Faith alone or not?

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Can you obey all of the 10 Commandments? If you say you can, then you are less than truthful.This is why we are saved by grace.
I think it is the other way around. We are saved by grace, so that we CAN obey all the commandments! It is possible to follow them by grace, through faith. This is what people in the OT did. As He says “my righteous one shall live by faith”. Those who were able to keep the Law of the Lord did so in this way.
 
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When we become spiritually born-again, which Jesus said we must be, our new faith produces new desires and a new heart. This produces works of love. We do these things because we love God and men. Not in order to merit heaven. That we can never do because our most righteous acts are like filthy rags before God. It is only what Christ did at Calvary, that God approves of and its the righteousness of Christ in us that God sees.
Abraham was declared righteous by God years before he offered up Issac. When he did offer up his son, this was faith in action, not the action that saved him.

Eph. 2:8 is a stumbling block for many.
Just as Eph. 2:10 is a stumbling block for many.

However, your post here makes it clear that you do not understand what Catholics mean when they talk about “merit heaven”. Merit is a worthiness that God instills in us so that we are fit for habitation in His presence. Merit is about doing the deeds that befit repentance. It is not about “earning” grace, salvation, or heaven. It is about doing the works that God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them. We merit because God is at work in us to will and to do His good pleasure.
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 Then your pride is showing and you are not being truthful. Jesus said if we so much as look at a woman  with impure thoughts, we have committed adultery in our hearts already. You have lied, but maybe you call it a fib or harmless white lie. You have stolen something, but maybe you called it borrowing or believe that taking something as small as a pen without asking or returning it is not really stealing.
This is what you have been taught to say, but it is not accurate. It is possible to walk in righteousness, according to God’s commandments,and to avoid sin. In fact, this is how He intends for us to walk. If we fall short, we confess our sins, and He is faithful and just to forgive them. It is not prideful to keep His commandments. It is our duty to Him.
The point is we are sinners, we all have fallen short and the wages of sin is death. If we get to heaven its because of the grace of God and what Christ accomplished at Calvary.
I am glad that your faith tradition has kept this Catholic truth. there are many teachings of the Apostles that have gotten lost when the Reformers departed from the faith. However, the Catholic Church teaches that we are saved by grace, through faith, and not of our own works, lest any man should boast.

You will find this in the New Testament, which is a Catholic book, written by, for, and about Catholics. There is nothing in it that is not Catholic. 😃
 
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No, I am not saying God is disingenuous. You are jumping to conclusions. How about having a real and civil conversation and ask me what I meant? What standard am I using ? God's Law, the 10 Commandments.
I think its a dishonest person who believes he ceases to sin. We sin daily. Maybe you don’t acknowledge it as sin. But thanks be to God that He is faithful to forgive when we confess them.
We cease to sin because His grace is at work in us. God did not create us for sin, but to walke with Him in righeousness. It is not necessary for humans to sin. There are some people who, by grace, through faith, keep the commandments.
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Let me ask you something. Are you holy? Holy in the way God is holy? Do you love others the way God commands? I doubt it. Look at your attitude towards me. And I don't love you the way I should either.
Granted, we are all people in process, but to separate this coming to holiness from salvation is a mistake. They go together. The one God justifies, He sanctifies.
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 Now it is by grace that we are saved..not of works, lest any man should **boast**.
It is not “boasting” to keep the commandments of God. We can only obey them by grace, through faith. This is our worship to Him. We are expected to be perfect and holy. It is not acceptable to say we are saved by grace, without the obligation to obey His commandments.
Yes we are commanded to love one another and strive towards holiness, but it will never be perfected this side of heaven because we still have a sin nature and satan is the god of this world. It won’t be till the Resurrection when we shall receive our glorious bodies, that we will have perfection.
This is what you have been taught to believe, but it is a departure from what the Apostles believed and taught. They taught that salvation is for here and now, as well as for there and then. They taught that we are to be perfect, as our heavenly father is perfect. They taught that we should walk in holiness,a nd obedience, and not be aware of any sins in ourselves at all.
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Yes, works of love are important, but they do not buy us a ticket to heaven. Jesus alone made that possible and offers it to us. Jesus said the kingdom of God is like little children. We are to come to Him with the faith of a child. What do children know about holiness? They have a simple faith and are very trusting. This is what God wants. A humble heart that admits he isn't perfect, stumbles and falls all the time and needs God's grace.
The two are not contradictory, yankee. A person can walk in God’s commandments with a humble heart, that seeks His forgiveness when they fall. But it is not necessary to sin.
Jesus came to save us from our sins.
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Maybe the difference between you and I is that you do "good works" to lessen your time in a place called purgatory, or to earn merit points with God. But Christians do good deeds because at their spiritual rebirth, God gives them a new heart.
We consider such statements insulting, yankee. Basically you are saying that Catholics are not Christians.

