“Fight the good fight of faith.”
Today those of us who are engaged in this project to read some great Christian classics together are going to be looking at the fourth chapter of J.C. Ryle’s Holiness. You can read more about this effort here: Reading the Classics Together. Even if you are not participating, please keep reading. I’m sure there will be something here to benefit you. We are at the half-way point of this study. If you’d like to participate, please do. Otherwise you may wish to wait until we have completed this study and begin our next one (did someone say, “John Owen?”).
To this point Ryle has covered Sin, Sanctification and Holiness. This week he progresses to “The Fight.” In this chapter he examines the biblical metaphor of the Christian life being a faith of faith. “There is [a] warfare of far greater importance than any way that was ever waged by man. It is a warfare which concerns not two or three nations only, but every Christian man and woman born into the world. The warfare I speak of is the spiritual warfare. It is the fight which everyone who would be saved must fight about his soul.”
Summary
The chapter follows this general outline:
- True Christianity is a fight
- It is a fight against
- The Flesh
- The World
- The Devil
- It is a necessary fight
- A fight of absolute necessity
- A fight of universal necessity
- A fight of perpetual necessity
- It is a fight against
- True Christianity is the fight of faith
- True Christianity is a good fight
- It has the best of generals
- It has the best of helps
- It has the best of promises
- It has the best of issues and results
- It does good to the soul
- It does good to the world
- It ends in a glorious reward
- Application
- To those who struggle for the fight of the word: Join Christ’s army
- To those who are tried soldiers of Christ, remember:
- to put on the whole armor of God
- to keep from civilian affairs
- to beware of insincere soldiers
- Balaam, Judas, Demas, and Lot’s wife
- the eye of Christ is upon us
- the countless soldiers who have fought before us
- time is short
Discussion
“The true Christian is called to be a soldier, and must behave as such from the day of his conversion to the day of his death. He is not meant to live a life of religious ease, indolence, and security.” How true these words are! And how they clash with the prevailing opinion of our day. We are accustomed to hearing preachers speak of the abundant life and the life of constant blessing and ease. We are accustomed to thinking that ease is the right of the Christian while difficulty is the result of a dead faith. But Ryle, looking to the Bible, tells us otherwise. The Christian life is a battle, from beginning to end, from conversion to consummation.
Many teachers today tell us that Christians must abandon the warfare imagery common in days past. If Jesus were to give us His Word today, they say, He would not use this imagery. It is contextual and a product of a violent Roman society. But I disagree. What better image is there of the Christian life than the constant battle against the flesh, the world and the devil. We cannot dialog and cannot rely on peacekeepers or negotiators. Rather, we must fight. We must battle continually as we seek to live in a way that is consistent with our position as children of God.
This is more than imagery. The fight is a principle, a worldview, a way of understanding life. If we do not understand that life is a battle, we will easily be lulled into complacency. “He who would understand the nature of true holiness must know that the Christian is ‘a man of war.’ If we would be holy we must fight.”
So this is the main point I take away from this week’s chapter. The battle is raging whether I choose to acknowledge it or not. If I see life in this way—in the way the Bible describes—I will be equipped to properly understand the difficulties that attend day-to-day life as a Christian. I will know that my flesh, the world and the devil are fighting against me and I will know that through the power of the Holy Spirit I can and must fight back.
Next Time
We’ll continue the book next Thursday (October 4) with the fifth chapter (“The Cost”). If you’ve committed to join in this reading project, please keep reading and be prepared to discuss it!
Your Turn
I am interested in hearing what you took away from this chapter. Feel free to post comments below or to write about this on your own blog (and then post a comment linking us to your thoughts). Don’t feel that you need to say anything shocking or profound. Just share what stirred your heart or gave you pause or confused you.





Comments (12) »
1. Joshua
September 27, 2007
10:47 AM
Mr. Challies,
What a moving chapter for those who are wavering in their walk thinking that because they battle sin, they may believe that they are not saved. I love that the Bishop admonishes us that as Christians, we will battle and that “there are two rival armies; two rival camps” which live within us.
He closes by saying, “My we never forget that without fighting there can be no holiness while we live, and no crown of glory when we die!”
A test of your faith and a true faith is to remember what the Bishop wrote, “No one ever fights earnestly against the world, the flesh, and the devil, UNLESS he has engraven on his heart certain great principles which he believes.
