Wrong!
"
as your work of faith;
by which is meant not the principle of faith, for as such
that is God's work, the product of his grace, and the effect of his almighty power; but the operative virtue and
exercise of it under the influence of the grace of God: the Vulgate Latin, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions render it, "the work of your faith"; and so some copies, and the Syriac version, "the works of your faith"."
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"
and the work of faith with power;
faith is not only an operative grace, (
See Gill on 1 Thessalonians 1:3) and is attended with good works; but
it is a work itself, not of man's, for he cannot produce it in himself, nor exercise it of himself; but it is the work of God, of his operation which he works in his people; it has not only God for its object,"
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"Once we have believed in Jesus for eternal life, this does not mean that faith has no more place in the life of the believer. Just as we have received Jesus Christ Jesus, so also we must continue to walk with Him (Col 2:6). And how is it that we received Jesus? By faith.
Future faith builds upon our former faith. Believing simple and elementary things allows us to later believe more difficult and hard things. This is what the Bible means when it talks about going from “faith to faith” (cf. Rom 1:17). But even this ongoing, sanctifying faith is not a work.
In order to move from believing one truth to believing another truth, it is true that we must act upon the faith we already have, and pursue the truth that follows. But even this sort of ongoing, sanctifying faith is not meritorious (Rom 4:16). It is simply faith at work; faith that energizes our life.
James has been widely misunderstood to be saying that an inactive faith is a non-existent faith, when in reality he is saying that an inactive faith still exists; it is simply unproductive. James does not want unproductive faith. He wants us to act upon our beliefs. James is not saying that faith is a work, nor is he saying the true faith always reveals itself through works. James and Paul are in full agreement: faith is the opposite of works (Rom 4:5), but faith energizes our works (Jas 2:14-26) and leads us on toward greater faith.
So no matter what stage of faith we are talking about,
faith is not a work."
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A powerful illustration of faith is given by August Hopkins Strong: “All the power to move the cars is in the locomotive. None of the power is in the couplings. Yet the locomotive with all its power cannot move one car without the couplings.”
"The Spirit works faith in our hearts through the preaching of the gospel. Faith is not a condition, it’s an instrument. Faith does answer a command but faith isn’t a work. It’s an anti-work because it has no inherent goodness or righteousness or power."
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I'm so sorry. Survey says...
Wrong again.
Here again, you as well as others here, show your complete ignorance of what Calvinism teaches.
You want to mislead people by teaching them that once you are given faith, led to exercise by the Holy Spirit is all of a sudden becomes a "work" that you do. Which by way of scriptures, gives you bragging rights in heaven.
You are no better than any of the other "Anti-Calvinists" here. In the whole of Christianity, there are basically only three (3) types of beliefs: 1) Calvinist; 2) Arminian; 3) Semi-Pelagian
So which one are you in?
God Bless
Till all are one.