J
jamil_joseph02
Guest
PART 1
I recently talked to a Protestant, who puts “justification by faith alone” this way: that in order for you to become justified from unjustified at the beginning of your Christian life, all you need is faith in Jesus Christ.
She gave an analogy, let’s say you’re the only one in a room. We need not argue about whether we have to say “it’s just you alone” because obviously there’s no one else but you. Similarly, we need not argue about “faith alone” if obviously it’s just faith that you did when you initially came to God and were justified.
Catholic apologist Jimmy Akin also understands this Protestant position:
I recently talked to a Protestant, who puts “justification by faith alone” this way: that in order for you to become justified from unjustified at the beginning of your Christian life, all you need is faith in Jesus Christ.
She gave an analogy, let’s say you’re the only one in a room. We need not argue about whether we have to say “it’s just you alone” because obviously there’s no one else but you. Similarly, we need not argue about “faith alone” if obviously it’s just faith that you did when you initially came to God and were justified.
Catholic apologist Jimmy Akin also understands this Protestant position:
https://www.catholic.com/ma…/print-edition/faith-and-works-0When Protestants use the phrase “faith alone,” they are describing how we are justified. The idea is that in order to come to God, be forgiven, and be declared righteous, you don’t need to do anything to earn your place before God except have faith in Jesus Christ. [END QUOTE]
Personally, I find this definition of “faith alone” to be agreeable to some extent (specially in the case of adults or those who are already at the age of reason).
A Catholic Answers article read:
"https://www.catholic.com/…/pr…/arent-we-saved-by-faith-aloneWe don’t disagree about the primary role that faith plays. Following Paul, the Catholic Church teaches that justification comes by faith. Only it says that it doesn’t come through faith alone. If you look carefully at Paul’s writings, you will notice that he never says that our righteousness comes from faith alone—only that it comes from faith apart from works.
Catholic Answers may say that “it doesn’t come through faith alone,” but again, should we not say “faith alone” if there is nothing else that a person did to receive his justification?
In “countering” James 2:24, she said James is not talking about “not by faith alone” in the sense of the beginning of Christian life, but when you are already taking your journey as a Christian. If “by faith alone” one means you don’t need good works that flow from grace for your present and future salvation, then she admits she also has to reject this formulation of “by faith alone.”