C
Cling2Cross
Guest
A huge point which further contrasts the law with grace.
Correct—because the law is from God, it is good; however, Christ (grace) is soooooooo much better—that’s the message of the writer to the Hebrews.
In a covenant of works, the condition is perfect obedience—or doing what the Law requires, i.e., works—to receive the blessings offered.
In the covenant of grace, OTOH, the sole condition is faith in Christ, apart from works (Rom. 3:28). “To the one who does not work but believes in him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is credited as righteousness” (Rom. 4:5).
Not only are the conditions different (works vs. faith), but the conditions have different functions relating to the blessings.
The condition (works) is the legal ground for obtaining the blessings offered in the Covenant of works.
The condition (faith), in the Covenant of grace, is merely a means by which the blessings are received. Faith is not the ground on which God bestows the blessings of the covenant of grace upon us, though faith is necessary. The legal ground for the bestowal of the blessings is the perfect obedience and merit of Christ—not our faith, which is nothing in itself.
Faith functions as the means or instrument by which the blessings earned by Christ are appropriated and received (Eph 2:8). Faith is not a work, but a gift (Eph 2:8); faith is the empty hand by which the believer receives all that Christ has earned for him as a gift.
I think that believers must also demonstrate that their faith is genuine by producing good works as the fruit of faith, as Paul says, good works are the result of salvation, not a condition of salvation. We are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus "unto good works," not by good works (Eph. 2:10).
So the good news (and it is good news indeed), is that we are not saved by what we do, but by what Christ has done for us, and nothing else—grace alone, faith alone, Christ alone,
that the glory would be to God alone.
Heaven goes by favour. If it went by merit, you would stay out and your dog would go in.
— Mark Twain
