poptown;9884228]Hey John,
Pop,Thank you for replying, but I am afraid you didn’t understand what I said. So I will try to make my explanation short this time.
It isn’t what you say about the Catholic Church that concerns, but instead what you’ve said about Lutheranism. If what you say about the CC is faulty, I will let a Catholic respond, as I have no place to do so.
And Lutherans would say we have the free will to reject grace, once received.First, you misunderstood my word when you claim that I said that Catholics believe men are saved without grace. But take a look at what I wrote: I said Catholics believe that we have freedom and are “able to choose God when God put his grace in front of us and let us choose”. My quotes from Catechism also says man has free response to God’s grace. So you misunderstood what I said.
Again, I’ll let Catholics agree or dispute this. Lutherans believe grace and faith are a free gift.Second, Catholics believe that, though we need God’s grace to initiate the process, faith is not received by grace alone, since it involves human’s free response: acceptance or denial.
Again, Catholics can respond. To be honest,and thanks be to God that my parents had faith, I was presented for Baptism a month and a day after my birth. It is at this time that I received the Holy Spirit. If you wish to say that this was against my free will, that’s fine. Free will gives us the freedom to reject grace.Third, as you should see, for Catholics, even Baptism is done by our free will. In other words, God presents his saving grace as he gives us an invitation to His Holy Baptism, and some of us freely choose to obey God and get Baptized.
this isn’t what the confessions say in the bolded, at least not the way you phrase it. I’ve never thought of grace as being "placed before us to reject or accept. In fact, even the term accept is questionable in my view. We are capable of receiving grace through faith, and capable of rejecting it once received.But since Luther believes in Total Depravity, Luther claims that man, whose will is already fundamentally evil and corrupted,** cannot say anything but “no” to God even if God put his grace in front of him**;
When I gave my granddaughter a gift some months back, when she was 6 months, she was incapable of accepting it, but she did receive it. As she grows, she can choose to reject it.
Well again, you seem to have a problem with the order here. The practice of infant baptism is doctrinal in Lutheranism. as I said, I was Baptized a month and a day after my birth. This reception of the Holy Spirit, a gift of grace, is the beginning of faith, and regeneration and forgiveness of sins.instead, God has to completely change his will in order to let him say “yes” to God’s grace, and then comes faith and Baptism and everything.
I see, but I think you are confusing what we believe with other protestant communnions.Do you see what I am saying? I hope so. If not, feel free to reply back to me.
Some selections from Formula of Concord that proves Luther’s belief in Total Depravity:
“For this reason the human being who is not reborn resists God completely and is totally the slave of sin.”
“we believe, teach, and confess that original sin is not a slight corruption of human nature, but rather a corruption so deep that there is nothing sound or uncorrupted left in the human body or soul, in its internal or external powers.”
You don’t have to convince me that we believe in “total depravity”. We do. So, we recognize that justification is, as the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification says, the work of the Triune God. We are, indeed slaves to sin, death and the devil. But thanks be to God for His grace that regenerates us in Baptism, and by hearing His word.
Jon