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AugustTherese
Guest
Edited my post just for you!Not mine. It should grind the gears of every good Catholic that seeks to reach out ecumenicaly to develop good rapport and dialogue, instead of driving wedges.
Edited my post just for you!Not mine. It should grind the gears of every good Catholic that seeks to reach out ecumenicaly to develop good rapport and dialogue, instead of driving wedges.
Not for me. Do it for good will between Christians.JonNC:![]()
Edited my post just for you!Not mine. It should grind the gears of every good Catholic that seeks to reach out ecumenicaly to develop good rapport and dialogue, instead of driving wedges.![]()
Part of repenting is making amends. Zacchaeus did this.That being said, I find it hilarious when a Roman Catholic who would uphold mistranslations in the Vulgate as legit (i.e., Do Pennance instead of Repent
As I said to @AugustTherese, I donāt think what Catholics do deserves āhilariousā as a description.That being said, I find it hilarious when a Roman Catholic who would uphold mistranslations in the Vulgate as legit (i.e., Do Pennance instead of Repent, ascribing the one who will crush satanās head as the mother of the seed to come, etc.), would then dare to try to nail Luther to the wall for that one.
And you think ādishonest ā is an improvement.Edited my post just for you!
You see that faith was active along with his works, and faith was completed by his works;However, we are justified by faith first, the works are the result
I posted a verse alone. You added a bunch of commentary. Whom do you think might be out of context?you keep quoting James out of context creating a contradiction between the two
I donāt have to butcher Saint Jamesā words to fit what you think Saint Paul is saying. Saint Paul did not believe in āfaith aloneā like you want him to.Unless your argument is that James believed a different gospel than Paul.
You fail to recognize that Paul and James and others frequently reference other scripture passages that were familiar to their readers in order to communicate a point. Understanding James therefore, involves understanding the reference to which he is pointing. In other words, you are reading James with one eye closed in order to support a faulty doctrine.I donāt have to butcher Saint Jamesā words to fit what you think Saint Paul is saying. Saint Paul did not believe in āfaith aloneā like you want him to.
For it is not the hearers of the law who are righteous before God, but the doers of the law who will be justified.which Paul flatly denies by saying that we are saved by FAITH, NOT works.
Of course they are! Or can be. If I promise my son a car, but I want him to graduate from High School first, it is still a gift.Giftās arenāt conditional. Edit to add, The only condition of eternal life is to have a āliving faithā.
A person cannot lose the seal of salvation. but a person can walk away from their inheritance.How do you lose something that is inside of you? That has been sealed with the Spirit?
I think you lost me here. Allusion to what? I think you are making the point that Rahab was to be saved from the sack of the city, but that it had nothing to do with eternal life?Using James epistle of what it means to be āsavedā given in the context of James 2 on salvation: was it an allusion to say that Rahab the harlot was saved eternally? ⦠or was she saved literally and physically? What does the Genesis passage actually say?..
First I will have to understand what you mean by the word āallusionā here.Please show me the allusion in the Genesis narrative showing how one is eternally saved.
Yes, from the Apostolic point of view, there is no separation between these two concepts.It is all about the āsaving of the soulā 1:21 which was the premise for his epistle.
Are you talking about Isaac? I am not aware that the Genesis account says anything about salvation in the context of the sacrifice, if that is what you mean.Was Abrahamās son saved eternally or literally? in the Genesis account?
There is a great deal about your narrow definition of āsalvationā that one cannot find in the scriptures. But Isaac was part of a specific covenant with God, so I am not so sure it is useful to this discussion to use him as an example. Unless you want to support that Godās entire Abrahamic covenant is for this life only, which seems to be a bit far from the scope of the thread.Is there anything in that passage suggesting that his son was saved eternally? ⦠I canāt find it.
An interesting question.Is not doing good works a mortal sin?
I agree with the second line, not so much the first.Of course they are! Or can be. If I promise my son a car, but I want him to graduate from High School first, it is still a gift.
But that is the whole point. Saving faith (living faith) is faith that works. It has the quality of producing good works.
I would add to this that it seems to indicate what James refers to as ādeadā faith, which cannot save. Saving faith is faith that works. It is a quality of the faith.ā Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away , and every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, that it may bear more fruit.ā
John 15:2
Not doing good works is a sin of omission and its severity as to whether it is mortal or not depends on the situation. But, generally speaking, not producing good works would be a grave matter.
He was obviously someone who believed in Father Abraham. Donāt you think he was a Jew? Do you think Jews were saved by grace through faith?I donāt know. Was the rich man a spirit filled adopted Child of God who had been saved by grace through faith? Or was he just your normal run of the mill rich guy who was selfish and greedy and had no, or at best a superficial, relationship with God?
I think that Luther retained some quite Catholic thinking on the role of good works.Martin Luther overturned it and heās like, whatās happeninā! His theology places virtually everything on God and very little on us and our response to God. Easy peasy! Whatās not to like? Except that it is not true, of course. Humans are attracted to novelty like moths to a flame - with similar results.