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The Essence of Faith

     

Ron Hanko

When we think of faith, we usually think of the activity of believing and trusting in God and in his Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. Faith is believing and trusting, but before that it is something else. Faith in its deepest reality and essence is union with Christ.

This is suggested in the Heidelberg Catechism, which speaks of true faith in terms of “ingrafting into Christ” [Q. & A. 20], and in the Westminster Larger Catechism, which says that faith is not only assent to the truth of the promise of the gospel, but also a receiving and resting upon Christ for salvation [Q. & A. 72]. In distinction from the activity of faith, this ingrafting into Christ, this receiving and resting upon him, is sometimes referred to in theology as the “power of faith,” or the “principle of faith.”

Scripture teaches that faith is union with Christ in such passages as John 17:20-21, Galatians 2:20, and Ephesians 3:17. This union is also shown in the very way that Scripture speaks of faith. In the New Testament, for example, the Greek uses several different expressions, most of which imply that faith brings us into living contact and union with Christ. Scripture speaks most often of believing “in Christ.” What else can that refer to but that we are, through faith, bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh (Eph. 5:30)? Scripture speaks also in the Greek of believing “into” him (John 3:16, 18; Col. 2:5), or of believing “on” him (Rom. 9:23; Rom. 10:11) or “upon” him (Acts 11:17; Acts 16:31). 

All these passages imply close personal union and fellowship with the Son of God. Even those passages that speak simply of believing Christ imply that we are close enough to him by faith that we can actually hear him speaking and know and trust what he says (John 14:11; 2 Tim. 1:12). Such is the nature of true faith. 

This, then, is what distinguishes true faith from all its counterfeits. In many other ways a counterfeit faith mimics a true faith, but there is one thing that cannot be mimicked, and that is being in Christ by faith.

To see faith as union with Christ is also to see that faith must be a gift of God. If we only speak of the activity of faith, we may begin to think that faith has its origin in us and in our will. But when we remember that faith is, first of all, union with Christ, it is clear that faith must be God’s work and gift. Are we able to unite ourselves to Christ? No more than a branch can graft itself into the tree!

This understanding of faith explains many other things as well. It explains how in justification the righteousness of Christ becomes ours through faith. It explains how faith is the victory that overcomes the world, for it is not some inherent power in faith that overcomes, but the fact that faith puts us into Christ and so brings us into union with Christ’s victory over sin, death, the world, and Satan. 

What a marvelous thing, then, to be able to say that we have faith. To say it is to confess that by a wonderful and sovereign work of God, we live in Christ and he in us, nevermore to be parted from one another.
(Doctrine According to Godliness [Jenison, MI: RFPA, 2018], pp. 192-194)

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