4.
‘Faith’ in the Gospels: (1) in the Synoptics; (2) in the Fourth Gospel.
5.
Some characteristics of the Johannine conception of ‘faith.’
6.
The Johannine and Pauline conceptions of ‘faith’ contrasted.
7.
The place of ‘faith’ in the teaching of Jesus.
Literature.
1.Introductory.—In the NT the term ‘faith’ has two main meanings, which may be distinguished as active and passive senses, viz.: (1) belief, ‘the frame of mind which relies on another,’ and (2) fidelity, ‘the frame of mind which can be relied on.’ Of these the former is the predominant use, and is marked by a rich, copious, and distinctively Christian development.
The two senses—the active and passive—both logically and grammatically pass by an easy transition from one to the other, and are not always clearly distinguishable, or are actually combined (as, e.g., in
ïἱ ôéóôïß
, ‘the faithful,’ applied to the Christian fellowship). In the OT the quasi-active sense of ‘trust,’ with the meaning ‘exhibit faithfulness or confidence,’ is expressed by the Hiphil
äָàֵîéï
(constr. with
ôְ
= ‘to believe in reliance on in,’ followed by the object or ground of the belief; with
ìִ
in a weaker sense, ‘to believe,’ the object here denoted by
ìִ
being not so much that in which the confidence is reposed, as that on the (attesting) strength of which it is reposed in the absolute object). No noun-derivative from the Hiphil occurs in the OT (denoting ‘faith’ as an active principle). The substantive
àָîåּéָä
‘firmness,’ ‘steadfastness,’ ‘fidelity’ (notice the passive form) is the nearest equivalent for ‘faith’; but it always occurs with the passive sense, with the possible exception of Hab_2:4 (‘the just shall live his faith’).* [Note: Targ., however,
òì
÷åùèäåï
éç÷ééîåï
. Perhaps, as Lightfoot (, p. 148) suggests, the ‘transitional or double sense’ should be recognized in the passage.] In this passage the active principle of trust in God seems to be contrasted sharply with arrogant self-sufficiency.
The Gr.
ôéóôéò
(
ôéóôåὐù
), seems to have followed the reverse order of development (from active to passive). Here the predominant meaning is active ‘faith,’ ‘trust,’ ‘belief’ (in Classical usage, however, with the slightest possible association with religious ideas). The LXX Septuagint use of the word (
ôéóôéò
=
àîåּðָä
usually; sometimes
àֶîִç
and
àַîָðָä
) probably reacted upon the Hebrew, and on this supposition it is possible to explain the active sense which is certainly present in Rabbinical Hebrew, and which may be seen in the late Hebrew of Sirach (e.g.Sir_46:15).† [Note: ἑí ðßóôåé áὑôïῦ ἡêñéâÜóèç ðñïöÞôçò; Heb.
á
(
àîåðúå
ðøø
)
ù
äåä
(Strack).] In the Aramaic of the Targums the active sense is fixed in a substantive derived from the Aphel,
äֵéîָðåּçִà
(used in Gen_15:6 of Abraham’s faith). Cf. the Syriac equivalent of
ðßóôéò
in the NT
ܗܝܡܢܘܬܐ
2. The idea of faith in the OT.—Faith as an active religious principle is relatively far less prominent in the OT than in the NT. The solitary instance in which the active meaning certainly emerges in the Heb. substantive
àֲîåּðָä
has already been referred to. But even the verb (
äַàַîִéï
) is by no means common with a religious connotation. Trust or confidence in God and the unseen are, of course, essential to spiritual religion, and receive manifold expression, especially in the Psalms (note the use in this connexion of (
áִ
,
òַì
)
áָּîַç
à
֛
ì
with God as object). But, as Lightfoot‡ [Note: cit. p. 151] has remarked, ‘it is indeed a characteristic token of the difference between the two covenants, that under the Law the “fear of the Lord” holds very much the same place as “faith in God,” “faith in Christ,” under the Gospel. Awe is the prominent idea in the earlier dispensation, trust in the later.’
