The person 
		whom the Bible designates a believer is one who having been persuaded 
		that Jesus is the Christ, accepts him in implicit trust as his Saviour
		(John 20:31). 
		He is not one who has merely assented to gospel truth or fact, but one 
		who has believed with all the heart; a belief that involves every 
		faculty of his intelligent being—his reason, his sensibilities, his will
		(Rom. 10:9, 10). The noun "pistis," (faith) means confidence, 
		trust. The verb "pisteus" (believe) means adherence to, reliance on. The 
		nobleman's (Acts 8) belief with all his heart meant his reliance 
		on what Phillip had preached unto him as essential elements of 
		salvation. His faith in Jesus and his confession of that faith meant 
		nothing less than his acceptance of all terms and conditions of 
		salvation laid down in the preaching of Philip (Acts 8:12). And 
		the conviction of those "pricked in their hearts" on Pentecost (Acts 
		2) was a faith that yielded the willing spirit of obedience in the 
		pleading question, "What shall we do?" Such a faith implies and embraces 
		all necessary conditions named in God's law of pardon.
		
		
		Salvation
		The 
		commission according to Mark says, "He that believeth and is baptized 
		shall be saved." This salvation is the forgiveness of past sins; pardon, 
		the complete absolution of guilt; remission of sins. But this pardon is 
		an executive act. It takes place in the mind of God in heaven; not in 
		the heart of man on earth. The thing we know as inner consciousness 
		cannot determine by inward feelings that pardon has been granted. Pardon 
		can be known only as God declares it. The man in the penitentiary can 
		know that he is pardoned only as the executive, the Governor, declares 
		it. No warden of such an institution would release an inmate of it on 
		the ground of an inner consciousness that the Governor had pardoned him. 
		Inner consciousness cannot testify to anything outside of the man 
		himself; it cannot measure or weigh any outward thing. There must be a 
		standard for all such. And God has a law of forgiveness—the sinner is 
		not pardoned until he has complied with it.
		
		By 
		Faith
		The issue 
		is not whether one is saved or justified by faith—to that we all agree. 
		The issue is in the degree of faith when is one saved by faith. The 
		Baptist order is repentance before faith, but they do not mean salvation 
		by repentance before faith. The Bible order is faith before baptism—why 
		should a Baptist insist that salvation comes by faith before baptism 
		seeing that they will disavow salvation by repentance before faith in 
		their order of things. True, faith comes before baptism, but one is not 
		saved by faith before baptism any more than one would be saved by 
		repentance before faith in the Baptist order of things. This one thing 
		answers every argument that can be made by a Baptist against baptism on 
		the ground that one is saved by faith and that faith precedes baptism. 
		All passages that declare justification by faith (Rom. 
		5:1) and others of like 
		import we accept and believe and claim. But we deny that any of these 
		passages teach or imply that one is saved by faith before he is 
		baptized. "He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved."
		
		By 
		Faith When
		The 
		eleventh chapter of Hebrews lists the men of faith in the former 
		dispensation. By faith they were approved but faith plus what? By faith 
		Abel offered his sacrifice and was justified by it. By faith Enoch moved 
		in godly fear. By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called. Try faith 
		alone on any of these examples of justification by faith and see how it 
		works. "Was not Abraham our father justified by works, in that he 
		offered up Isaac his son upon the altar? Thou seest that faith wrought 
		with his works, and by works was faith made perfect." (Jas. 2:21, 
		22).
		In further 
		proof that it requires an active faith to produce justification, 
		contrast the cases of the priests and rulers who believed. In one case 
		(Acts 6:7) a great com pany of priests became obedient to the faith. In 
		the other case (John 12:42) many of the rulers believed but would not 
		confess. Both of these companies of Jewish officials believed; but only 
		one company was justified. It proves that faith only does not save, else 
		both companies would have been saved seeing that they both believed. 
		"Yes see, then, that by works a man is justified and not by faith only."
		(Jas. 2:24).
		
		Faith 
		Plus
		If a man 
		exercises faith but his faith does not exercise him, either the subject 
		has a poor faith or the faith has a poor subject. Some plain passages 
		from the New Testament suggesting some pointed questions will serve to 
		show that mere faith does not save.
		First: 
		"But as many as received him, to them gave he the power to become sons 
		of God, even to them that believe on his name." (John 1:12) 
		Question: How does a believer exercise the power to become a child of 
		God?
		Second: 
		"And the hand of the Lord was with them: and a great number that 
		believed turned unto the Lord." (Acts 
		11:21) 
		Question: What did these believers do when they turned unto the Lord?
		Third: 
		"Repent ye, therefore, and turn again (be converted) that your sins may 
		be blotted out." (Acts 
		3:19) 
		Question: What did these penitent persons do when they turned?
		- Bible Banner - December 1941
		
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