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Salvation by Allegiance Alone: Rethinking Faith, Works, and the Gospel of Jesus the King

von Matthew W. Bates

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Corrects common misconceptions about faith and offers a fresh understanding of salvation as allegiance to Jesus the king.
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Summary: Argues that the words we translate as "belief" or "faith" are better translated as "allegiance" and that the focal point of the gospel is not simply being forgiven for sins or obtaining eternal life, but allegiance to King Jesus.

Matthew Bates thinks the understanding of salvation by faith is rooted in a poor choice of words to translate the idea of pistis in the Greek. A better understanding of this word might be "allegiance" or "faithfulness." Part of the problem that he sees is a lack of focus on how the resurrection of Jesus and his ascension vindicate him as the King who has come and that the only appropriate response to this King is our full allegiance, both initially and through life, and that this restoration to our true allegiance is what constitutes our salvation which certainly includes pardon for our rebellious sin but encompasses so much more. Bates summarizes his case as follows:

"So, in the final analysis, salvation is by allegiance alone. That is, God requires nothing more or nothing less than allegiance to Jesus as king for initial, current, and final salvation. As such, while continuing to affirm the absolute centrality of the cross, the atonement, and the resurrection, the church must move away from a salvation culture that spins around the axis of 'faith alone' in the sufficiency of Jesus's sacrifice. It must move toward a gospel culture that centers upon "allegiance alone" to Jesus as the enthroned king. With the Apostles Creed as a pledge of allegiance, the rallying cry of the victorious church can become 'We give allegiance to Jesus the king.' For as the creed reminds us, Jesus the Christ is 'our Lord' and he 'is seated at the right hand of God' and as such he both merits and demands our undeserved loyalty."

One might note several emphases in this summary that Bates develops in different chapters of the book. One is an understanding of the gospel as reflected in the Apostles Creed, which he thinks ought regularly be recited in our churches as a king of "pledge of allegiance." He identifies eight elements in the gospel of Jesus the king:

He pre-existed with the Father.
He took on human flesh, fulfilling God's promises to David.
He died for sins in accordance with scripture.
He was buried.
He was raised on the third day in accordance with the scriptures.
He appeared to many.
He is seated at the right hand of God as Lord.
He will come again as judge.

Bates contends that these last statements as well as the pre-existence of Jesus rarely are part of our gospel messages and that we thus fail to properly set forth Jesus as God's anointed Messiah King.

This also informs his understanding of justification. Bates understands justification as tied up with God's vindication of the son, crucified for sin in his resurrection and ascension to God's right hand. Through our union with Christ, we share in that vindication, that justification, both instantaneously through our allegiance to Christ, and increasingly through life as we stay with Christ, which he calls "restoring the idol of God" reflecting all and more than we were made to be through Christ. He, along with Wright and others, also observes that the future hope of Christians is resurrection life with Christ in the new creation, not some vague hope of heaven.

He deals with objections, foremost of which is the idea of allegiance as a "work." So much of his case hinges on the thinness of how we often discuss belief, which seems mere intellectual assent or some kind of trust in Jesus without any further obligation. He contends that faith is in fact a human response to the grace of God, no matter how defined, and that allegiance fills this out as the form of loyal trust appropriate to servants of the Risen King.

I do think the title may de-center the proper focus of allegiance. The focus seems to be on "allegiance alone" but this is dangerous and de-centered if we do not focus on "allegiance to whom?" It is Christ who saves and restores. Just as it has been observed that faith is not "faith in faith" so here we need to avoid "allegiance to allegiance." While the title makes a polemical point, we might more accurately say "by allegiance alone through grace alone in Christ the King alone."

I find several things helpful in this work. One is that it addresses the question of "cheap faith" that does not seem to eventuate in any kind of transformed life, often because the person does not think or expect that this follows. Another is that it does reflect the full gospel that the church has confessed through history, the gospel of the king and his kingdom and sets our pardon for sin in the context of being restored subjects, indeed vice-regents, in his kingdom. Finally, and Bates alludes to this, the idea of allegiance may address the sharp divides around grace, faith, justification and works that have separated Protestant and Catholic for five hundred years. The focus on scripture and creed to understand these things may point the way forward. We can hope.

____________________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from the publisher through Netgalley. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. ( )
  BobonBooks | May 9, 2017 |
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