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| Faith
Working Through Love |
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| Randy Hohf |
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These four words would make a
great mission statement for every Christian and every church. It is
difficult to imagine more truth and profundity packed within so concise a
phrase. Here you have the three great principles of our salvation—faith,
works, and love—placed side-by-side in their relationship to each other:
Faith works through love. Before I talk about that, however, let’s look
at the context. The phrase comes from Gal 5.6, in which Paul contrasts it
with circumcision and uncircumcision, which he says are nothing. The
Judaizers looked on circumcision (or uncircumcision) as the badge of who
you are in relation to God, the proof of your justification (or lack of)
in God’s sight. To them, being circumcised was the sign that you kept
the law, which meant that you were in favor with God. But Paul states that
either way, it means nothing. What is something, however, is “faith
working through love.” This is the true badge of justification, the true
mark of being in favor with God. Jesus himself touched in part on this in
Jn 13.34-35: “A new commandment I give to you, that you love one
another, even as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this
all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one
another.”
So perhaps “faith working
through love” is not so much a “mission statement” as it is an “identity
statement.” It isn’t describing what we do, so much as it describes as
to who we are. Christians are those whose faith works through love. But as
I said, packed within this concise statement is a world of profound truth.
So let’s unpack it a little. First, there is faith. In the context of
Gal 5, faith is opposed to justification by law—not simply the Law of
Moses, but law in general (vs.4). Law, by its very nature, demands
flawless perfection (vs.3), which is burden or yoke that is too much for
us to bear (cf. vs.1). Faith, on the other hand, by its nature recognizes
our utter failure, and looks to the merciful grace of God. It looks
outside of one’s self for justification, trusting in Another.
But justifying faith is not
simply an inner attitude or belief. It is a faith that works (“faith
working…”). In the very same breath, Paul speaks of “obeying the
truth” (Gal 5.7). Thus we see the relationship between faith and works.
Works is what faith does. James likewise spoke of this essential
relationship when he said: “Was not Abraham justified by works when he
offered up Isaac his son on the alter? You see that faith was working with
his works, and as a result of the works, faith was perfected” (Jas
2.22). Thus, it is “faith working.”
But Paul’s statement also
reveals the means by which faith works: through love. Jesus spoke of this
as well when he said, “If you love me you will keep my commandments” (Jn 14.15). Love is the motivator behind a working faith. For example,
when Christ, through his apostles, commanded believers to be baptized,
faith obeys not in self-righteousness, but in love for God. But the love
Paul talks about in Gal 5 is not simply love for God or his son Jesus
Christ, but love for one another (vs. 13-15). Faith works itself out in
and through our love for each other. And that brings us back to our badge
of identity, as well as our mission statement.
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