Work is a performance. There is nothing to perform in faith. Saving faith is apart from performance; i.e., works.
Greetings Eleanor~I must respectfully disagree with your understanding. Closer to the truth than Jim's, yet your understanding still cannot shut the mouths of gainsayers, because you still have man included in his justification from sin and condemnation of God's law and
presently active in the new birth, which he is not.
As a side note, the sinner is not active in any way whatsoever when one is born of God. The new birth is much like the wind blowing~you can't tell from whence its source begins, finished and going, The sinner is dead spiritually speaking~ God comes, creates a new man and then leaves, leaving the new man the power to see, hear, believe, etc. This birth can take place when man is doing just about anything under heaven........working, sleeping, and many other things I will not mentioned because it is irrelevant to God working, because ALL THINGS are naked and open unto the eyes of God Almighty. To believe otherwise, is to have a very small opinion of the LORD JEHOVAH God. Jehovah is his name, God is his title.
There have been folks living in this world who have never heard of Jesus Christ, yet have been born of God~when Paul went through the Roman Empire, he was searching, looking for folks that show signs of being born of God~ his preaching helped him to discerned them~or, any religious actively, like praying, and desiring to hear what he had to say, and by them cleaving to him after hearing him. He had a strong desire to go to Spain for this very reason! The gospel does not BRING LIFE, it only can manifest where there is life, nothing more.
Notice carefully: life and immortality comes
to light through the gospel, it cannot bring life to a dead sinner, only God's power can work such a miracle of grace.
And when it comes to works, Paul spoke of both "works of the law" in response to the Judaizers, and simply "works" in response to everything else.
Eleanor~the works of the law is
any and all woks a man has an ACTIVE PART IN, be it whatever that work may be.
Do you really think Paul got it wrong when he said that "salvation is. . .through faith. . .not by works" (Eh 2:8-9)?
Read the post I sent to Jim where I addressed these scriptures
We see this in his presentation of Abraham as the model of righteousness by faith, where he denies being
"justified by works" (Ro 4:2),
"to the man who does not work. . .his faith is credited as righteousness" (Ro 4:5)
"God credits righteousness apart from works" (Ro 4:6).
When it comes to faith "apart from works," it excludes all works--of the law and otherwise.
Even as Abraham believed God, and it was accounted to him for righteousness.
This is the most popular Bible quotation (
Gen 15:6;
Rom 4:3,
5,
6,
9,
22,
24;
Gal 3:6;
Jas 2:23).
Paul declared New Testament worship of Christ to be comparable to Abraham’s worship. The adverbial phrase, even as, means that there is a very strong comparison to be seen. Paul has been mentioning faith over and over, and Abraham is the greatest example of it.
This is precious and sweet, if you grasp Paul introduced Abraham as father to Gentiles!
Why is Abraham so important? All the Jews recognized Abraham as the great friend of God, inheritor of promises, and father of the nation, in whom they took great confidence (
Matt 3:9;
John 8:33;
Ex 3:6). For those trusting Abraham, he was a man approved and commended by God for faith. For those trusting circumcision, Abraham was declared righteous before it (
Rom 4:9-12) For those trusting Law, Abram was righteous 430 years before (
Rom 4:13-16;
Gal 3:17).
What did Abraham believe? God promised him a son and a multitudinous seed (
Gen 15:6). Did Abraham call forth faith in order to be justified and made righteous by God at this time?
Here is where we greatly differ from Arminians and Calvinists alike about justification, whom we find to be very similar on this doctrine, when we press them for definitions.
Arminians hold conditional justification –~faith is the human condition for righteousness.
Calvinists hold instrumental justification ~ faith is the instrument receiving righteousness.
We deny both as being in error, for
our faith
does not affect legal justification, or have a part in it.
The text says God accepted Abraham’s faith and counted it as evidence for righteousness, which is how we understand it: our faith is the spiritual evidence and fruit of salvation.
The difference is significant – is legal justification conditional, or is it unconditional? Is faith the means of righteousness before God, or is it only the evidence of righteousness?
Abraham had believed God and his promises and trusted Him obediently long before this minor event (
Gen 12:1-4;
Heb 11:8;
Gen 12:7,
8;
13:4,
14-18;
14:17-24).
If this event was the conditional or instrumental cause of Abraham’s justification, then he was a condemned pagan in his previous acts of worship, which God joyfully accepted!
Did Melchizedek bless Abram as a condemned sinner on his way to hell (
Gen 14:18-20)?
Before Abraham could get started believing, God had already accepted him (
Gen 15:1)!
If this event was the conditional or instrumental cause of Abraham’s justification, then the shish-ka-bob javelin act of Phinehas was his condition or instrument (
Ps 106:30-31)!
Please consider: Is it an act of faith that justifies? A life of faith? Or only while you have faith? Or what?
Why was this event singled out and quoted more in the New Testament than any passage?
Abel, Enoch, and Noah were ignored, because they were not the “father” of Israel, though they proved their righteous character by their faith long before Abraham (
Heb 11:4-7).
God wrote
Genesis 15:6 for the future use of Paul in showing the important role of faith to Jews trusting the Law that came 430 years later and to Gentiles that had no Law at all!