The object of ‘faith,’ as expressed (with a religious connotation) by the verb (
äַàָîéï
) in the OT, is sometimes the words or commandments of God, or a particular word or work of God, or the Divine revelation, or the Divine messengers the prophets, or God Himself in His own Person. Of this last usage the examples are the most important (Gen_15:8, Exo_14:31, Num_14:11; Num_20:12, Deu_1:32, 2Ki_17:14, 2Ch_20:20, Psa_78:22, Jon_3:5).§ [Note: Add to these the cases where it is construed absolutely: Exo_4:31, Isa_7:9; Isa_28:16, Psa_116:10; and Cf. Psa_27:13.] Here the verb is construed with
áּ
. The classical instance is, of course, Abraham’s faith (Gen_15:6), which, with a true instinct, has been recognized, both by Jewish and Christian religious exegesis, as the supreme example of faith in its active exercise as a religious principle.
3. Later Jewish idea of ‘faith.’—In early Rabbinical and other Jewish literature the term for ‘faith,’ besides its Biblical meaning of ‘faithfulness,’ also denotes active trust in God. This as a religious principle is emphatically praised by the Rabbis, and regarded by them as highly meritorious. The classical example is, as has already been stated, the faith of Abraham (Gen_15:6), which became one of the commonplaces of theological discussion not only in Rabbinical circles but also in the Hellenistic school of Alexandria,* [Note: In Philo the career of Abraham is made the subject of elaborate and frequent comment and allegory. Lightfoot (op. cit.) remarks: ‘If we look only to the individual man, faith with Philo is substantially the same as faith with St. Paul. The lessons drawn from the history of Abraham by the Alexandrian Jew and the Christian Apostle differ very slightly.’] while its occurrence in the NT is, of course, a familiar fact. The most instructive example in Rabbinical literature is to be found in the early Midrashic work the Mekhilta (on Exo_14:30).† [Note: The original can be seen in Weiss’ ed. of the Mekhilta, 25b, 26. The Mekhilta is a halakhic midrash on part of Exodus, dating in its present form from the first part of the second Christian century, but containing much earlier material. It is invaluable for illustrating early Jewish ideas and religious thoughts of the Apostolic age.] The passage runs as follows:
‘The people feared the Lord. So long as they were in Egypt they did not fear God, but now: the people feared the Lord, and they believed in the Lord and His servant Moses. If they believed in Moses, much more did they believe in the Lord. From this thou mayest learn that whoever believes in the faithful Shepherd is (regarded) as if he believed in the word of Him who spake and the world was.… Great is faith whereby Israel believed in Him who spake and the world was; for because Israel believed in the Lord, the Holy Spirit abode upon them, and they sang the song: for immediately after the words: they believed in the Lord and in Moses His servant, follow the words (Exo_15:1): Then sang Moses and the children of Israel this song to the Lord. In like manner thou findest that Abraham our Father inherited this world and the world to come only by the merit of faith (
àֲîָðָä
) whereby he believed in the Lord, as it is said (Gen_15:6). he believed in the Lord, and He counted it to him for righteousness … R. Nehemiah says: Whoever receives unto himself one precept (of the Law) in true faith (
áַàֲîָðָä
) is worthy for the Holy Spirit to abide upon him; for so we find in the case of our fathers that because they believed in the Lord they were deemed worthy that the Holy Spirit should abide upon them, and they uttered the song. For it is said: believed in God and in Moses His servant; and (immediately afterwards) it is said: sang Moses and the children of Israel, etc. And so thou findest in the case of Abraham that he inherited this world and the world to come solely by merit of faith (
áּåëåּú
àֲîָðָä
), whereby he believed in the Lord, as it is said (Gen_15:6): believed, etc. And in the same way we find in the case of Moses, David, and Dehorab that they (by reason of faith) sang a song, and the Holy Spirit abode upon them. And in like manner thou findest that solely by merit of faith was Israel redeemed from Egypt, as it is said: the people believed, etc. And so it is said (Psa_31:23): Lord preserveth the faithful, making mention of the faith of the fathers.… Of the righteous it is said (Isa_26:2): ye the gates that the righteous nation, which keepeth the faith, may enter in. Into this gate all the faithful (
