mind and the will.
In addition
to calling us to believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, the New Testament uses
several figures of speech to describe the nature of saving faith. Perhaps
the most vivid of those figurative references is found in Jesus' words from
the Sermon on the Mount: "Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for
righteousness, for they shall be satisfied" (Matthew 5:6). In that passage,
Jesus likens true faith to hungering and thirsting. The unbeliever, by
virtue of the regenerating work of the Holy Spirit, recognizes his or her
dire need of nourishment and refreshment and comes to Jesus begging that He
fill the need. That is a beautiful picture of faith. First, there is
recognition of Jesus' claim to be the "bread of life" (John