However, there is not contradiction between these two positions. Catholics do good works because we are born from above by water and Spirit. Our hearts are circumcised “without hands” by the HS. We have been cleansed in the “bath of regeneration”, and the old man has been put to death, joined with Jesus in His crucifixion and burial.

You may misunderstand purgatory, which is why you make such a statement. There is no “time” in purgatory. It is a state in which those who are saved are cleansed of any remaining stains of sin from this world so that we can enter His presence without spot or blemish. God accomplishes in us the righteousness that He declared toward us when we were born again.

You clearly do not understand the use of the term “merit”. In your bible, it is translated “reward”. You might want to do a word study on this, so you can see how Christians reach the merit (reward). Merit is a gift of God, that we can receive by grace, through faith.
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So how about putting aside your pride and admitting to God you are unable to **DO ALL THAT HE COMMANDED**. God already knows you can't do it. He sent you the Son. So humble yourself before Him and ask Jesus to take over your life and be your Lord and Savior. It will be the best decision you will ever make.
The two are not contradictory, yankee. When we humble ourselves before God, and allow His grace to work in our lives, we are enabled to do all that He commanded
 
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I don't doubt that many catholics do good deeds out of love. I was once catholic and saw many good things in works of charity, etc.
Do you believe these were works of the flesh, or ergos hagios?
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 But I too have an advantage. Its knowing Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior in a very real and personal way.
It sounds like you never learned to do this after you were baptized Catholic.
He alone is the only way to salvation and eternal life. Without His complete redemptive work on the Cross, my own works would be useless, filthy rags before God.
This Catholic teaching also did not seem clear to you at the time. 😉
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   I have direct access to the throne of God thanks to Christ. That was why the temple veil was torn in two, to signal the end of temple worship and the priesthood. Jesus became the only Mediator between man and God.
It is clear that you suffer from a misunderstanding of the Apostolic teaching on priesthood. As in the OT, in the NT there are three levels of priesthood, that of all believers, the ministerial priesthood, and a High Priest. In the NT, which is the fulfillment of the Old, all of these have their identity from God, who alone mediates between God adn man. Even the High Priest in the OT acted on behalf of God and the People, not himself.

It sounds like you have been taught some things that are a departure from what the Apostles believed an taught, such as the ministerial priesthood. This is not uncommon from anti-Catholic sources.
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 He reconciled us to the Father. God must be worshiped in spirit. He does not reside in buildings made with human hands. There is now only one priesthood: The royal priesthood made up of true believers in Jesus Christ. To them was given the power (authority) to be sons of God.
It is very Catholic of you to say this too. There is only one priesthood, that of Jesus. The NT ministerial priests, along with the people of God, are made priestly in, with, and through Him. There is no priesthood apart from Him.
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By being spiritually born-again, which Jesus said we must be or we cannot see the kingdom of God, the holy spirit indwells the new believer and God transform the heart and gives us new desires..the desire to see all men saved.
I venture to guess that you did not see this phenomenon after you were Baptised Catholic. If you had, you might not have felt it necessary to go elsewhere.
 
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The point is God says there's no one righteous. All our most righteous acts are like filthy rags to God.
I think if you will look open mindedly at this scripture, you will see that it is being taken out of context. If you read the Psalm from which it comes, there is a clear comparison there of unrighteous (unbelievers) and righteous (believers). Paul is using that scripture to support his arguement that both Jews and Gentiles can be unrighteous (faithless), and righteous (faithful) and that there are no “benefits” given to Jews just because they are Jews. They are as capable of falling from faith as Gentiles.

Your assertion that there are “none righteous” is not scriptural. This can be proven if just one righteous person can be brought forth. For example, Enoch was taken up to heaven, because he walked with God, as was Elijah. If they were not justified by faith, they could not be righteous. Those who are righteous keep the Law of God perfectly.
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 Trying not to sin is a losing battle.
No, yankee, this is an insidious lie from the pit. God does not command us to do that which is fruitless. The Apostolic teachings are clear that we are to fight against sin with all our might, working out our salvation, because God is at work within us to will and to do His good pleasure.