May I add again how much I have, along with others whom I have suggested the reading, enjoyed this reading. His writing is full, yet not weighty with words so as to loose one who is not a “reader” and is straight to the point. At our church, our pastor preaches very similar to how the Bishop writes - Straight to the point and Simple!
I have been blessed to listen to more from Dr. Beeke on holiness with the following 4 different messages from the last ones I offered.
Pt. 1 The Calling of Holiness
Pt. 2 The Test of Holiness
Pt. 3 The End of Holiness
Pt. 4 Question and Answer
2. John Hollandsworth
September 27, 2007
11:10 AM
What a great chapter.
My comments are on my blog in the post What Are We Fighting For?.
3. Leslie
September 27, 2007
11:28 AM
How different Ryle’s explanation of spiritual warfare is from many Christian’s understanding of it these days! Most of my post today deals with those differences. I think what struck me the most is the fact that those who we consider heroes of the faith died in the midst of their battles, when they’re faith must have been at its greatest. Ryle calls that kind of death a victory. The prevailing idea these days is that if we have great faith, then victory will look like a new house, car, etc, and the absence of trials.
I appreciate Joshua’s reminder that because we are battling sin (constantly) does not mean that we are not saved. It reminded me of Ryle’s writing in previous chapters regarding the false teaching of achieving perfection while we’re on this earth. I guess the moment I decide to give up the fight, take my hand off the plow, is when I need to seriously evaluate whether or not I am in the faith.
Thanks for suggesting this book, Tim.
4. Joe
September 27, 2007
1:41 PM
I’ve read Holiness probably some 7 or 8 times now. This is by far my favorite chapter in the entire book. There are times when my reading load won’t allow me to pause for another time through Ryle’s classic. It is at those times I pick up the book and only read this chapter. It is so good, refreshing, humbling, and challenging.
Thanks Tim, for leading us through.
5. Robert Weir
September 27, 2007
8:26 PM
I start with the end, “May our end be like this! May we never forget that without fighting there can be no holiness while we live, and no crown of glory when we die” Something that has concerened me for some time is that I want to die well, not that I am as far as I know. But in this life time I know all too well how at times I have lived. It is by God’s grace and gift of Christ Jesus and the work of the Holy Spirit, that has brought me thus far.Do not mis-under-
stand me I am so glad to be able to live for Him now.
Many thingsin my life have been leading me to this idea of personal holiness. This book has been a great affirmation as to the availability of holiness, if we but percervere in our pursuit of holiness. It is a curious thing to pursue what is ours already we just do not implement what has been given,
through the work of our Lord. I refer to John 17:20-26.
This is a fair analysis of a christian “He may be known by his inward warfare, as well as by his inward peace.” Praise God for the struggle within! for the evidence it gives or I should say comfort.
Thanks again Tim for the effort. Know this it is well worth it.
6. Jeri
September 28, 2007
12:53 AM
It was a great chapter. God is using this book in my life. Thanks, Tim—can’t wait for Owen!
7. Matt
September 28, 2007
10:30 AM
Could it be…we have abandoned a warfare worldview? Who sold us that crock of sanctimonious puff-and-fluff? Onward Christian soldiers, marching as to war? You’ve got to be kidding me. We gave up that hymn not so much for reasons of musical fashion but because we felt ridiculous singing it, as you do when asked to sing “Happy Birthday” in a restaurant to a perfect stranger. We don’t sing it ‘cause it ain’t true. We have acquiesced. We have surrendered without a fight. We’ve exchanged that great hymn for a subtle but telling substitute, a song that is currently being taught to thousands of children in Sunday school each week, which goes something like this (sung in a very happy, upbeat tune):
I may never march I the infantry
ride in the cavalry
shoot the artillery,
I may never fly over the enemy
but I’m in the Lord’s army, yes sir!
Sounds like Ryle. Actually it’s:
John Eldredge. Yes, John Eldredge! Not going to get a lot of shout outs on this blog I’m sure, but he wrote this. Thought of this quote the entire time I read this chapter. He, along with Ryle, is right…
8. donsands
September 29, 2007
6:49 PM
Faith Fight. It’s a difficult concept, but it’s what we are called to, so we need to understand how to fight by faith.