áöìé
àîåðä
) enter. David sings (Psa_92:1): is a good thing to give thanks unto the Lord, and to sing praises unto Thy name, O Most High: to show forth Thy loving-kindness in the morning and Thy faithfulness in the nights, with an instrument of ten strings and with the psaltery, with a solemn sound upon the harp. For Thou, O Lord, hast made me glad through Thy works, and in the operation of Thy hand will I exult. What is the cause of his joy here? It is the reward of faith which our fathers showed in this world, wherewith they trusted by day and night. For thus is it said: show forth thy loving-kindness in the morning and thy faithfulness in the nights. And in like manner is it said of Jehoshaphat (2Ch_20:20): they rose early in the morning and went forth into the wilderness of Tekoa; and when they went forth Jehoshaphat stood up and said: Hear ye me, O Judah, and ye inhabitants of Jerusalem! Have faith in the Lord your God, and so shall ye be established; and have faith in His prophets, and so shall ye prosper. And (so) it is written (Jer_5:3): Lord, do not Thine eyes look upon faith? And (Hab_2:4): righteous liveth of his faith. Also (Lam_3:23): are new every morning, Thy faithfulness is great. Also thou findest that the (Divine) intercourse is only accorded as the reward of faith, as it is said (Son_4:8): with me from Lebanon, my bride (‘’ = Spirit), with me; of faith Shalt Thou be the familiar companion altogether (lit. ‘the head’).‡ [Note: So the words of the original (
úּùׁåּøִé
îַøֹàùׁ
àֲîָðִä
) are under stood here. ‘Bride’ (ëַìָä) is a mystical designation of the Holy Spirit or Shekinah,] In like manner it is said (Hos_2:19-20): I will betroth thee unto me for ever; yea, I will betroth thee unto me with faith (
áֶּàֱîåּðָä
). Great is faith before God, for on account of faith it is that the Holy Spirit abides (upon Israel),’ etc.
In the early Rabbinical literature ‘faith’ wavers in meaning between ‘belief’ and ‘fidelity (to the Law).’ The former is prominent in the Apocalypse of Baruch (1st cent. a.d.) But the latter is characteristic of the later period, ‘faith ‘and ‘works’ being co-ordinated or combined.* [Note: Charles’ note on Apoc. Bar. liv. 21: ‘Faith in the Talmud is in one of its aspects regarded as a work which, as the fulfilment of the Law, produces merit.’] ‘Faith’ (
àֵîåּðָä
) in the sense of fixed dogmatic belief is quite late in Hebrew literature (mediaeval times).
In Rabbinical Hebrew, besides the nouns
àֲîָðָä
àָîåּðָä
, a Hipbil-substantival form
äַàֲîָðָä
(= Aram.
äéîðåúà
) occurs (Tosefta Baba Bathra v. 8). For the Gospel-expression
ὁëéãüôéóôïé
a Heb. parallel occurs in Mekhilta (on Exo_15:1)
àîðä
îçåñøé
‘those lacking faith.’ So in the Pal. Targ. (on Num_11:32)
îçñøé
äéîðåçà
(‘Then rose up those who had lacked faith and gathered the quails,’ etc.); and Gen. Rab. § 32,
÷ְîַðּé
àîåּðָä
‘men of little faith’ (an exact parallel). In the Mishna, Sota ix. 12, the decline of the world is ascribed to the disappearance of ‘men of faith’ (
àַðְùִׁé
àֲîָðָä
).
4. ‘Faith’ in the Gospels.—The terms for ‘faith’ and ‘believe’ in contrast with those of the OT are characteristic of the whole NT language, and occur almost entirely with a directly religious connotation. In Philo the religious content of the terms had decidedly been heightened, but suffered from a certain vagueness in the conception of the object of faith, due to his transcendental philosophy. Faith, in Philo’s conception, rests rather upon the abstract Divinity than upon the personal God of grace and salvation, and is rather the fruit and crown of righteousness than its antecedent. In the NT it is all-important to distinguish the different connotations of the terms according as the object is (a) God; (b) the promises of God; (c) Christ; (d) some particular utterance, claim, or promise of God or Christ. ‘The last of these senses is the one most common in the Synoptic Gospels.’† [Note: Sanday-Headlam, Romans, p. 31 f. The passive sense of ôßóôéò (‘faithfulness,’ ‘fidelity’) is very rare in the NT. The only instance in the Gospels seems to be Mat_23:23 (‘the weightier matters of the Law, judgment and mercy and faithfulness’ [êáὶ ôὴí ôßóôéí]).]