2 Cor 7:1
7:1 Having therefore these promises, beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all defilement of flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God.

Do you think the Apostle really means that it is possible for us to “cleanse ourselves”? Of course not. We are to do whatever we can to get clean, and stay clean, but we do this by the grace of God.

Eph 4:24

24 and put on the new man, that after God hath been created in righteousness and holiness of truth.

The Apostle here, as in other places, enjoins the believers to take action towar holiness “put on” the new man. The word is similar to that used to “put on” clothing. We do this ourselves, through God’s grace. We are not passive in becoming holy.

Luke 13:24

24 Strive to enter in by the narrow door: for many, I say unto you, shall seek to enter in, and shall not be able.

Why does the Lord instruct us to “strive”? If he was going to do everything, and we ourselves nothing, why strive?

Nothing unclean can enter heaven, so we must become the cleanness that God has declared us to be.
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 God said all have sinned and the wages of sin is death. It doesn't matter how devout one tries to be or goes to church faithfully and participates in all the works of the church, we are sinners who deserve death.
Sorry, Yankee, but maybe you should read some of Moondwellers’s posts. He will emphazise for you that once we are in Christ, we are a new creation. the old has passed away. We are no longer sinners, but saints. We have been transferred from the kingdom of darkness into the kingdom of light. Those who are in Christ have been adopted, grafted into Him, the chief cornerstone. For such persons, spiritual devotions have great power in their effects.
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 Unless one recognizes that he cannot please God through human merits he is kidding himself. If we don't acknowledge that we are lost sinners who can do nothing to save ourselves and confess that Christ alone saves and there's no other way to God the father and salvation, then we are denying the full redemptive work of Christ at Calvary.
This is what the Catholic Church believes and teaches, yankee. Apparently you did not get the message, which is regrettable. However, the fact that you did not “get it”, does not change the facts. What you have written here is Catholic.
At the moment we turn to Christ and trust Him alone for our salvation that’s when our sins are forgiven and we have the righteousness of Christ in us.
The Apostles taught that we are put in right relationship with God in baptism, when we are joined with Him in his suffering and death.
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 So by saying you're a faithful and devout churchgoer doesn't save.
I think you are missing the point, yankee. The person is faithful and devout BECAUSE they are saved. They participate in these spiritual devotions as an outgrowth of SAVING FAITH. No, it is not devotion that saves, though it has saving effects. Everyone is saved by grace, through faith.
The catholic goes to a human mediator to seek forgiveness, but you have been told many times and God’s word confirms this: That Christ alone is the Mediator between God and men.
Here is another statement that reflects your lack of understanding about Catholicism. You are not alone by any means. There are hundreds of thousands of poorly catechized
Catholics. I hope that, by coming to CAF, you can have these misperceptions fixed.

The Catholic does NOT go to a “human mediator” to seek forgiveness. There is no forgiveness apart from Christ, and the shedding of His blood. The priest acts in the person of Christ, who alone was worthy to purchase our redemtpion by His blood (mediate). When scripture says “confess your sins to one another, that you may be healed” it means to confess to the one who is acting in the person of Christ. This is done through the Apostolic Succession. That is the way Jesus set things up.
 
MD and Yankee - you need to face the harsh reality that the Reformers invented a new theology in an attempt to usurp the AUTHORITY of the Church
This is true. However, they did not believe they were inventing. They believed they were getting “back to the basics”. What they really wanted was a more pure church. They did not realize that, although men are always in need of Reform, the doctrine of Jesus is not.
so they could then teach you whatever they wanted and secularize the faith into a new “Christianity Lite” - essentially an easy Christianity that would be wildly popular with the populace. A sort of “eat, drink, be merry for tomorrow we die - but so what because now we are saved!”. :rolleyes:
I dont’ think this is a fair or accurate assessment of the Reformers, nor of MD and Yankee. None of them were looking for Christianity “lite”. This modern American Fundamentalist notion is only about 200 years old, and does not characterize the original Reformers, who were all very staunch about holiness and right living.
It’s SNAKE OIL and you know it in your hearts.
Yes, MD and Yankee agree with us on this point. It is expected that we will bear the fruits that befit repentance. They just see salvation differently than we do.
Since you consciously reject the Church that Christ founded and its teachings (the Catholic Church) this verse PROVES that your faith is first a faith in the reformers (or your own wild personal opinions) before it is a faith in Christ; and therefor it is NOT a saving faith since it DENIES CHRISTby DENIYING His Authority vested in His apostolic successors!
I don’t think this can be true, since neither of them recognize that the CC is the one founded by Christ, nor do they recognize the authority He gave to the Church. They also both suffer from a deficient notion of the nature of Church.
 
