P
pablope
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This journal contrasts the Protestant and Catholic understanding, and I think would be of great benefit to youā¦chnetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/salvation.pdfThe definition of salvation seems to be the same among all protestants - Jesus died on the cross for our sins, we repent, we are forgiven.
Thank you for explaining and sharing the link!Iāve been attending the Catholic Church for some time and now Iām trying to understand the beliefs and discern everything. I just want to follow the truth and Godās word but sometimes itās difficult to work through everything. I know that God will guide me, though. It just might take some time to figure everything out.
I like the article by Dr. William Marshner, here is an excerpt:
Stages of Justification
Catholic and Protestant views on the respective roles of grace, faith and works cannot be compared meaningfully, unless one specifies what stage of the justificational process one is talking about. In the preparatory stage, for instance, in which prevenient graces first stir a person towards an interest in religious truth, towards repentance, and towards faith, Catholics, Lutherans and Calvinists are at one in saying āsola gratia.ā2 A second stage is the very transition from death to life, which is the first stage of justification proper. Here the parties are at one in saying āsola fide,ā though they seem to mean different things by it. Protestants tend to mean that, at this stage, by the grace of God, manās act of faith is the sole act required of him; Catholics mean that faith is the beginning, foundation and root of all justification, since only faith makes possible the acts of hope and charity (i.e. love-for-God) which are also required.3 However, since most Protestants have a broad notion of the act of faith, whereby it includes elements of hope and love, it is often hard to tell how far the difference on this point is real and how far it is a matter of words. Finally, however, there comes a third stage, that of actual Christian life, with its problems of growth and perseverance. The man justified by faith is called to āwalkā with God, to progress in holiness. It is at this stage that the parties sharply diverge. Catholics affirm, and Protestants strenuously deny, that the born-again Christianās good works merit for him the increase of grace and of the Christian virtues. As a result, Protestant piety has no obvious place for the self- sacrifices, fasts, and states of perfection which are prominent features of Catholic piety. At each stage, neither the apparent agreements nor the apparent disagreements can be understood without looking at certain metaphysical quarrels, the chief of which is over the very existence of what
Catholics call āgrace.ā