(1) In the Synoptics.—In its active sense of ‘faith,’
ðßóôéò
usually means here belief or trust in God or God’s power as manifested in Christ (the so-called ‘miracle-faith’).‡ [Note: Nowhere in the NT is it used of man’s faith in man.] The response of faith conditions the granting of relief to those in bodily distress (Mar_5:34 ||, Mar_10:52 ||), the effect being proportionate to the degree of faith exercised (Mat_9:29 ‘According to your faith [
êáôἀ ôὴí ðßóôéí ὑìῶí
] be it done unto you’; cf. Mat_15:28, Luk_7:9; Luk_7:50; and for degrees of faith see Mat_8:10 ||, Luk_17:5 etc.). In this connexion Mat_13:58 is instructive. We are told that ‘He did not many mighty works there [‘in his own country,’ Nazareth] because of their unbelief’ (‘lack of faith,’
ἀðéóôßáí
); cf. Mar_6:6. The term ‘faith’ is also applied to the confidence of the disciple that the power conferred upon him will be effective (in the performance of miraculous works), Mar_11:22-24, defined by Christ as ‘faith in God’ (Mar_11:22). Possibly, however, this passage (as has been suggested by Menzies§ [Note: The Earliest Gospel, p. 211.] ) is intended simply to bring home to the disciples the power of faith in accomplishing the seemingly impossible. ‘Jesus summons those who look to Him to have faith in God when they are in great danger, or when they are seeking with all their heart some boon which outward appearances declare to be all but hopeless’; the special and (apparently insurmountable) difficulty here being the insensibility of the Jewish people as a whole to the message of the gospel (symbolized by the withered fig-tree). Cf. the words of Christ to Jairus (Mar_5:36 ‘Fear not, only believe’), to the father of the epileptic (Mar_9:23 ‘If it be possible! All things are possible to him that believeth’), to the disciples in the storm (Mar_4:40 ‘Why are ye fearful? Have ye not faith?’).
The words about the power to remove mountains (Mar_11:23 f. || Mat_21:21 f.) occur also in a different connexion in Mat_17:20 (and in the rebuke administered to the disciples for their ‘lack of faith’ in dealing with the epileptic—a case of special difficulty). They have a proverbial ring,* [Note: For the possible interpretation of the words áäøéäåäéøàä (Gen_22:14) as a proverb = ‘In the mountain (.e. when perplexity is at its height) Jahweh will provide,’ see C. J. Ball in note, loc. Cf. Zec_4:7.] and may easily have been used by our Lord more than once (cf. Luk_17:6 ‘If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye would say to this sycamine tree, Be thou rooted up,’ etc.).
In one instance ‘faith’ is used in the Synoptic Gospels in a way that suggests the technical sense so frequent in the Epistles, viz. Luk_18:8 (‘When the Son of man comes, shall he find faith on the earth’?) Here ‘faith’ = faith in Himself as Messiah and Redeemer.
In the Acts and Epp.
ðἱóôéò
, used absolutely, constantly occurs in a soteriological sense = ‘saving faith.’ It rapidly became a Christian technical term, and practically stood as a synonym for Christianity, marking out the new religion as essentially characterized by faith or belief in Jesus as Redeemer. ‘Believers’ becomes the designation of Christians; ‘to believe’ = to become a Christian. As contrasted with this usage, the term in the Synoptics is, to some extent, undeveloped in meaning. Yet how near the soteriological lies to the ‘miracle-faith’ comes out clearly in such a passage as Act_3:16 (the healing of the lame man at the Gate Beautiful) ‘By faith in his name hath his name made this man strong, whom ye behold and know; yea, the faith that is through him hath given him this perfect soundness in the presence of you all’; here ‘faith in the Name’ (of Jesus) is described as ‘faith brought into being by Him’ (
ἡ ôßóôéò ἠ äé
ʼ
áὑôïῦ
),† [Note: also Act_14:9.] and the same conclusion results from a comparison of the language of Mat_9:2, Mar_2:5, Luk_5:20 (‘Thy sins are forgiven thee’), as well as from the language of Luk_7:50, Mat_9:22, Mar_5:24.‡ [Note: also the use of ôéóôåýåéí for saving faith in Christ, in Mar_9:42; Mar_15:32.]
