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guanophore
Guest
You hit this nail on the head, JonNC as you always do. I enjoyed reading Catholic Knight’s posts just before yours. I think that many Catholics do not have sufficient catechesis in how grace works, which is why Catholicism is often mistaken as a “works based religion”. I have to admit that the Lutheran perspective does bring in a lot of balance. The biggest difference, I think is the element of transformation. Catholics believe that we are sealed in grace at baptism, and that the grace continues to sanctify us throughout our lives as we walk in the Good Works he has prepared for us. The works themselves justify us because they are borne of grace, through faith. Anything else, as you say, is Pelagianism.Well, of course, if they are works borne of faith, borne of the Spirit’s work within us. That wasn’t the point. The poster claimed, it seems, that faith was a work of ours. If it is, the it seems Pelagianism must be correct.
It is easy to step outside of His grace, accessed through faith when it comes to “doing good”. I have met a lot of people, and have fallen into this myself as well, who shift from “working out” to “working on”. It is insidious and subtle.Of course I can. The works that are borne of faith are of His grace, as well, but it is by faith that we access justification.
It is the work of God, and when we accept HIs grace, His work in and through us transforms us, leading to more “good works”. Faith is a faculty of humanity that is built into our nature. We have a choice about where to place that faith. Everyone is given sufficient grace/revelation to place it in God, but some place it in money, power, etc. When we respond to His grace, and choose to put our faith in Him, it becomes a Work of God.There was no implication on my part that good works are not because of grace. I was only stating that faith is not a work.