Fidelis:
If there are many Catholics who “have faith in their own ability to cooperate sufficiently with God to attain salvation” then they are poorly taught in their own Faith.
But it is still taught by Rome that salvation is finally attained through a cooperative, obedient effort on the part of a Catholic and not simply “
through faith” in the efficacy of Christ’s work on the cross alone. Your argument that works done by the faithful Catholic in this lifetime are the result of the empowerment of God is immaterial. God doesn’t save anyone based on those works (even if they were His through you). He saves based on Christ’s redemptive work on the cross only. Christ and His sacrificial (
substitutionary) work on the cross is the object of salvation faith. The cross was the message the Apostles took to the world:1 Cor 1:23 “but we preach Christ crucified, to Jews a stumbling block and to Gentiles foolishness, but to those who are the called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ (
i.e., His crucifixion) the power of God and the wisdom of God.”
1 Cor 2:2 "For I determined to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and Him crucified."The saved (aka “
the righteous”) are to walk/live by faith (Rom. 1:17; 2 Cor. 5:21), but it’s not the “
walk” that
saves,
saved, or ever
will save them. Whether God empowers them to perform good works or not is not the issue of salvation. God saves based on one Man’s work, and His work alone. And that work He “
finished” two thousand years ago. We benefit eternally from His work through faith in Him. God Himself
saves (an all inclusive word for:
justification,
sanctification,
redemption,
regeneration,
glorification, etc., etc.) the sinner when he turns from unbelief to belief in the Son and His sacrificial work on his behalf. In regards to faith, Christ crucified was the Apostolic message.
When God saves, He is able to save completely because the cross released Him from any and all restrictions which sin had imposed (Jn. 1:29). Salvation is a faith issue, not a sin issue. It was the message of the cross that Christ commissioned His Apostles to take to the world and to be believed for salvation:Acts 10:43 “Of Him all the prophets bear witness that through His name everyone who
believes in Him receives forgiveness of sins.”
Acts 13:38 “Therefore let it be known to you, brethren, that through Him forgiveness of sins is proclaimed to you,”
Acts 26:18 “to open their eyes so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the dominion of Satan to God (this is what it means to “repent”), that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among those who have been sanctified
by faith in Me.’”
Let me repeat it again in a futile hope of it sinking in: We are saved by grace through faith, and faith includes obedience.
Repeat it again and again, but salvation faith is personal belief in Christ’s obedience, even His death on a cross on your behalf (Phil. 2:8).
But none of this makes sense to you because Catholic theologians and apologists have surgically removed the
substitutionary value of the cross of Christ, ergo, the only way salvation can be made personal for you is by adding meritorious works and rendering salvation the end product of a
cooperative life effort between God and you (I wish I had a dollar for every time I heard a Catholics say, “Christ did His part now I must do mine”). But no matter what kind of spin you put on it (e.g., God gives us the graces to do the works), you’re presenting a salvation based on personal merit rather than the sole work Christ Himself
finished two thousand years ago.
I wonder if there were those in Galatia who responded to Paul by saying that they believed God provides them with the “
graces” to endure the pain of circumcision. Because they believed enduring the pain of circumcision increased their “initial” justificaition. And through circumcision they partake of His suffering. In other words, they rathionalized that they weren’t being circumcised according to “the Law” (because we all know that no one is justified by works of law) but according to God’s “graces.” However, no matter what kind of spin they could put on it, it’s still “another gospel.”