Last week in the bulletin the article 
		was by Bob Oliver.  The first paragraph of the article said something 
		that really stood out to me.
		
		“’You believe that God is one; you do 
		well. Even the demons believe—and shudder’ (James 2:19) so if we say we 
		believe, we can only say, “Congratulations, you’ve qualified to be a 
		demon!” 
		
		That is a terrifying thought, is it 
		not?  I had not thought of applying this verse in such a way, but it 
		makes a striking point.
		
		This morning I want to look at a very 
		good example that shows that belief, that is faith alone, is not enough 
		for salvation.
		
		We are going begin by looking at Noah 
		this morning and focus on Genesis 6 starting with verse 7.
		
		      Genesis 6:7
		
		7 
		So the Lord said, “I will destroy man 
		whom I have created from the face of the earth, both man and beast, 
		creeping thing and birds of the air, for I am sorry that I have made 
		them.” 
		
		      God decides that the world that 
		was and all that was in it needed to be destroyed. An Armageddon for all 
		that lived.  But then verse 8 says:
		
		Genesis 6:8
		
		8 
		But Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord.
		
		Here we see that the first part of 
		Noah’s salvation. God’s Grace. Then we see verse 9.
		
		      Genesis 6:9
		
		9 
		This is the genealogy of Noah. Noah was a just man, perfect in his 
		generations. Noah walked with God.
		
		      Two things of note are in this 
		verse, the first is the Hebrew word for perfect here could also be 
		translated “having integrity.” So, this Scripture tells us that of all 
		his generation he had integrity.  The other point is that Noah walked 
		with God. This is a common phrase depicting Noah’s faith, or belief in 
		God the second part of Noah’s salvation. (Walking with God also has the 
		implication that Noah not only believed in God, but he also obeyed God’s 
		commands.)
		
		      And to emphasize that point, we 
		read verse 22.
		
		            Genesis 6:22
		
		22 
		Thus Noah did; according to all that God commanded him, so he did.
		
		      Here we see Noah’s obedience to 
		God spelled out for us in Scripture. This is the final part of Noah’s 
		salvation. 
		
		Now as Noah’s story goes on God destroys 
		the world that was with a massive flood.  Noah and his family spend a 
		year on the ark.  And are the only 8 people to survive the destruction 
		of the world that was. So that the world that is would be populated by 
		men.
		
		The point here is Noah’s faith, 
		obviously an extremely strongly convicted belief, in God, alone did not 
		save Noah. God’s grace alone did not save Noah. Noah obeyed God. 
		
		
		Did Noah’s faith pleased God? 
		Absolutely.
		
		If God had not extended his grace to 
		Noah would Noah have been destroyed? Absolutely.
		
		If Noah had not obeyed God’s command to 
		build the Ark would Noah have also been destroyed? Absolutely.
		
		So, we have to come to the conclusion 
		that here in the destruction of the world that was, Noah was saved, not 
		by faith alone, not by Grace alone, but by his obedience.  God saw that 
		Noah honestly tried to please God in his faith and deed. So, God 
		extended Grace, his undeserved favor, to Noah.  God gave Noah a plan for 
		salvation. Build an ark, collect the animals for the world that would 
		be, food for those animals and his family, live in the ark and care for 
		the animals that were on the ark. And Noah obeyed, thus he and his 
		family were saved.
		
		Why would I focus on Noah like this, 
		after all, today’s salvation is not from physical death, but from 
		eternal punishment.  Well, despite Noah being in the Old Testament, and 
		even before the Law of Moses, today’s salvation is directly mirrored to 
		Noah’s.
		
		First off, like in the days of Noah in 
		the future there is coming a day of destruction.
		
		Revelation 21:1
		
		1 
		Now I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the 
		first earth had passed away. Also there was no more sea.
		
		      We also have the words of Christ 
		to further tell us that in that day of destruction there will be a 
		judgement for all who have ever lived
		
		            Matthew 23:31-33
		
		31
		“When the Son of Man comes in His glory, and 
		all the [c]holy angels with Him, then He will sit on the throne of His 
		glory. 32 All the nations 
		will be gathered before Him, and He will separate them one from another, 
		as a shepherd divides his sheep from the goats. 33
		And He will set the sheep on His right hand, 
		but the goats on the left.
		
