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benedictus2
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But that is all very nebulous. The reformers tried to make a bit more sense of that by this two step stage of justification and sanctification which as I have shown above shows some inconsistencies.We get to heaven by grace through faith in Christ. We respond to that grace by trying to live as He would have us live. Consistent refusal to do so, without repentence, is evidence of a dead faith, which does not save.
But the question is not whether God’s declaration is a “merely” but whether this is in fact the case, “that God declares you righteous but leaves you unrighteous.”Merely declared. You make God declaring something sound like a nothing. If God declares I am righteous in His sight, is it not so? Is that not good enough for Him? Should it not be good enough for me?
Do you really think that God lies to himself and says we are clean when in fact we are putrid underneath?
I have read a few commentaries from former Lutherans and Protestants in general and everyone seems to agree that this declaration is forensic. I would think that Beckwith, McGrath and Mascall would know what they are talking about with regards the nature of justification for protestants.
Which is why I keep asking this question: If at justification when you are declared righteous you are actually considered righteous, what then is the need for the second stage of sanctification when you are already righteous?
Can’t you see the inconsistency there?
First off the error in that question is that I will never say I am righteous. But neither will I say that God will say I am righteous while underneath I remain the same miserable rotten smelly sinner that I am.If you choose to say you are righteous, and I choose to say, God declares me righteous, which of us is not righteous in God’s eyes?
Rather God will set about **making **me righteous by his grace such that when He says I am righteous I am actually so because His grace has caused this transformation in me and made me so.
LutherShow me where Lutherans say sanctification is not necessary. I have no need to defend something I do not believe.
“There is no justification without sanctification, no forgiveness without renewal of life, no real faith from which the fruits of new obedience do not grow.”
Luther did not teach, nor do Lutherans belief, what you are contending here.
But even from this statement I can already see the same problem I have outlined above.
Luther says there is no justification without sanctification. But according to Reformed theology, Justification precedes sanctification.
So again, a man is justified then immediately dies. Does that mean that he is already sanctified? Or does it leave him still at the justified stage? If still at the justified stage, since sanctification has not yet happened (he is dead after all), will he go to heaven?
If you say yes, then that means he goes to heaven just at the justified stage.
If someone therefore can enter heaven at the justified stage then what is there a need for sanctification?
But if you say no, he needs to be sanctified, then what is point of justification when you can very well die justified and still go to hell?
What I am trying to illustrate here is the inconsistency, the holes in this kind of sundered theology.
But the point is do you think that Christ commands for no reason? He says do good just because…?Is because Christ commanded it a good enough reason?
This is why Catholic theology makes so much more sense. We do not say “Oh because Christ said so”. It would be like Christ said “hop on this merry go round that goes nowhere because I said so”. No doubt we do things because God said so and should do at God’s decree. But God does not leave it at that. Christ said so for a reason. And that reason is knowable.