A protestant wrote saying that Romans 4:1-12 shows that salvation for all mankind is by faith alone. Though the passage does not say this specifically, the text is a bit confusing to me. Can someone help me refute this position?..
Dear mom2three, et. al.:
Read chapter three, four, and five; you will find the following quotes: “…if God’s truth redounds to his glory through my falsehood, why am I still being condemned as a sinner?..no human being will be justified in his sight…by observing the law; for through the law comes consciousness of sin. …They are justified freely by his grace through the redemption in Christ Jesus,…, we are supporting the law. …when one does not work, yet believes in the one who justifies the ungodly, his faith is credited as righteousness. …we have been justified by faith, we have peace…with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, …through whom we have gained access (by faith) to this grace in which we stand, and we boast in hope of the glory of God. …Not only that, but we even boast of our afflictions, knowing that affliction produces endurance,…and endurance, proven character, and proven character, hope, …and hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out into our hearts through the holy Spirit that has been given to us. …For Christ, while we were still helpless, yet died at the appointed time for the ungodly. …”.
Grace of God provided us with our Lord Jesus Christ, when we accept this; when we believe this: faith is provided to us, righteousness is a consequence of faith, as opposed to The Decalogue. Faith is supportive of The Decalogue, righteousness being requisite to fulfill The Decalogue, and faith being requisite to righteousness and therefore, it is grace provided to the condition of our soul, born into Original Sin, which we know is the restoration of the soul to its image, of God.
God owes nothing to the soul and therefore, grace is a gift as opposed to something owed. God is just. The wrath of God is just. Where must the soul go, when it is immortal, intelligent, and of freewill? The soul by its own choice cannot save itself, particularly it would seem, when it is born in Original Sin. Many of us, like myself, have been bapised as infants. Grace through the sacrament of Baptism was provided to us as a gift from God, and in fulfillment of an obligation on the part of parents, grandparents to raise their children in The Faith. Grace is a gift.
Now what righteousness is committed in life, must have its reward though, not necessarily in heaven, but on earth or in Hell, and this is a consequence in part of freewill–we may choose God, but as a consequence of our choice to follow The Decalogue, or as a consequence of God’s grace?
We may say, our choice to believe in Jesus Christ has saved us, but it is God’s grace, which provided us with His Son in whom, we might believe, and this belief rooted in God’s grace–will move us to do what is right and therefore, we are called to go and sin no more, to become saints, to become perfect, and our soul has the freewill, the intelligence, and the immortality to act upon God’s grace, sanctifying our soul.
Most sincerely,
Kristopher
P.S. et. al. is an abbreviation of “and others”; additionally, some of what I know came from a book titled something along the line of “Father Smith Instructs Mr. Jackson”, which I think that many will find enjoyable, and it is a bit of a Catechism, really.
It is true, without my saying so that scripture must be interpreted, and it must be interpreted in accord with The Holy Spirit, as it was the authorship inspired by The Holy Spirit, allowing for scripture to be without error: this of course, must be entrusted to The Catholic Church, born at Pentecost, with The Descent of the Holy Spirit, right?