(2) In the Fourth Gospel the absence of the substantive (
ðßóôéò
)—which does not occur at all—is made up for by the frequent use of the verb (
ðéóôåýåéí
).
ôéóôåýåéí
rarely occurs in the NT in the weakened sense ‘to credit,’ ‘give credence to’; only once apparently of a non-religious act (Mat_24:23; Mat_24:26, Mar_13:21—in the warning about false Christs, ‘believe it not’); elsewhere of assent given to some definite act, event, or fact in the religious sphere: of believing prayer (Mat_21:22 ‘Whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing ye shall receive); of belief in the fact of the resurrection of Christ (Joh_20:8; Joh_20:25; Joh_20:29bis); in God’s word of promise (Luk_1:45; cf. Act_26:27), in the declarations of Jesus whether regarding earthly or heavenly things (Joh_3:12; Joh_1:50, Luk_22:67); of faith generally in the word of salvation (Luk_8:12 ‘that they may not believe and be saved,’ cf. Joh_1:7).
The usual sense of the verb in the Fourth Gospel is a soteriological one. It expresses saving faith directed to the Person of Christ. In some instances, it is true, the immediate object of the faith is the wonder-working power of Jesus (the ‘miracle-faith’): Joh_4:48 (‘Except ye see signs and wonders, ye will in no wise believe’), Joh_11:40.§ [Note: Mat_8:13, Mar_5:36; Mar_9:23-24, Luk_8:50.] But here also the same remark applies as to the similar cases in the Synoptics, that the soteriological meaning lies very close to, and is sometimes almost indistinguishable from, the other (cf. Joh_4:48 with Joh_4:53 and Joh_9:38, and Joh_11:40 with Joh_11:15 and Joh_12:39). In the following instances, however, the direct soteriological significance is clear and unmistakable: Joh_3:15; Joh_3:18, Joh_4:41-42; Joh_4:53, Joh_5:44, Joh_6:36; Joh_6:47; Joh_6:64, Joh_9:38, Joh_10:25-26, Joh_11:15, Joh_12:39, Joh_14:29, Joh_16:31, Joh_19:35, Joh_20:31. Of these passages the two last are particularly instructive: ‘That ye may believe’ (Joh_19:35), and ‘These are written that ye may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing ye may have life in his name’ (Joh_20:31). Here faith occupies a fundamental place. Its essential object is defined to be the belief that Jesus is ‘the Christ, the Son of God.’
Once again the conclusion is reinforced that the undefined ‘to believe’ is practically a synonym for ‘to be a Christian.’ Indeed, it may be inferred from the NT usage generally of
ôéóôåýåéí
that before the disciples were called ‘Christians’ (Act_11:26), they were designated ‘believers’* [Note: ïἱ ôéóôåýóáíôå; (= those who had turned to Christ in trustful reliance) is perhaps used as a subst. in such passages as Act_2:44; Act_4:32, 2Th_1:10, Heb_4:3.] (
ïἱ ôéóôåýïíôåò
is used as a participle in Mar_9:42, but as a subst. perhaps in Act_5:14 b ‘And believers were the more added to the Lord’). Sometimes
ïἱ ôéóôïé
is used in an equivalent sense (e.g.Act_10:45; 1Pe_1:21, Rev_17:14; cf. the use of
ôéóôïò
in Joh_1:27), and
ἀôéóôïé
occurs in the opposite sense of ‘unbelievers’ (e.g.2Co_4:6; 2Co_6:14 f.; cf. Joh_20:27, Mat_17:17, Mar_9:19, Luk_9:41). Cf. the cognate use of
ἀôéóôéá
, ‘unbelief’ (Mar_9:24; Mar_16:14, Mat_13:58, Mar_6:6; also in the Epp.);
ἀôéóôÝù
, ‘disbelieve’ (Mar_16:11; Mar_16:16, Luk_24:11; Luk_24:41, Act_28:24; 1Pe_2:7); and
ὀëéãüôéóôïò
, || ‘of little faith’ (Mat_6:30; Mat_8:26; Mat_14:31; Mat_16:8, Luk_12:28);
ὁëéãïôéóôéá
, ‘little faith,’ occurs Mat_17:20.
