Faith Alone,
I have no problem with your application and interpretation of the passage as far as it goes. You have also illustrated your interpretation well with the story of Annanias and Sapphira. However, I think you are limiting the scope of the letter’s address by seeing it as a message exclusively to those who are certainly born again. At one point, the writer says “Take heed, brethren, that there is not in any of you an evil heart of unbelief to turn from the living God”. So, while the writer does assume that his audience is a group of believers whom he is encouraging to continue in the faith, there is a possibility that some are not genuinely born again. This is always a possibility when we are speaking to an audience of profession Christians. For those who are not truly believers, the warnings are warnings of eternal judgment. The biblical illustration for this type of person would be Judas. Judas was thought to be a believer. He witnessed the miraculous power of Jesus and it is hard to argue that he did not perform miracles himself. Yet, he was the “son of perdition” whose judgment was not just the loss of his life, but eternity in hell.
As to the Ephesians passage, good works are not the cause of salvation, but they are the result of salvation. No amount of good works can earn or contribute to salvation, but no one who is a believer will lack good works. This does not mean that every single work is good. It does not mean that all believers produce the same level of good works. But believers do good works, without exception and the natural progression of the Christian life is increasing good works. The argument that has been made here by others is that it is normal to get saved and never show any results via good works. That is false teaching that is as bad as teaching that good works are required for salvation.
I have no problem with your application and interpretation of the passage as far as it goes. You have also illustrated your interpretation well with the story of Annanias and Sapphira. However, I think you are limiting the scope of the letter’s address by seeing it as a message exclusively to those who are certainly born again. At one point, the writer says “Take heed, brethren, that there is not in any of you an evil heart of unbelief to turn from the living God”. So, while the writer does assume that his audience is a group of believers whom he is encouraging to continue in the faith, there is a possibility that some are not genuinely born again. This is always a possibility when we are speaking to an audience of profession Christians. For those who are not truly believers, the warnings are warnings of eternal judgment. The biblical illustration for this type of person would be Judas. Judas was thought to be a believer. He witnessed the miraculous power of Jesus and it is hard to argue that he did not perform miracles himself. Yet, he was the “son of perdition” whose judgment was not just the loss of his life, but eternity in hell.
As to the Ephesians passage, good works are not the cause of salvation, but they are the result of salvation. No amount of good works can earn or contribute to salvation, but no one who is a believer will lack good works. This does not mean that every single work is good. It does not mean that all believers produce the same level of good works. But believers do good works, without exception and the natural progression of the Christian life is increasing good works. The argument that has been made here by others is that it is normal to get saved and never show any results via good works. That is false teaching that is as bad as teaching that good works are required for salvation.