I agree, it is definitely the source of heresy and misunderstanding. However, it seems that it would be helpful,** if you are going to dialogue with a Reformed Christian, to understand why they think the way they do. Just repeating your mantra that you don’t see it does not seem very productive.** Obviously millions of people do see it, or it would not be so rampant.
So you think those who have converted and given detailed explanations of why they finally realized the error of reformed theology are not a good enough background to understanding how reformed-theology adherents think?
I would recommend reading Francis Beckwith’s Return to Rome. He goes into quite a lot of detail in the second half of the book into the protestant understanding of justification. A lot more than those that I have read in these forums. And there is a lot of credibility where he is concerned because he was the president of the Evangelical Theological Society.
If it were not believed by the early Church, it would not be in the New Testament.
You are assuming that the NT meant that it was forensic. If it was indeed forensic then the Church Fathers must have been wrong and the Catholic Church must be wrong.
But, perhaps I don’t understand what you mean by “forensic”. When I hear that word, I am thinking of legal matters.
I think Coptic made a differentiation somewhere. But the quote I posted regarding nominalism explained it. It means that justification is a mere declaration that we are just but it does not actually mean that we are indeed just.
As I said in my earlier reply, it would seem like God declared you sinless when in fact nothing has happened, you are left you as vile as you were. Then the sanctification process kicks in to make you indeed sinless. So it was like God says a lie then proceeds to make that lie a truth.
I am sorry, I just am not following your train of thought. I don’t see how the necessity of sanctification in Reformed Theology exists to make sense of some “split”.
The monergism / synergism is what was contrived to make sense of the split.
Sanctification must have come as an afterthought because Luther realized that God could not possibly take you to heaven still full of sin.
If a person is justified and sanctified in baptism, then they have no “process” to complete. They are whole, entire, and ready to enter heaven.
Exactly. Because as far as the Catholic Church is concerned there is no split between justification and sanctification. We don’t say God first declares you just then He proceeds to make you just. God declares you just when you have been made just and not before.
You want me to show you how you are closed minded?
Yes. Based on my post, show me how I am close minded.
Reformed Christians call this “the golden chain of salvation”. They believe that God saves only those He intends to glorify. Therefore, all who are justified are then sanctified, and all that are sanctified are then glorified. One cannot be sanctified until one is first justified, and one cannot be glorified without being both justified and sanctified.
But there is no mentioned of sanctification in that text. It just says justifified then glorified so how do can they possibly support this J-then-S schema.
And if we go with that understanding we’d be as awful as Calvin.
We do not read it that way, because we read it with Catholic faith, so we understand it differently, but they is how they read it.
But that is absolute rubbish. Luther was a Catholic too.
And to say they read it that way, we do it this way is a slip into relativism.
Most Armenian Christians have a much more Catholic understanding of salvation, but they also believe in forensic justification.
If justification is forensic then it cannot be said to be a Catholic understanding.
I am not sure they use the term the same way you do, though. It clearly seems to mean something different to you than it does when St. Paul writes about it in the Scriptures.
So you think that St Paul meant forensic? So you think the Church Fathers and the Catholic Church got Paul wrong?