5. Some characteristics of the Johannine conception of ‘faith.’—The fundamental conception of ‘faith’ in the Fourth Gospel coincides with that of the other NT writers; it consists essentially in trustful self-committal to Christ and His salvation. Only it is concerned less than in the Synoptics with the appropriation of directly physical relief; it moves rather in the sphere of spiritual and eternal facts, and directs itself more exclusively to the Person of Christ. Trust in God and in Christ are equated (Joh_14:1); faith characterizes those who recognize His Divine mission (cf. also Joh_16:30), and they are described as those ‘who believe in his name.’ The result of faith is an acknowledgment of Christ’s unity with the Father (Joh_10:38, Joh_14:10).
Faith (
ðéóôåýåéí
) and knowledge (
ãéãíþóêåéí
) are interchangeable ideas in the Fourth Gospel (cf. Joh_6:69, Joh_10:38, Joh_17:8), or rather they express the same truth looked at from different sides. ‘To know’ (
ãéãíþóêåéí
) in the Johannine language expresses the perception of eternal truth; ‘to believe,’ its temporal discovery and appropriation. The former is therefore the fruit of the latter (cf. esp. Joh_10:38 ‘believe … that ye may know’). The intellectual element is thus the product of a moral act, and is conditioned by it. Faith is not the result of logical operations, but is due to the Divine working (Joh_6:44 ‘No man can come to me, except the Father which sent me draw him’). Where faith is not attained, this is due to the distraction exercised by lower and earthly ambitions or ideals (‘glory one of another,’ Joh_5:44), or the deliberate choice of darkness rather than light (Joh_3:19, cf. v. 21). Trust is also shown to be characteristic of a real faith, which does not need ‘signs,’ and has risen above the necessities of ‘sight’ (Joh_20:29). The boon which faith appropriates is eternal life (Joh_5:24).
There is evident in the treatment of faith characteristic of the Fourth Gospel a spirit of protest against the false and exaggerated views of knowledge that were beginning to affect the Church. The subtle and pervasive danger of Gnosticism, with its dangerous glorification of a merely intellectual knowledge, and its contempt for simple faith, had to be met. This was effected in the Fourth Gospel, ‘on the one hand by deepening the idea of knowledge to the knowledge of experience’ (which is the fruit of simple faith), ‘and on the other by insisting upon the immediate entrance of every believer into the possession of salvation.’† [Note: B. Warfield in Hastings’ DB i. 836 (art. ‘Faith’).] The writer of the Fourth Gospel ‘would indeed have believers know what they believe, and who He is in whom they put their trust, and what He has done for them, and is doing, and will do in and through them; but this is not that they may know these things simply as intellectual propositions, but that they may rest on them in faith, and know them in personal experience.‡ [Note: Warfield, ib.] Nothing is more characteristic of the Johannine conception than the insistence on the present experience and participation in eternal life of believers. ‘He that believeth hath eternal life’ (Joh_3:36, Joh_5:24, Joh_6:47; Joh_6:54; cf. 1Jn_3:14-15; 1Jn_5:11-13). The inheritance of the true Christian was not merely a future boon,—though the future had in store for him a greater glory than that of the present,—but the simple believer, by the mere act of faith, was already placed on a plane of life to which no knowledge could attain.’
