Thanks, Edwin. I think that’d be helpful. I know I’d be interested in discussing primary sources, and Tomster - if you can share where your summary is from, that’d be swell too.
Right. So if we could go canon by canon, that’d be great. “basic outlines” and ‘cliffnotes’ just omit too much necessary info. Can you reference Trent for us on the points below?
Can you explain what you mean here? If God created everything and it was “good,” then this doesn’t sound off at all.
I’m not sure Original Sin is merely the loss of original justice (though I need that term defined before I can discuss it). But yes, Man is incapable of doing good on his own. Lutherans understand the Fall to have made us Totally Depraved.
This is not Lutheran belief. Lutherans understand Man to have free will but,* on our own and apart from the Holy Spirit*, our free will always chooses evil due to our fallen nature. While the distinction can be confusing, be careful not to conflate Lutheran belief with Calvinism.
How are we somehow not responsible for our sins? Romans 6:23 is quite clear about what we deserve for our actions.
Whoa. Surely you mean, “so deeply that ***only ***God can heal him.”
Yes, Christ’s death is what saves us; and this is not of works, that no man may glory (Eph. 2:9). What’s the alternative?That humans can save themselves? Thanks, but my eternal soul is better off in Christ’s hands, not mine.
I’ve never liked the analogy of “covering up” sin as “snow over ****” - I mean, it’s fine for explaining that my works are useless apart from the Holy Spirit, but it doesn’t do justice to the redemptive transformation that the Holy Spirit begins in the regenerate, first in Baptism and continued in Holy Communion and the preaching of the Word. But it is true that as this transformation happens, it is no longer the believer who lives, but Christ who lives in him (Gal. 2-19-21).
There is no such thing as habitual grace apart from the Holy Spirit. Whoever says they have a “power or quality of the soul” and can -on their own- avoid sin deceives himself and the truth is not in him (John 1:8). That’s why we confess our sins. And God, Who is Faithful and Just, forgives our sins because of Christ’s work for us and cleanses us from all unrighteousness.
Even then, this cannot happen without the work of the Holy Spirit and the sacrifice of Christ.
Ummm… what? How do you go from saying that Lutherans depend entirely on God reaching out to them and somehow come to the conclusion that the sacraments are somehow rendered pointless?:whacky: The sacraments have Christ’s command and promise, forgive our sins and have us grow in grace.
Continued…
Lets take a look at #6
Habitual grace is a divine gift infused by God into the soul, as something permanent by its nature. In the strict sense, habitual grace is that infused into the very essence of the soul, and is called sanctifying grace, inasmuch as it confers holiness and makes righteous one who had been a sinner. In a broader sense, habitual grace includes, in addition to sanctifying grace, also the virtues and gifts of the Holy Spirit, which are like the ramification of sanctifying grace and are received in the faculties of the soul.
The Scholastics, starting from the data of revelation, developed an abundant doctrine on habitual grace with the help of the Aristotelian theory about habits. But Luther, opposing this theory on account of nominalistic mentality, rejected the entire traditional doctrine and reduced sanctifying grace to an extrinsic, divine favor or to an extrinsic imputation of Christ’s sanctity to the sinner, who remains in himself intrinsically corrupted and incurable. The Protestants have followed in their master’s footsteps up to our own times, with however a few exceptions.
Baianism conceives grace dynamically, i.e., only as actual, and identifies it with morally good and salutary action, namely: with the observance of divine precepts which according to him, is possible only with grace, integrative element of the creature.
The Church condemned both of these errors (Council of Trent, session VI, canon 11), appealing to revelation (especially St. Paul and St. John), which manifests to us grace as a regeneration, a new life, a divine energy, diffused by the Holy Spirit and INHERENT in the soul. Hence the true theology of sanctifying grace is that grace is a divine quality or entitative habit inherent in the soul, upon which it confers a mode of divine being, a participation of the divine nature, according to St. Peter, adoptive divine filiation (Romans 8:15; Galatians 4:5; John 3:1), and the right of inheritance to eternal life (Romans 8:17).
Tradition, in the East especially, is rich in concepts and developments with respect to sanctifying grace, boldly termed “divinization of man” (Irenaeus, Origen, Cyril of Alexandria).
Sanctifying grace is lost through mortal sin (Council of Trent, see Denzinger # 808), is conserved and increased through good works, done under the influence of God, and by means of the sacraments duly received (Council of Trent, again, Denzinger #s 834 and 849).