It's good to know we agree that salvation is through faith, not by works
Have you tasted sass? Like barbecue sass? To me it’s vinegary. Anyway, we agree that salvation is by faith, and I believe a certain class of works is utterly excluded. But I doubt you and I are
fully agreed, and I’m okay with that.
If anyone is saved, it must certainly be by Christ, through a perfectly free gift and act of His mercy, and there shall be nothing to boast about
but His mercy. However, in the event that I myself arrive at heaven, I hope the faith that gets me there shall have been a faith
working by love (Gal 5:6), and that faith will cease at the point at which I’m finally and utterly saved.
Saint Paul said of faith, hope, and love that love is “the greatest” (1 Cor 13:13). That’s because, if anyone sees heaven, that soul shall arrive at God, and God is love (1 Jn 4:8). If we arrive at the fullness of perfectly infinite and eternal love, then we shall no longer need faith or hope, for faith and hope in this lifetime is a faith and hope
in that love. And while love is a person (God) and a community of persons (Father, Son, Holy Ghost) in communion with others (His Church), love also
works. By its very nature, love is constantly overflowing into infinity, even while remaining at rest.
Hence, with all due respect to faith and hope, I prefer to think of myself as being saved by love, if indeed I am being saved. Now according to the myriad translators whose translation was approved by King James I of England (whose love is beyond all doubt on account of all the swords and guns and canons that he loved), Jesus is reported in the Gospel of Saint John to have said, “If ye love me, keep my commandments” (Jn 14:15). His “first and great commandment” is to love God with literally all our being (Mt 22:36-38) “and the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself” (Mt 22:39).
Now love is no mere word. Love
works, revealing itself in action, especially in the action of Christ. And since God is love, it is clear that I cannot possibly love Him or myself or my neighbor unless He comes to me and works in me. If God does come to me and work in me, then He will presumably save somebody - if not me personally, then surely He will save at least somebody whom He loves and serves through me, for there can be no greater act of love than to save a soul from misery and sin and death.
If, on the other hand, love does
not save me or at least save somebody, then it cannot possibly be because He failed to work towards that goal. Infinite and eternal love must be infinitely and eternally working to redeem all creation, drawing all things into itself. Thus, if I am being saved, it must be due entirely to the free action of love, to whom I mysteriously surrender and open myself and allow to love me and love others through me, and I will praise and thank Him eternally for His entirely free gift of grace.
If I am
not being saved, then it must be because I reject love. Love must have created me as a free agent and given me the potential to resist His action. Hence, I will not scream and kick and cry and pitch an eternal tantrum in hell, because hell will simply be the final state that I create in my own soul by turning from love. I’m willing to take responsibility for my own refusal to love. In fact, if I end up in hell (which I don’t think is an actual place, but is rather a state of absence, just as heaven is not a literal city with pearly gates and streets of gold but is God Himself), well, I hope to still praise God in that “lake of fire,” because He created me freely and gave me everything necessary to discover Him and to love Him and to love His creation, and I feel thankful just to have the opportunity. (Thank You, Jesus!) And guess what? Praising God is about as close to heaven as I have come in this life, so even hell could be a kind of heaven for me, just so long as I praise Him.
I see Jesus as the perfect revelation of love, and I want to love Him by keeping His commandments, loving Him and myself and others. I trust that He has revealed Himself freely to me, not so much by the testimony of words from the witnesses who wrote the Bible, although theirs is a mighty testimony, but by the testimony of His Church as a whole. I believe He has given me faith to hope in Him and trust that He really is love, and really does love me personally, and really has caused me to want to love Him in return and to love myself and others. And I find in His Church all the graces necessary to sustain this faith, hope, and love for Him and myself and others. So I stay close to His Church and encourage everyone to come in and stay close.
Now if you want to think of yourself as being saved by faith alone, and grace alone, according to the Bible alone, in some sort of love that is
not working, well, okay. That is fine by me. I encourage you to enjoy your faith and grace and Bible for as long as it lasts. Nevertheless, if your faith is true, then you must eventually arrive at infinite and eternal love. And if you do, then His Church will be with Him and in Him, and I hope that I will be there too, to share Him with you. But if I’m not, oh well, it’s my own fault. I’m still glad that you will be there, and I thank Him for saving you. (Thank You, Lord, for saving all souls whom You have purposed to save.)
The word "penance" is nowhere in Scripture.
The word penance is definitely in versions of scripture that I look at. Perhaps you could try different translations. There is free software called
e-Sword (free, but you can donate if you want) that offers loads of translations. They all have pros and cons. In a real sense, the Greek-speaking East has an advantage over us with regards to the Bible because they need no translation. I lean most on the DRV, because its source is the Vulgate, which the Roman Church has officially adopted. But I enjoy looking at different translations, including the Latin, as well as the original Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek. It all helps towards grasping a fuller sense of meaning.
The word in Revelation 2:5 (Gr: metanoeo) is "repent;" i.e., to change one's mind or purpose;
to turn, from sin and to obedience.
To turn from sin to obedience
is to do penance. And who would a Christian in Ephesus obey except the Lord and His bishop? Or how could a Christian in Ephesus obey but by hearing and responding to the Lord’s voice in His Church? (Again, these are rhetorical questions. No need to reply.)
The Lord said, "Repent (change, turn) and do the things you did at first."
Evidently the love they had at first for one another and/or Christ had grown cold.
Their growth in sanctification had stalled, or even reversed.
They are commanded to turn back to it, loving others and/or Christ as they had before.
If they are going to turn back and love others and/or Christ, then surely they must perform
works of charity. Or are they just supposed to say “I love you Jesus, and I love all you people” and then take a nap or perhaps make tents all day or something? That’s rhetorical. And I guess the first rhetorical question remains:
why is the Lord concerned with their works? You did’t explain why. Or am I in the heart of your explanation now?
Don't see anything about "faith to be renewed" in the text.
Not sure what "a revival service" would have to do with it.
Being playful. You know, like I could say penance shmenance... and vinegary spinach... and muh Bible, and muh best and most reliable translation(s) from muh original languages and most trustworthy manuscripts, and muh Strong’s concordance with muh handy mouse-over feature, and especially what muh prophet Hephzechahabalikihael dun sayed back yonder in 222 BC in his tooty-toof chapter and tooty-toof verse: “a merciless and fiery brimstones upon them thar cities, Denvertika and Walla Wallatia, for verily hath they burnt much incense upon a golden statue of Camel as passeth she through the Eyes of Pine Needle with smoldering blast furnace and costly gas imported from Magog and dour spices and fine raiment! How art thou fallen like a morsel into a vat of hot sass, O Sackoribs! Repent therefore (yet do ye no penance)!” (Hpzcl 22:22) And also whatever Muhamad sayeth in his tooty-toof surah. Muhamad and Muhbuddha and Muhdollylamo.
"Responding (i.e., working) toward their sanctification" is the repentance; i.e., changing/turning being commanded here.
Can anyone be sanctified without being saved, or saved without being sanctified? (Rhetorical)
Are you thinking I am not in agreement with Revelation 2:5?
I’d given no thought as to whether or not you are “in agreement” with Revelation 2:5. I was wondering what might happen if you were to meditate on the passage from 2:1-7,
why you would think God is concerned with works there. I still don’t think I know your answer, but I guess you think the Lord wants the Ephesians to sanctify themselves by a love that does not work, or else he’ll do away with them. Okay. Again, it was a purely rhetorical question. God bless you. I have a tent to make now, and afterwards a long nap.