The fighting goes along with the walking, and living.
Good post, and good comments. (Except for hearing John Eldredge’s name.) Just, sort of kidding.
“A special faith in our Lord Jesus Christ’s person, work and office, is the life, heart and mainspring of the Christian soldier’s character.” -Ryle
9. Ken
September 29, 2007
10:25 PM
Tim Challies wrote: “Many teachers today tell us that Christians must abandon the warfare imagery common in days past. If Jesus were to give us His Word today, they say, He would not use this imagery. It is contextual and a product of a violent Roman society.”
Ironic! After all, war hasn’t exactly ceased in our day. Although I guess the difference is that a whole lot of people are embarrassed of it… and embarrassed of warfare (and warfare terminology) in the Bible, too.
Looking forward to the next chapter.
Ken
10. Carol Blair
September 30, 2007
10:31 PM
Along with “Onward Christian Soldiers,” another spiritual warfare hymn that has been lost to the Church is “Soldiers of Christ, Arise,” by Charles Wesley. This hymn is a poetic exposition of Ephesians 6:10-18—the passage on the Christian’s armor. The hymnals that still publish it include only 3 verses, but the original had 16 verses—every one of them saturated with Scripture. Here is the first verse:
Soldiers of Christ, arise, and put your armour on,
Strong in the strength which God supplies through His eternal Son;
Strong in the Lord of Hosts, and in His mighty power,
Who in the strength of Jesus trusts is more than conqueror.
The hymn is sung to the same tune as “Crown Him with Many Crowns.”
Carol Blair
Longview, TX
11. Caroline
October 1, 2007
10:18 AM
I continue to be amazed at just how relevant Ryle’s writing is today. How true still that the “saddest symptom about many so-called Christians is the utter absence of anything like conflict and fight in their Christianity”. The battle is most certainly real, and yet so often played down, watered down, filtered out to promote a more politically correct version of Christianity. If we deny the battle aspect of Christianity, we are denying a fundamental attribute of God.
Like Matt (comment #7) I also was reminded of John Eldredge’s words… so I thought I’d risk posting some more of them :)
I don’t fully understand the modern church’s amnesia-plus-aversion regarding one of the most central qualities of God understood for centuries before us:
The LORD is a warrior; the LORD is his name. (Ex. 15:3 NIV)
The LORD will march out like a mighty man, like a warrior he will stir up his zeal; with a shout he will raise the battle cry and will triumph over his enemies. (Isa. 42:13 NIV)
But the LORD is with me like a mighty warrior; so my persecutors will stumble and not prevail. (Jer. 20:11 NIV)
Who is this King of glory? The LORD strong and mighty, the LORD mighty in battle. (Ps. 24:8 NIV)
Our God is a warrior, mighty and terrible in battle, and he leads armies. It is this God that man is made in the image of.
(John Eldredge - The Way of the Wild Heart)
12. cat
October 8, 2007
7:50 AM
A new hymn which calls for us as a church to respond in good faith to the fight that Christ calls us to.
O church, arise and put your armor on;
Hear the call of Christ our captain;
For now the weak can say that they are strong
In the strength that God has given.
With shield of faith and belt of truth
We’ll stand against the devil’s lies;
An army bold whose battle cry is “Love!”
Reaching out to those in darkness.
Our call to war, to love the captive soul,
But to rage against the captor;
And with the sword that makes the wounded whole
We will fight with faith and valor.
When faced with trials on ev’ry side,
We know the outcome is secure,
And Christ will have the prize for which He died—
An inheritance of nations.
Come, see the cross where love and mercy meet,
As the Son of God is stricken;
Then see His foes lie crushed beneath His feet,
For the Conqueror has risen!
And as the stone is rolled away,
And Christ emerges from the grave,
This vict’ry march continues till the day
Ev’ry eye and heart shall see Him.
So Spirit, come, put strength in ev’ry stride,
Give grace for ev’ry hurdle,
That we may run with faith to win the prize
Of a servant good and faithful.
As saints of old still line the way,
Retelling triumphs of His grace,
We hear their calls and hunger for the day
When, with Christ, we stand in glory.
“O Church, Arise”
Words and Music by Keith Getty & Stuart Townend
Copyright © 2005 Thankyou Music