On another thread http://www.baptistboard.com/showthread.php?t=72661&page=6 DHK and I had a most interesting discussion over whether and to what extent faith is a gift of God.
I cited three verses: Acts 11:16; 16:14, and Eph 2:8-9. Due to the way the thread galloped onward, we didn't really get to discuss any of these texts, but I want particularly to look at the last one.
Eph 2:8-9 (it is helpful to read vs 1-9 to get the context). 'For by grace you are saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast.'
The question is, what is it that is ‘not of yourselves’? As I look at it in the English, it seems very clear to me. 'That' refers back to 'faith' which is the nearest antecedent. That would normally be the case in Greek also. However, this is what DHK said.
1. If faith is not something that we work up in ourselves and it is not the gift of God, where does it come from? Who gives it to us?
2. The word 'salvation' does not appear in the text.
3. The text does not tell us that we are saved 'by grace through grace’ as DHK says above. The text tells us that we are saved by grace through faith. It is God's grace that saves us on account of our faith (Gk. dia tes pisteos) and that not of ourselves.
So what is Grace? Every dictionary and commentary will tell you that it is the unmerited favour of God. So to say that we are saved by grace and that not of ourselves is a tautology, a redundancy, a needless repetition. Grace by definition is not of ourselves, so there is no need for Paul to tell us that. Therefore, by process of elimination, it can only be faith which Paul is telling us is not of ourselves but the gift of God.
So how is faith the gift of God? DHK has said repeatedly that we are not ‘injected with faith’ and that it is we who have to believe. In this he is quite right. I have searched for an analogy to explain how faith comes to us and the best I can do is to compare it with a parent giving pocket money to a child. Unless the child receives the money from his parent, he can buy nothing. But the parent does not ‘inject’ the child with sweets, comics or whatever, nor does he buy them on behalf of the child; the child does that for himself when he receives his allowance. In the same way, God does not inject us with faith in order to convert us, nor does He believe for us. Rather He puts His Holy Spirit within us, melting our cold, hard hearts, causing us to know our sinful state and leading us irresistibly (Jer 31:3) to trust in Christ for salvation (Ezek 36:25-27; Zech 12:10; Eph 2:5; Titus 3:4-6).
However, it is clear that He does not do this for everyone, but only for His elect (Rom 9:18). He has decreed salvation for a vast crowd of people that no man may number (Rev 7:9ff). These were given to the Son to redeem, and He has redeemed them all (John 17:2 etc.). The gathering of His elect is through the preaching of the word to all men and women (James 1:18). Whoever responds in repentance and faith will be saved, but their salvation is not of themselves, it is the gift of God who has opened their hearts and irresistibly drawn them to believe (John 6:44).
Steve
I cited three verses: Acts 11:16; 16:14, and Eph 2:8-9. Due to the way the thread galloped onward, we didn't really get to discuss any of these texts, but I want particularly to look at the last one.
Eph 2:8-9 (it is helpful to read vs 1-9 to get the context). 'For by grace you are saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast.'
The question is, what is it that is ‘not of yourselves’? As I look at it in the English, it seems very clear to me. 'That' refers back to 'faith' which is the nearest antecedent. That would normally be the case in Greek also. However, this is what DHK said.
There are a few problems with this view.Yes, faith is not something we work up in ourselves.
But it is not a gift, and that passage does not say it is. Examine it carefully.
The subject is "You". The verb is "saved."
By faith are you saved through grace. There are two adverbial prepositional phrases there that tell us how and the means by which we are saved by: grace and faith.
It is the gift of God. What is the gift of God? Salvation is the gift of God. That is what the subject is all about. You are saved. How? By grace. By what means? By faith. IT (salvation) is a gift of God. IT (salvation) is not of yourselves. IT (salvation) is not of works; lest any man should boast.
1. If faith is not something that we work up in ourselves and it is not the gift of God, where does it come from? Who gives it to us?
2. The word 'salvation' does not appear in the text.
3. The text does not tell us that we are saved 'by grace through grace’ as DHK says above. The text tells us that we are saved by grace through faith. It is God's grace that saves us on account of our faith (Gk. dia tes pisteos) and that not of ourselves.
So what is Grace? Every dictionary and commentary will tell you that it is the unmerited favour of God. So to say that we are saved by grace and that not of ourselves is a tautology, a redundancy, a needless repetition. Grace by definition is not of ourselves, so there is no need for Paul to tell us that. Therefore, by process of elimination, it can only be faith which Paul is telling us is not of ourselves but the gift of God.
So how is faith the gift of God? DHK has said repeatedly that we are not ‘injected with faith’ and that it is we who have to believe. In this he is quite right. I have searched for an analogy to explain how faith comes to us and the best I can do is to compare it with a parent giving pocket money to a child. Unless the child receives the money from his parent, he can buy nothing. But the parent does not ‘inject’ the child with sweets, comics or whatever, nor does he buy them on behalf of the child; the child does that for himself when he receives his allowance. In the same way, God does not inject us with faith in order to convert us, nor does He believe for us. Rather He puts His Holy Spirit within us, melting our cold, hard hearts, causing us to know our sinful state and leading us irresistibly (Jer 31:3) to trust in Christ for salvation (Ezek 36:25-27; Zech 12:10; Eph 2:5; Titus 3:4-6).
However, it is clear that He does not do this for everyone, but only for His elect (Rom 9:18). He has decreed salvation for a vast crowd of people that no man may number (Rev 7:9ff). These were given to the Son to redeem, and He has redeemed them all (John 17:2 etc.). The gathering of His elect is through the preaching of the word to all men and women (James 1:18). Whoever responds in repentance and faith will be saved, but their salvation is not of themselves, it is the gift of God who has opened their hearts and irresistibly drawn them to believe (John 6:44).
Steve
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