		         
		Scripture also tells us that ALL men are 
		extended God’s grace, His undeserved favor. Just as was Noah.
		
		            Titus 2:11
		
		11 For the grace of God that brings 
		salvation has appeared to all men,
		
		      Which I know is part of a sentence 
		and we will come back to Titus 2 to finish that sentence.  Another 
		example is the most often quoted verse of the Bible a memory verse that 
		almost every Christian knows by heart:
		
		 
		
		            John 3:16
		
		16For
		God so loved the world that He sent His 
		only begotten Son that whoever believes in Him should not perish but 
		have everlasting life.
		
		      
		Also, like Noah, we must 
		believe in God. That is, we must have faith.
		
		            Hebrews 11:6
		
		6 
		But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to 
		God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who 
		diligently seek Him.
		
		            Galatians 2:16
		
		16 
		knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law but by faith 
		in Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Christ Jesus, that we might be 
		justified by faith in Christ and not by the works of the law; for by the 
		works of the law no flesh shall be justified.
		
		      Even John 3:18 says 
		we must have faith.
		
		            John 3:18
		
		18
		“He who believes 
		in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned 
		already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten 
		Son of God. 
		
		
		James 2:19
		
		      19 You 
		believe that there is one God. You do well. Even the demons believe—and 
		tremble!
		
		      But Scripture also 
		says faith alone is not enough to save.
		
		James 2:24
		
		      24 You 
		see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only.
		
		      Honestly you could 
		use all of James 2:14-19 not just these two.  Christ even tells us that 
		our actions will affect where we spend eternity during his description 
		of the day of judgement.
		
		            Matthew 
		25:34-36
		
		34
		Then the King 
		will say to those on His right hand, ‘Come, you blessed of My Father, 
		inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world:
		35
		for I was hungry 
		and you gave Me food; I was thirsty and you gave Me drink; I was a 
		stranger and you took Me in; 
		36
		I was naked and 
		you clothed Me; I was sick and you visited Me; I was in prison and you 
		came to Me.’
		
		      That is right faith 
		is great, it is absolutely necessary for salvation, but it alone is not 
		enough for salvation. But God gave us a plan for salvation just as he 
		gave Noah one.
		
		      Now, God’s plan for 
		Noah’s salvation included building an Ark six stories tall, a football 
		field (no endzones) and a half long, an Olympic swimming pool wide, 
		filling it with 2 of every unclean animal, 14 of every clean animal, and 
		enough food to feed 8 people and an untold number of animals for a 
		year.  Then he had to be sequestered in a confined space with his family 
		and all those animals for a year. I know that relationships can become 
		strained in a family on a week-long vacation, much less a year.  
		Luckily, God’s plan for our salvation is much easier on us, than was 
		Noah’s.
		
		      God’s plan for our 
		salvation began not with us, but with Christ’s death on a cross.  A 
		price that we could never have paid.  This is God’s grace.  Without it 
		our salvation would not be possible.  Grace is the beginning and 
		honestly it is the end of our salvation.  Through grace, through the 
		cross, God made a covenant, or contract, with us, to use more modern 
		phrasing.  He has pledged to give us His undeserved favor, His grace, 
		His forgiveness, and His presence for all of time if only we will meet a 
		few requirements.
		
		The first requirement for 
		us to receive salvation is put on the shoulders of existing Christians 
		(through the great commission Matthew 28:19). We have to be taught about 
		Christ (Romans 10:17).  We have to hear the Word of God and, often, see 
		how someone who lives by the Word is different from those who do not.
		
		
		      Once we have been 
		taught, God’s plan for our salvation places all the responsibility for 
		where we spend eternity on our shoulders, and no one elses. 
		