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The Holy Bible says there are none who are righteous. No, not one. This isn't man speaking, but God in His Word. So it can't be debatable.
Yes, the Bible says this, along with it saying that there are righteous people, some who obey the law perfectly. What is debatable here is your perception of what scripture means when it says there are none righteous. Since you have taken the passage out of context, and ignored other scriptures related to the same topic, it is quite clear that it is you speaking this opinion about Scripture, not God. 😃
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 Abraham lied and married his wife's half-sister. David was a fornicator and a murderer, Job accuses God of being unfair, Moses frequently lost his temper, and all the other biblical men were no better. It was not their conduct that pleased God but the very fact that they believed in God. They strove for righteousness but couldn't do it. They were sinners same as you and I.
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No, Yankee, they were the people of God, called to be holy, sanctified by His grace. If you wish to conceive of yourself as a sinner, and believe you cannot overcome sin by the power of God within you, that is your perogative. But you will not succeed in making us believe that holiness can’t be reached, or that we have to settle for falling into sin. that is not how these men lived their lives, and that is not how God wants us to live.
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Striving to be be righteous is a noble thing but we can never achieve it on our own. We must have the righteousness of Christ in us. That can only happen when we humble ourselves and fully confess that we are sinners who deserve death and only the blood of Christ and His complete atonement can save us and make us right with God.
I dont think anyone on this thread (except you) thinks that Catholics strive for righteousness “on our own”. For Catholics, it is God who is at work in us to will and to do His good pleasure. When we walk according to the Spirit, and not the flesh, we walk in righteousness.
 
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 The Bible says there's no one righteous.
Yes, Yankee, it does. The Bible says a lot of things. Here is one:

1 Tim 2:14-15

14 and Adam was not beguiled, but the woman being beguiled hath fallen into transgression:

15 but she shall be saved through her child-bearing, if they continue in faith and love and sanctification with sobriety.

The question is, how do we INTERPRET what is what we read. Does this passage mean that a woman can only be saved through bearing children?

Does it mean that a woman who is not engaged in child bearing cannot be saved?

We are in agreement with what the Scripture says. We are not in agreement with your misunderstanding of what it says.

If only one “righteous” person can be documented then your errant soteriology falls like the house of cards that it is. Some examples were given to you of several figures that walked in righteousness before God, and you wanted to find sins they committed as “proof” that they did not walk right with God. Try these:

Luke 1:5-6

5 There was in the days of Herod, king of Judaea, a certain priest named Zacharias, of the course of Abijah: and he had a wife of the daughters of Aaron, and her name was Elisabeth.

6 And they were both righteous before God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless.
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 In other words we all sin. Even Job. Job was considered upright because he feared God and lived a godly life. He placed his trust in God. The same way we must have faith in Jesus Christ and trust Him for our eternal salavtion.. But do you really believe Job was sinless?
Walking in righteousness does not mean that a person never falls short. It means that, when they fall short, they use the means God has provided to make atonement. For example, in our righteous couple above, it is possible that one of them fell short, but if they did they would use the method of atonement provided in the Law of Moses. This is what all the saints have done.
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  The Bible says only Christ was sinless.
Actually, it does not say that. On the contrary, it says that nothing unclean can enter heaven, so all the humans that were taken up to heaven would have to be without sin.
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   Men were called righteous because they believed on God, not because there's any righteousness in them.
The two are not separated, Yankee. When one believes in God for their righteousness, He works that righteousness into their being.

**Ezek 36:26-27

26 A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you; and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart of flesh.

27 And I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep mine ordinances, and do them.
**

It is His Spirit within us that has cleansed and regenerated us that enables us to walk according to His commandments.
I am not judging when I say that all men sin. We all lie and have impure thoughts, etc. God showed us in the Scriptures, men like you and me, all needing salvation.
NO, Yankee, we don’t. The rest of us think it is a sin to lie, and have impure thoughts, so we have renounced such behaviors as incompatible with the Christian life. Yes, we are all in need of salvation, and that salvation is intended to save us right here, right now. We are to be dead to our sins, and not still live in them.
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No we don't need to stay in a state of grace to ensure entrance to heaven. We live in a time of grace, thanks to Christ's once-for all perfect sacrifice. Grace is God's unmerited favor to those who believe on His Son and place their complete faith and trust in Christ alone to get to heaven.
You have been given misinformation, Yankee. God’s grace has been shed abroad, yes, but not all will benefit from it. Those that try to get into the wedding banquet without the proper garment will be thrown out!
Why are you trusting your church attendance and church rituals? When did God ask this of you? When Did Jesus teach it? What Christ taught was: You must be born again.
We do not forsake the assembling of ourselves together, as is the habit of some. I am not sure what you mean by “church rituals”. However, the initiation into Christian life is Baptism. God asked this of us when He gave this instruction to His Apostles. Jesus taught it on many occasions using many different methods. We are born again by water and spirit when we enter the bath of regeneration. We keep the flame of faith alive by celebrating the Lord’s Supper, which He commanded that we do as an anamnesis of Him. This table is only open to those who have been born again and confessed their sins as He instructed.

If you think that the life of God needs to be separated somehow from ritual, I would encourage you to read again the book of Leviticus. You will find few places anywhere in the world where so much ritual has been proscribed for man to follow than He gave to His beloved people.
What God says it never debatable. God’s Word’s says it is by grace we are saved and **not **of works. Either we believe this or we don’t.
It is very Catholic of you to say this! I think for some reason you don’t realize that this verse was written by a Catholic, to Catholics. It is a Catholic teaching. 😃
And no I am not “almost there.” I am there already because I am trusting Christ alone and you are trusting your own good deeds.
You still seem to be suffering from a lack of understanding of ergos hagios.

Good deeds cannot exist outside of saving grace. They can only be done by the saved!
 
But I do have God’s grace. I have assurance of eternal salvation. Something the catholic does not have. But the Bible says believers can have assurance. The apostles had assurance. Why don’t you?
Phil 3:10-15

10 that I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, becoming conformed unto his death;

11 if by any means I may attain unto the resurrection from the dead.

12 Not that I have already obtained, or am already made perfect: but I press on, if so be that I may lay hold on that for which also I was laid hold on by Christ Jesus.

13 Brethren, I could not myself yet to have laid hold: but one thing (I do), forgetting the things which are behind, and stretching forward to the things which are before.

14 I press on toward the goal unto the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.

15 Let us therefore, as many as are perfect, be thus minded: and if in anything ye are otherwise minded, this also shall God reveal unto you:

Catholics have the same kind of assurance that theApostles taught, which is that we do not obtain salvation in this life, but we hope for it, and press on toward it.

If the apostle thought his salvation was a “done deal”,then why would he say he had not already obtained it, or “if my any means I may obtain”?

I think your modern innovations are getting read back into the text, and blind you to passages such as this.
 
If James taught its Christ PLUS works, then you are saying he contradicts Paul’s teaching. .
You only think that because when you saw this:

[BIBLEDRB]Romans 3:20-28[/BIBLEDRB]

You failed to turn the page back. Had you done so you would have seen what Paul made very clear before turning to “works of the law…”

[BIBLEDRB]Romans 2:1-11[/BIBLEDRB]

So, Paul clearly does not teach salvation by faith alone. Those who are righteous, Jew or Gentile, have eternal life; those who do iniquity do not. He does teach that the works of the Old Testament law don’t save. Works under New Testament grace are a different matter.
 
You only think that because when you saw this:

[BIBLEDRB]Romans 3:20-28[/BIBLEDRB]

You failed to turn the page back. Had you done so you would have seen what Paul made very clear before turning to “works of the law…”

[BIBLEDRB]Romans 2:1-11[/BIBLEDRB]

So, Paul clearly does not teach salvation by faith alone. Those who are righteous, Jew or Gentile, have eternal life; those who do iniquity do not. He does teach that the works of the Old Testament law don’t save. Works under New Testament grace are a different matter.
I think that yankee also forgot Matthew 25:31-47…
 
I think that yankee also forgot Matthew 25:31-47…
Indeed, but Yankee’s premise is that Paul (not His Master) taught faith alone. The whole faith-alone theology is premised on Paul teaching faith alone which is premised on burning the first two chapters of Romans in addition to all of Paul’s other epistles.
 
Indeed, but Yankee’s premise is that Paul (not His Master) taught faith alone. The whole faith-alone theology is premised on Paul teaching faith alone which is premised on burning the first two chapters of Romans in addition to all of Paul’s other epistles.
I think the problem with Reading Paul’s epistles outside of the rest of the rest of the Bible and Catholic traditions, is that people misunderstand his point about the Mosaic law. Paul is VERY focused on the reality that Jesus put forth a new covenant, with a different covenant relationship , that replaced the Old Covenant.

The Old Covenant was focused in many ways on preparing the Jewish race to recieve the Messiah. As such, it was setting the Jews apart from the others to be a Holy Race. They were marked by the sign of the covenant (circumcision), they were given a set of purification rituals (which included dietary laws) and they were required to sacrifice their goods (both to feed their priests, who managed all this, and to gain in personal holiness).

The New Covenant, however, had a totally different focus, since the Messiah (Jesus) had come. No longer was it focused on making one Race holy, but it was open to all. The marking of the covenant was elevated to the spiritual (Baptism) rather than the physical (circumcision). The purification rituals shifted to purifying the soul (reconciliation) rather than the body (dietary laws). Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross ended the need to sacrifice burnt offerings.

When St. Paul insisted that Works of the law COULD NOT save us, he was talking about the Old Covenant laws (circumcision, purification, and , animal sacrifice) which simply never applied to the Gentiles he was ministering to (since they weren’t the chosen Race that needed to be set apart) and also no longer applied to the Jews, since the Messiah had come. He was pointing instead to the new covenant, with its grace giving sacraments, that COULD save us.

That Paul was not talking about the elimination of the MORAL laws is quite evident in all of his epistles, since he spends considerable time defining how to act uprightly in each one, giving advice on both the attitudes and actions that lead to heaven and hell. In fact, he is the source of many of the lists we recognize as he 7 deadly sins and the gifts of the Holy Spirit. Fittingly, he is the most explicit about the continual validity of MORAL works in Romans, which is also the Epistle in which he is most explicit about the differences between the Old and New covenants. Indeed, he begins Romans by telling us that we will be judged based on our actions. (Romans 2: 1-10, which has been quoted several times in the last few posts by myself and others). He then spends time discussing the point that all men know the MORAL laws innately through conscience, whether they have been exposed to the 10 commandments or not. He says this NATURAL LAW means that no one has an excuse before God for his sins, whether Gentile or Jew. Once he firmly establishes that the Moral laws remain in effect for all men, he then focusses on the fact that the Old Covenant laws are no longer in effect, having been replaced by the New covenant.

Those that have been decieved by the “reformed view” fail to read the bible or even Romans as a whole and erroneously believe that the New covenant eliminated the need to follow the MORAL Laws. They ignore the fact that Jesus taught extensively about morals and said explicily that you need to follow the Commandments to enter heaven (Matthew 19) when they say that Faith alone is all that is required . They ignore or try to redefine James 2, which says explicitly that Faith without works is dead, and imagine that they are not one of the ignoramouses that he condemns for thinking otherwise. They even ignore the teaching of St. Paul in 1Corinthians 13, when he says " if you have faith enough to move mountains but do not have love, you are nothing." If they don’t believe our Lord or the Apostles, what more can be done for them?
 
Indeed, but Yankee’s premise is that Paul (not His Master) taught faith alone. The whole faith-alone theology is premised on Paul teaching faith alone which is premised on burning the first two chapters of Romans in addition to all of Paul’s other epistles.
And burinng Paul’s lifestyle, and his identity as a Catholic.
Those that have been decieved by the “reformed view” fail to read the bible or even Romans as a whole and erroneously believe that the New covenant eliminated the need to follow the MORAL Laws. They ignore the fact that Jesus taught extensively about morals and said explicily that you need to follow the Commandments to enter heaven (Matthew 19) when they say that Faith alone is all that is required . They ignore or try to redefine James 2, which says explicitly that Faith without works is dead, and imagine that they are not one of the ignoramouses that he condemns for thinking otherwise. They even ignore the teaching of St. Paul in 1Corinthians 13, when he says " if you have faith enough to move mountains but do not have love, you are nothing." If they don’t believe our Lord or the Apostles, what more can be done for them?
And curiously, this is a position that was not held by any of the original Reformers, all of who believed that moral conduct is essential for the Christian. It is interesting to see how theology continues to evolve when it is separated from the Church founded by Christ.
 
Romans 11:6: But if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works, otherwise grace is no longer grace."

Romans 4:6: " Just as David also speaks of the blessing upon man to whom God reckons righteousness apart from works."

Romans 3:28: "For we mention that a man is justified by grace apart from works of the law."

Titus 3:5: “He saved us, not on the basis of deeds which we have done in righteousness, but according to His mercy by the washing of the regeneration and the renewing by the Holy Spirit.”

Gal 2:21: “For if righteousness comes through obedience of the law, then Christ died in vain.”

James 2:10 condemns every form of self perfection. He who stumbles on one point of the law is guilty of breaking the entire law.

What are these passages saying? Its all about grace. Not about us.
 
Romans 11:6: But if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works, otherwise grace is no longer grace."

Romans 4:6: " Just as David also speaks of the blessing upon man to whom God reckons righteousness apart from works."

Romans 3:28: "For we mention that a man is justified by grace apart from works of the law."

Titus 3:5: “He saved us, not on the basis of deeds which we have done in righteousness, but according to His mercy by the washing of the regeneration and the renewing by the Holy Spirit.”

Gal 2:21: “For if righteousness comes through obedience of the law, then Christ died in vain.”

James 2:10 condemns every form of self perfection. He who stumbles on one point of the law is guilty of breaking the entire law.

What are these passages saying? Its all about grace. Not about us.
Have you ever counted the times you have co-operated with God’s grace? Have you ever counted the times you have NOT co-operated with God’s grace?
 
Have you ever counted the times you have co-operated with God’s grace? Have you ever counted the times you have NOT co-operated with God’s grace?
What does this have to do with salvation? If you break one law, you’re guilty of breaking all of them. Without God’s grace we cannot make it to heaven. Remission of sins can only come about through the shedding of blood…the blood of the Lamb, Jesus Christ.
 
Romans 11:6: But if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works, otherwise grace is no longer grace."

Romans 4:6: " Just as David also speaks of the blessing upon man to whom God reckons righteousness apart from works."

Romans 3:28: "For we mention that a man is justified by grace apart from works of the law."

Titus 3:5: “He saved us, not on the basis of deeds which we have done in righteousness, but according to His mercy by the washing of the regeneration and the renewing by the Holy Spirit.”

Gal 2:21: “For if righteousness comes through obedience of the law, then Christ died in vain.”

James 2:10 condemns every form of self perfection. He who stumbles on one point of the law is guilty of breaking the entire law.

What are these passages saying? Its all about grace. Not about us.
These passages are saying that God calls everyone of us to himself, regardless of our actions and that every one can be saved through the mercy of God. But don’t be decieved, It does NOT say that we will go to heaven regardless of our actions. After we have been saved through baptism, we are still held accountable to following God’s moral laws and we are still called to Love. If we do not, we will be condemned as described in Romans 2 and Matthew 25 among other places. You mus live out your faith, Do you deny this point?
 
These passages are saying that God calls everyone of us to himself, regardless of our actions and that every one can be saved through the mercy of God. But don’t be decieved, It does NOT say that we will go to heaven regardless of our actions. After we have been saved through baptism, we are still held accountable to following God’s moral laws and we are still called to Love. If we do not, we will be condemned as described in Romans 2 and Matthew 25 among other places. You mus live out your faith, Do you deny this point?
The verses I quoted speak for themselves. I can give you examples of people who live morally upright lives, don’t smoke or do drugs, help out their neighbor, donate to charity, volunteer their time, etc etc. If these people do not know Christ as their Savior or have rejected Him, do they have eternal salvation, yes or no?
 
Originally Posted by Tomster
Have you ever counted the times you have co-operated with God’s grace? Have you ever counted the times you have NOT co-operated with God’s grace?
It has everythign to do with going to Heaven. If you cooperate with God’s grace you will go to heaven. If you do not, you will be condemned. You must do God’s willl.
If you break one law, you’re guilty of breaking all of them.
You know that this is incorrect. If you are an steal a dime, you might be a sinner, but you certainly aren’t a murderer.
Without God’s grace we cannot make it to heaven.
this is true. you must die in the state of Grace to go to heaven. Your problem here is that you are decieved in what it takes to a) get in the state of grace and b) to stay there…
Remission of sins can only come about through the shedding of blood…the blood of the Lamb, Jesus Christ.
Also true. Jesus’s blood was required for the forgiveness of sin. That opened the doors to heaven for those that die in the state of grace.
 
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