While we are not saved by works, we were created for good works. Like the God in whose image we were created, we were designed to work, to create. Good deeds are the redeemed heart’s response of gratitude for the gift of God’s grace. Good deeds are not an option for Christians. We cannot fail to follow Christ’s example. Good deeds are our way of life.
The remarkable flow of thought in the second chapter of Ephesians goes from amazing grace to amazing work. First, the good news of salvation defines us as human beings: We are his workmanship! The best translation of that word workmanship is given by F. F. Bruce: “His work of art, his masterpiece.’’1 We are God’s works of art. We were created in his image. Then, even better, we were recreated in Christ Jesus! Paul describes it this way: “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!” (2 Cor. 5:17).
Perhaps you don’t feel like a masterpiece because of difficult and painful experiences that have made you question your own worth. Don’t overlook this beautiful truth of Scripture: You are his “workmanship”—his masterwork of art.
Ephesians 2:10 points to the purpose of our creation and recreation—good deeds. The Gospel defines us and then explains what we are supposed to do. Paul’s great statement here capsulizes God’s role in our salvation and our responsibility to God. So what does the privileged position of masterpiece require of us? Once we have been saved by his grace, we must work. Works are a sign that we are his workmanship! “No one more wholeheartedly than Paul rejected good works as a ground of salvation; no one more strongly insisted on good works as a fruit of salvation.”2 Authentic believers, in response to God’s grace, work for Him.
Think of it! In God’s great plan, there are good works prepared before the foundation of the world, waiting for you and for me to carry out. They have been prepared for us by design. And we unique individuals have been designed with these specific tasks in view.
1. F.
F. Bruce, The Epistle to the Ephesians(London: Pickering &
Inglis, 1973), p. 52.
2. Ibid.
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