It is worth noting in this connexion that
ἁëÞèåéá
(which like
ôéóôéò
is employed in the LXX Septuagint to translate
àֲîåּðָä
) seems to be used in the Fourth Gospel in the sense of faithfulness, rightness, rectitude, rather than with the meaning of intellectual truth. In Joh_1:14; Joh_1:16
÷áñéò êáé ἀëçèåéá
=
äָñָê
åָàַîֵç
or
çָñָø
åָàֳîåּðָãּ
, and by
ἀëÞèåéá
is to be understood ‘faithfulness corresponding to certain obligatory relations or to certain promises’ (Wendt* [Note: Teaching of Jesus, i. p. 259 (Eng. tr.). God’s faithfulness to His promises, as shown esp. in blessing His people, is an attribute constantly insisted on in the OT.] ). Cf. also the phrase
ôïéåúí ôçí ἀëÞèåéáí
= ‘to do the right,’ i.e. to act conscientiously; also Joh_8:32; Joh_8:40; Joh_8:45-46, Joh_17:17; Joh_17:19, and possibly also in Joh_14:6; Joh_14:17, Joh_15:26, Joh_16:13, Joh_18:37 f.—in all which passages the connotation seems to be a moral one (‘faithfulness,’ ‘rectitude’) rather than a purely intellectual one (‘truth’).
6. The Johannine and Pauline conceptions of ‘faith’ contrasted.—This is not the place for an extended review of the Pauline view of faith, but one or two salient points of contrast with the Johannine may be briefly indicated. The different method of presentation in each case is explained by the different circumstances under which each was formulated. In the interests of spiritual religion the Apostle of the Gentiles was forced to wage uncompromising war with Jewish legalistic conceptions of religion, and prejudices in favour of their own privileged religious position, which (naturally enough) were ingrained in the Jewish consciousness, and threatened to pass over into the Christian Church.† [Note: As has already been pointed out above, ‘faith’ was regarded in Jewish circles as of the highest religious significance and value; only, in the background of the Jewish mind there always lurked the consciousness of privilege and superiority.] As against Jewish privilege and advantages, St. Paul vindicated and maintained the great principle that in the domain of salvation there is no distinction between Jew and Gentile, and that the Jew has no other righteousness than that which comes through faith in Jesus Christ (Gal_3:7 f.), being in this respect in exactly the same position as the Gentile (cf. Rom_3:30). From this certain important results follow: (1) That ‘no man is justified by the law’ (Gal_2:16; Gal_3:11, Rom_3:20), and (2) that ‘a man is justified by faith alone, apart from works of law.’ This thesis was splendidly developed by St. Paul in his great dialectic. The absolute sufficiency of this saving faith is above all shown in the contemplation of its object. ‘It is because faith lays hold of Jesus Christ, who was delivered up for our trespasses and was raised for our justification (Rom_4:25), and makes us the possessors of the righteousness of God through Him, that there is no room for any righteousness of our own in the ground of our salvation (Rom_10:3, Eph_2:8)’ (Warfield). See, further, Justification.
On the other hand, the Johannine presentation is determined by an environment of different circumstances. The false emphasis laid on a merely intellectual knowledge had to be met. Hence the insistence in the Fourth Gospel on the true knowledge of Christian experience which is the fruit of a simple faith. It is regarded as a precious and permanent present possession. Briefly, it may be said that ‘faith with St. John is rather contemplative and philosophic, where with St. Paul it is active and enthusiastic.’‡ [Note: Sanday-Headlam, Romans, p. 32.]
7. The place of ‘faith’ in the teaching of Jesus.—Christ no less than St. Paul combated the prevailing tendency among the Jews to rest in a position of privilege (cf. Mat_3:9, Rom_2:17). But the dominant characteristic of His teaching, as reported both in the Synoptics and in the Fourth Gospel, is the consistent way in which He strives to draw all faith to Himself. Even when His language is general in character (Mar_11:22, Mat_21:22, Mar_9:24, Luk_18:8), He speaks in a way that necessarily fixes attention upon His own Person as God’s unique representative on earth. The soteriological significance of the so-called ‘miracle-faith’ has already been pointed out above. This comes out especially in such a passage as Mat_9:2, where healing of the body is conjoined with the claim to forgive sins. That Christ is the proper object of this soteriological faith is sufficiently attested even in the Synoptic account (Luk_8:12-13; Luk_22:32, Mat_18:6 [|| Mar_9:42], Luk_7:50; cf. Luk_24:25; Luk_24:45). It is in the Fourth Gospel, however, in the intimate discourses of Jesus which are there preserved, that the fullest account is given of the teaching of our Lord on this subject. Here, as is natural, faith in its higher aspects is consistently and abundantly set forth, as reflected and mirrored in the recollection of the ‘disciple whom Jesus loved.’ In the Fourth Gospel we are confronted with the personal testimony of the disciple who was uniquely fitted both by temperament and by character to receive and assimilate the deepest thoughts of his Master.
