Jude wrote to Christians when he desired to describe their common salvation, but as he did so necessity compelled him to change topics. He ended up writing ‘to them appealing that they contend earnestly for the faith’ (Jude 1:3). Though we do not know the specifics of what caused Jude to write with such urgency, we do know how he intended them to respond to his writing.
Jude wanted his audience to fight for truth.
Examining this short letter gives us great instruction about how to live in a day when, from all around us, people are assaulting true religion. One obvious fact from this letter is that whether or not we contend, the Christian faith is being contended against. Jude wrote that certain people had crept in unnoticed into the church (v. 4)! There people opposed the gospel of grace by their libertinism, rejection of authority, and their self-serving attitude (vv. 4, 8, 10-13). Therefore, they will be destroyed in the final judgment (vv. 5-7). Nevertheless, we are to contend against their false teaching now, as we ground ourselves firmly in the biblical gospel (vv. 20-21). We must stand firm in the truth in order to oppose these errors. This is how we contend.
Second, we must contend earnestly. The Greek verb has an intensive preposition as a prefix in order to communicate the fervent nature of our contention. This is no game. This is not the kind of fair-weather fight from which we may take off vacations and holidays. In this life, there is no retirement from this fight. Rather, we must train and agonize over these things. We are called to defend nothing less than the doctrine of salvation, the grace of God and the reality of the Lordship of Jesus Christ, which these false teachers deny (v. 4). This requires training and discipline as we search the Scriptures for ourselves and as we teach others. We must firmly stand against error!
Finally, we must contend earnestly for the historic Christian faith. Jude does not say that we just fight for the sake of religion generally, nor even for faith as a principle divorced from truth, but that we contend for “the faith which was once for all handed down to the saints” (v. 3). This is the expression of Christianity as it is given in the Holy Scriptures—it has only been handed down once for all. This means that we are not bound to the actions and teaching of the early church in the following centuries, however helpful that teaching may be. We ground ourselves on the historic Christian faith, recognizing that in the apostles and their close associates we have the authorized spokesmen of God.
When we fight for the gospel, then, let us contend zealously and with great diligence for the historic faith of the Bible. Our warfare will be pursued in earnest in this life—but that is not our end. We look forward to the great day when we will stand before our Lord, “blameless with great joy” (v. 24). May He grant us success in our defense of the gospel!
--Dean of Admissions