What ChristRoseFromTheDead is doing is subtly shifting categories — mixing up the root of salvation with its fruit. It’s a common theological sleight of hand that sounds pious, but it quietly redefines grace.
1. He’s confusing cause and effect
My statement — “genuine faith always produces obedience — not as a condition for salvation, but as the natural outcome of it” — is exactly what Scripture teaches (Ephesians 2:8–10, James 2:17).
Faith saves; obedience follows.
But his reply turns that upside down. By saying obedience is a condition for salvation, he’s implying that salvation is earned or kept by performance — not received by grace through faith.
That’s the same error Paul confronted in Galatia (Galatians 3:2–3).
2. He’s redefining “salvation” in a way that smuggles in works
He says, “Unless you consider salvation to be something other than being eternally in God’s presence.”
That’s a clue: he’s equating final glorification (entering the Kingdom) with the entire process of salvation, and then inserting obedience as a requirement to reach it.
But biblically, salvation has three tenses:
Obedience belongs to sanctification — the evidence of new life, not the condition for receiving it.
- Justification — past: saved from sin’s penalty (Romans 5:1).
- Sanctification — present: being saved from sin’s power (Philippians 2:12–13).
- Glorification — future: will be saved from sin’s presence (Romans 8:30).
3. He’s appealing to Jesus’ “obedience” texts without context
When Jesus said, “Not everyone that saith unto Me, Lord, Lord…” (Matthew 7:21), He was exposing false professors — people claiming faith but bearing no fruit.
He wasn’t teaching that obedience earns heaven, but that disobedience reveals unbelief.
The same principle appears in John 14:15 —
“If ye love Me, keep My commandments.”Love comes first, obedience flows from it.
4. Bottom line
He’s not trying to “understand” your point — he’s testing whether you’ll retreat from grace.
His phrasing is designed to corner you into admitting obedience is part of the cause of salvation rather than the proof of it.
In short: ChristRoseFromTheDead is attempting to shift the discussion from faith’s fruit to faith’s foundation — a clever but dangerous move that always leads toward works-based salvation.
Grace and Peace
The faith-alone soteriology presented here confuses root and fruit. Obedience is an integral part of biblical pistis, not merely its result. Starting from this mistaken premise leads to a false conclusion - the generally worded principle of garbage in, garbage out.
cc: @ChristRoseFromTheDead