The testimony of the Fourth Gospel on this subject cannot be more adequately summed up than in the words of Warfield:* [Note: cit. ib.] —
‘In these discourses, too, Jesus’ primary task is to hind men to Him by faith. The chief difference is that here, consonantly with the nature of the discourses recorded, much more prevailing stress is laid upon the higher aspects of faith, and we see Jesus striving specially to attract to Himself a faith consciously set upon eternal good. In a number of instances we find ourselves in much the same atmosphere as in the Synoptics (Joh_4:21 f., Joh_4:48 f., Joh_9:35); and the method of Jesus is the same throughout. Everywhere He offers Himself as the object of faith, and claims faith in Himself for the highest concerns of the soul. But everywhere He begins at the level at which He finds His hearers, and leads them upward to these higher things. It is so that He deals with Nathanael (Joh_1:51) and Nicodemus (Joh_3:12); and it is so that He deals constantly with the Jews, everywhere requiring faith in Himself for eternal life (Joh_5:24-25; Joh_5:28, Joh_6:35; Joh_6:40; Joh_6:47, Joh_7:38, Joh_8:24, Joh_10:25; Joh_10:36, Joh_12:44; Joh_12:46), declaring that faith in Him is the certain outcome of faith in their own Scriptures (Joh_5:46-47), is demanded by the witness borne Him by God in His mighty works (Joh_10:25; Joh_10:36-37), is involved in and is indeed identical with faith in God (Joh_5:25; Joh_5:38, Joh_6:40; Joh_6:45, Joh_8:47, Joh_12:44), and is the one thing which God requires of them (Joh_6:29), and the failure of which will bring them eternal ruin (Joh_3:18, Joh_5:38, Joh_6:64, Joh_8:24). When dealing with His followers, His primary care was to build up their faith in Him. Witness especially His solicitude for their faith in the last hours of His intercourse with them. For the faith they had reposed in Him He returns thanks to God (Joh_17:8), but He is still nursing their faith (Joh_16:31), preparing for its increase through the events to come (Joh_13:19, Joh_16:29), and with almost passionate eagerness claiming it at their bands (Joh_14:1; Joh_14:10-12). Even after His resurrection we find Him restoring the faith of the waverer (Joh_20:29) with words which pronounce a special blessing on those who should hereafter believe on less compelling evidence—words whose point is not fully caught until we realize that they contain an intimation of the work of the Apostles as, like His own, bringing men to faith in Him (Joh_17:20-21).’
The fundamental position of faith in the Christian religion, which is so strikingly expressed and implied throughout the whole NT literature, justifies the distinction of the old and new covenants as the ages before and after the ‘coming of faith’ (Gal_3:23; Gal_3:25). At the same time the way had been prepared for this historically by the circumstances of the time. The more the fulfilment of Israel’s national hopes by special Divine interposition seemed to recede, the more stress was laid upon the necessity of trust and faith in the Divine ordering as a religious duty.
Literature.—A comprehensive treatment of the whole subject will be found in B.B. Warfield’s art. ‘Faith’ in Hasting's Dictionary of the Bible. To the literature there cited add R. J. Knowling, Ep. of St. James (1904), p. xlii ff., 53 ff.; R. St. J. Parry, Discussion of the Ep. of St. James (1903), p. 43 ff.; J. R. Illingworth, Reason and Revelation (1902), p. 204 ff., Christian Character (1904), p. 63 ff.; G. Ferries, Growth of Christian Faith (1905); W. Herrmann, Faith and Morals (1904), p. 7 ff. See also artt. Belief, Doubt, Justification, Righteousness.