M
mercygate
Guest
When Mother Teresa was alive – or Pope John Paul II – Catholics generally pointed to them as living saints. No problem there with your friend’s pointing to Paul on the matter.Another great quote from this Born Again…
*"I am a saint right now. Anyone of God’s born-again righteous living children are saints. If we read over the scriptures we will see that PAUL is writing in many places, Peter and John and others also write. They (living men ) refer to the saints as those people who are currently living righteous lives before a sinful world. *
*The catholic church uses the term saints to mean those people who have died and then been canonized because of particularly good lives or accomplishments–whatever --thus according them special status or powers or an inside line to God. And the definition has been promoted so firmly that most people don’t know the original meaning of the word as it was used by NT Christianas. *
Fine, but I am not waiting to be canonized, because Paul and Peter and others already call me a saint because of the work of Christ’s blood in my live. I already have special powers and an inside line to the throne of God. I received it all when I repented of my sins and was born again. I didn’t take it. I’m not bragging about it. No one assigned it to me. I’m simply stating a fact."
Your friend doesn’t understand the difference between BEING a saint and being** recognized** in a way that allows public celebration of the fact via an act of the infallible teaching office of the Church. For example, someone might appear to be a saint to all who know him, and might believe in his heart of hearts that he is “saved,” but be harboring a fatal moral flaw, perhaps invisible even to himself, that will keep him out of heaven when he comes to be judged. Now, your friend will not allow that, of course, but that is a problem with the subjectivist view of salvation.
Catholics view salvation (as differentiated from redemption or justification) as a lifelong process; certain fundamentalists, who insist on the dubious teaching of “eternal security,” think salvation happens once and you’re good to go forever. The flaw in that emerges when a “saved” person takes a serious dive into sin. The only explanation is that the person wasn’t really saved in the first place. So much for eternal security.
Too much of the New Testament speaks of running the race and working out our salvation to think of eternal security as anything other than a “tradition of men” that makes void the word of God.
Some extremists even believe that eternal security means that you can sin like mad after you’ve been saved and it won’t affect your salvation at all. Others say that the moment you accept Jesus Christ as your personal Lord and Savior, all of your sins, past, present, and future are forgiven.
Where do they GET this stuff? :whacky: Don’t they ever say the Lord’s prayer? Shouldn’t Jesus have told us to pray: “Thank you for forgiving all our trespasses” rather than “Forgive us our trespasses?”