		      The next requirement 
		in God’s plan for our salvation is that we would come to believe in 
		Him.  That is for us to develop faith. (Ephesians 2:8 - For by grace you 
		have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the 
		gift of God). (Hebrews 11:6 - But without faith it is impossible to 
		please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He 
		is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him.)  But God’s plan for our 
		salvation does not stop there.  Despite what many would tell you. 
		Scripture tells us outright that belief alone is not enough. A great 
		example is the verse we started today with James 2:19 - You believe that 
		there is one God. You do well. Even the demons believe—and tremble!  Yet 
		the demons who serve Satan are surely not going to heaven! 
		Unfortunately, many people fall into the trap of the belief that you are 
		saved by faith alone. And as such stop here never fulfilling their part 
		of the contract.  
		
		      Some who cling to 
		the idea of salvation through faith alone will teach that all the points 
		yet to come count as works and as such are not necessary for salvation 
		after all – Romans 11:6 – And if by grace, then it is no longer of 
		works; otherwise grace is no longer grace. But if it is of works, it is 
		no longer grace; otherwise work is no longer work.  You will notice that 
		in no way am I saying that by doing any of the points to come can we 
		EARN salvation. If God had not extended us a covenant, or contract, by 
		His grace salvation would not be possible. What I am saying is that IF 
		we have faith than we will obey His Word so that we will fulfill our 
		part of the contract extended to us through His grace. James 2:18 - But 
		someone will say, “You have faith, and I have works.” Show me your faith 
		without your works, and I will show you my faith by my works.
		
		      So, what are the 
		rest of our responsibilities to God if we want to fulfill our part God’s 
		plan for our salvation.  Once we believe in Christ, we must repent of 
		the sins in our lives and make every effort to leave them behind us.  (NIV) 
		Acts 3:19 - Repent, then, and turn to God, so that your sins may be 
		wiped out, that times of refreshing may come from the Lord,
		
		      The next requirement 
		is that we confess our faith in Christ. That is, we must tell others 
		that we believe in Christ. (Acts 8:37 - Then Philip said, “If you 
		believe with all your heart, you may.”
		
		 
		
		And he answered and said, 
		“I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.”)
		
		      Which brings us to 
		the last requirement that we must meet to fulfill our side of God’s plan 
		for our salvation. We must be baptized.  We read Acts 8:37 but look at 
		the verses both before and after Acts 8:36,38, we read the great 
		commission Matthew 28:19, Peter’s sermon on Pentecost in Acts 2:38 - 
		Then Peter said to them, “Repent, and let every one of you be baptized 
		in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins; and you shall 
		receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.
		
		      Well, that is it 
		then if we have done all these things, we have fulfilled our part of the 
		contract… well, not quite.
		
		      You see, there is 
		one more requirement, and this one is perhaps the most overlooked 
		requirement throughout the denominational world.  The final requirement 
		is to stay obedient till death.  (Revelation 2:10 - Be faithful until 
		death, and I will give you the crown of life.) As well as 2 Timothy 4:7, 
		2 Timothy 2:5, 1 Corinthians 9:24-27, and Philippians 3:14 to name just 
		a few.  
		
		Over and over the Bible 
		describes God’s relationship with Christians as a marriage, and I am 
		going to wrap up with the steps we have talked about put into a modern 
		relationship build to marriage. God wishes a relationship with us and to 
		show his Grace he sent Christ to die on a cross so that we could have a 
		way to start that relationship, that was a heck of a first date.  Before 
		we could go on that first date though someone told us about it, it may 
		have been a person we know, or even one long dead through study of the 
		Word of God, but either way we Heard about that first date.  We have the 
		choice to trust in the Word of God that says he has been pursuing each 
		of us from the beginning of time or not but choosing to have Faith gets 
		us to that been dating one-month anniversary.  Turning away from the 
		‘other women of the world,’ Repenting of the sins in our lives gets us 
		to that proposal.  Following that faith and Confessing it to others, and 
		being Baptized, bring us to the wedding day, and the wedding ring.  And 
		like in any marriage if you stop putting in effort, if you start to 
		cheat, if you stop trusting the relationship will fall apart.  Like 
		marriage, being a Christian is not a one-time declaration of faith, it 
		is not a one-time plunge beneath the cleansing flood, but is a daily, 
		moment by moment choice to remain faithful until death.
		
		Is this the morning that 
		you will choose to bind your heart to the heart of God? If it is or if 
		you have any other need of the Church, please come forward as we stand 
		and sing.
		 
		
		Sermon Outlines on All Topics: