=ClearWater;11437077]As a Catholic, I don’t accept Sola Fide (only by faith). Likewise, I don’t accept any of the 5 solas.
Only by Faith
Only by Grace
Only by Scripture
Only by Christ
Glory to God, Alone
Do I object to faith? No. Do I object to grace? No. Do I object to the use of scripture? No. Do I object to Christ? No. Do I object to the glory of God? No.
With the 5 solae, what I, and we Catholics, object to is the use of the word, “ONLY”.
Can you get to God through faith, grace, and scripture? Absolutely.
Is it by faith, ONLY? No, because obviously, you just said you can also get there by grace and scripture. Also, there’s baptism, good works.
The same way you can have only’s in other settings. They apply to different things, and are meant to exclude different things.There are 5 onlys in the Protestant faith. First of all, how can you have 5 onlys?
Therefore, when we say by grace alone, we mean to exclude any other way salvation is available to us. It is only by God’s grace. When we say by faith alone, we mean to say that is the sole way in which we justification, and we exclude other means as possible ways to justification, such as proposed by the Pelagians. When we say by Christ alone, we recognize that Christ alone is our Savior, that no one else did or even could have paid the atoning sacrifice which makes our salvation possible. So, by grace alone through faith alone, in the works of Christ alone are we justified.
Scripture alone speaks to the belief that only scripture is the final norm. by which teachers and teachings, doctrines and dogmas are held accountable.
Sola fide does not exclude good works, but only says that those good works are not what justifies. Are good works necessary? Of course, since a faith without them is a dead faith.So, is it faith ALONE? Well, in Matthew 25:31-46, good works are necessary. In John 6:48-58, the Eucharist is necessary for eternal life. Acts 15:11, we are saved by grace. In 1 Corinthians 13:13, it says love is actually greater than faith. In 1 Peter 3:21, we are told that baptism saves us.
St. Paul tells us that we are saved by faith working through love.
And baptism, like Holy Absolution and the Eucharist, is a means of grace. The Spirit uses these means to bring us grace, which kindles and strengthens faith in us.
Jon