Received by Faith Alone, Proven by Fruit
"while we were still sinners, Christ died for us" (Romans 5:8).
The gift is given to the undeserving.
This is the gospel.
Because the gift comes to us while we are still sinners, two things remain true at the same time:
1. No one is too far gone.
2. The gift is not cheap. Once received, it begins to transform us. The same love that saved us while we were enemies now works in us so we do not remain as we were.
And so it's fair to say that if you cannot know Christ is within them by their fruit, likely then, Christ is not within.
Jesus said it and it's not so difficult to grasp that it requires specialized interpretation.
"By their fruit you will recognize them. Do people pick grapes from thornbushes, or figs from thistles? Likewise, every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit." (Matthew 7:16-17)
A tree’s nature is revealed by what it produces. You don’t need advanced theology to grasp this; just honest observation over time.
If someone claims to know Christ but their life consistently shows no evidence of His influence (no love, no repentance, no growing obedience, no concern for what matters to God), then Jesus says we should recognize that something is wrong with the root. Good fruit doesn’t mean sinless perfection. It means a discernible forward direction. Moving away from sin and toward holiness, even if imperfectly, with all the stumbling blocks and missteps.
Open immorality, unrepentant greed, cruelty, constant deceit, or total indifference to God. Jesus says those cases are clear; the tree is bad. Bad fruit (or total lack of fruit) reveals the true condition of the heart. Bad fruit is easy to spot. When it gets confusing is when we can't spot the rot. When there’s no obvious rot, but also no real fruit. The life looks "respectable," maybe even religious, but lacks the quiet evidence of Christ within.
Jesus addressed this too. He warned about wolves in sheep’s clothing right in the same passage (Matthew 7:15). They can look the part. They can sound the part. They can even do religious things. But over time, the fruit (or lack of it) tells their true story.
Is there any forward movement, however slow and stumbling?
Do they care about obedience, prayer, Scripture, and the church; even imperfectly?
Does the person grieve over sin, or defend it?
A tree that stays permanently unchanged was never made new. This is why self-examination is so important for all of us. The gift is free, it always remains open to any sinner who comes to Christ in faith. But receiving it means the tree starts to change, and begins to bear the fruit of the Spirit; love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control (Galatians 5:22-23).
These are not optional add-ons for the super-spiritual. They are the natural evidence of the Holy Spirit’s presence. They don’t appear overnight in perfect form, but in a true believer there will be some evidence of them over time.
We hold these truths to be scripturally self evident, the gift of grace is free; received by faith alone, while we are still sinners. And the gift is powerful enough, it does not leave us as it found us.
Yes we'll need the nourishment of the church to help sustain us.
Yes we'll need our works of faith to complete us.
Yes we'll need the enduring Word of God to inform us.
We need all of it, the full picture.
Grace plants the seed. The Word waters it. The Church helps it grow in community. Works of faith are the fruit that shows the tree is alive.
None of these things earn the gift. They are the means by which the gift takes root, grows, and proves genuine. This is the balanced Christian life Jesus and the apostles described. The same Lord who says "Come to me" (grace) also says "Follow me" and "By their fruit you will recognize them."
We need all of it.
Amen?