and do you not have to have faith in order to be baptized ? Are unbelievers baptized ? Of course not, yet the statement was that faith did not put you into the body of Christ, that you need hope and charity. It did not mention baptism.
Baptism is more than forgiveness of sins. It is for communicating the Holy Spirit ,to regenerate make born again. Much more than just forgiveness of sins. Again,that is counter to say faith (even as expressed in baptism) does not put you into the Body of Christ. To say you are not in the Body until your first good work of charity, or that being "worthy’’ of that grace sounds precariously counter to works coming after faith,and all or both by grace.
Blessings
While I am not sure that is what was meant in the post, I do agree with your point here.
I think we are all in agreement that faith without works is dead. Saving faith is faith that works.
Salvation is a process. You aren’t finally saved until you die in a state of grace. Looking at salvation as a one-time event is dangerous and contrary to the Christian faith and Scripture. Without works, you lose your salvation.
I think it might be more accurate to say that we fail to be united with the imperishable inheritance that is kept for us in heaven. We can’t really “lose” that which we have not yet attained! That being said, I do agree that good works keep us in the grace that saves us.
Again, we all agree in walking out the faith after the initial "saving’’/ justification. We call it sanctification, or living a holy (set apart for God) life.** Has nothing to do with justice, which works on merit or demerit. **We are under the law of grace now, justice being met by our Savior.
Blessings
Can you help me understand how you came to this conclusion? How does remaining in a right relationship with God relate to “merit or demerit”?
Never heard of regeneration, being born of the spirit, being born again, all things becoming new, as “snow-covered dung-heaps” Is a butterfly still an ugly caterpillar inside ? I do not think the catechism addresses the old man and the new man in Christ. Is that foreign to you ?
Blessings
That is an apocryphal phrase that has been attributed to Luther but might be a case of linguistic ledgerdomain. It may have been distilled from some of his writings, including Luther’s Sermon on Our Blessed Hope (St. Louis Ed. IX: 930-957):
“We see grain sowed in the ground. Reason now asks: What happens to the grain in winter that has been sowed in the ground? Is it not a dead, moldy, decayed thing, covered with frost and snow? But in its own time it grows from that dead, moldy, decayed grain into a beautiful green stalk, which flourishes like a forest and produces a full, fat ear on which there are 20, 30, 40 kernels, and thereby finds life where only death existed earlier. Thus God has done with heaven, earth, sun and moon, and does every year with the grain in the field. He calls to that which is nothing that it should become something and does this contrary to all reason. Can He not also do something which serves to glorify the children of God, even though it is contrary to all reason?”
We do get closer to the saying here:
“I said before that our righteousness is dung in the sight of God. Now if God chooses to adorn dung, he can do so” (Luther’s Works, Vol. 34, page 184).
In that same document Luther adds:
“All the justified could glory in their works, if they would attribute glory to God with respect to themselves. In this manner they would not be dung, but ornaments” (Luther’s Works, Vol. 34, page 178).
In answer to your question/observation, the Catechism does reference the “old man” in the context of sanctification:
1473 The forgiveness of sin and restoration of communion with God entail the remission of the eternal punishment of sin, but temporal punishment of sin remains. While patiently bearing sufferings and trials of all kinds and, when the day comes, serenely facing death, the Christian must strive to accept this temporal punishment of sin as a grace. He should strive by works of mercy and charity, as well as by prayer and the various practices of penance, to put off completely the “old man” and to put on the “new man.”