Why do you ignore the fact that Paul contrasts faith with works in Ephesians 2:8-9?
Faith and works are not opposites of each other; the former is the reason for the latter, the... oh, let's say catalyst... for the latter. We are moved... motivated... compelled to do good works because we are assured ~ by God, of course ~ of our being in Christ and thus saved. It is in this way that our will becomes to do the will of the Father. The faith we are given, the assurance of God, is what moves us to... well, die unto ourselves and live unto God, to love and serve Him. We love because God first loved us. Prior to being born again of the Spirit, of course, not so much.
And I don't mean for this comment to be insulting, but it's ironic that you ask this question at all, because... Well, just look at Ephesians 2:8 alone for a second:
"For by (God's) grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God..."
Paul speaks of absolutely nothing that we did in salvation. Just before this, he does speak of what we did
before salvation ~ that we
"all once lived in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind" ~ but absolutely nothing in
achieving salvation; the silence on that is deafening. He does speak of the
result of salvation, what we
will do in having salvation
given to us and being assured of it, but again
nothing ~ even believing; there is nothing there of us doing anything ~ to
achieve salvation. The fact is that we would have
continued "in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and mind" if we had not been born again of the Spirit and given this faith (assurance).
And when Paul says there,
"this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God," the word
'this' modifies the entire first part of that verse...
"you have been saved through faith." In how you understand that verse, in what you are saying about it, you are separating "faith" back out of that verse completely. Which just cannot be done. I mean, you can, but it's just wrong. Giving us this faith, which again is God's assurance, is an act of God, not of man. Once we are given it, we are then compelled in and of ourselves to
act on it...
because of it.
He said salvation IS through faith but NOT by works.
Right, but by saying, as you did, faith is (our) believing and trusting in Him, you not only turn the very definition of faith (Hebrews 11:1) on it's ear, you make it into something we
do, which is to make it a
work of our own. As I said directly above, you only apply the second half of Ephesians 2:8,
"(a)nd this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God," to the first part of the first half of Ephesians 2:8
"by grace you have been saved," and separate out what comes immediately after that,
"through faith." I get loud and clear that is not your intention, and that being told that even repulses you, but it is what it is.
Clearly, to be consistent with your beliefs, you could not possibly answer the question "what must I do to be saved" the way Paul and Silas did when the jailer asked them that question.
They answer that question, SI, in the same context of what this same Paul says to the Philippians in Philippians 2:13. We can
"make our calling and election sure"... which is that we can
make it outwardly evident to all, even to ourselves
by affirming what is really
already a reality ~ that we have been born again of the Spirit ~ if we do so ~ believe on the Lord Jesus Christ ~ because
"it is God who works in us, both to will and to work for His good pleasure." So, yes, I could and would answer in the very same way as Paul and Silas. We do nothing to "make our salvation happen" or to "push our salvation across the finish line" or to deserve it in any way. It is by God's grace... His
unmerited favor.
Do you credit yourself for all of the gifts you receive?
No offense, but that question misses the point... Making that receiving part of the gift is the issue. I know, I know, you will say you're not doing that, but... <
smile>
Grace and peace to you.