I'm calling on everyone here in this forum EXCEPT Catholics !!!

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Actually, Ive now looked up my own Bible and about 10 online translations and** NONE of them say ‘‘faith alone’’. What translation does this come from**?
I’m not trying to crash the party.

I read all the posts, and noticed your question wasn’t answered. . Martin Luther added “sola” to faith in Romans. Here’s his answer.
http://www.iclnet.org/pub/resources/text/wittenberg/luther/luther-translate.txt I’m not aware of any bible today that adds “alone” to Rm 3:28, although this became the Protestant doctrine.

there is only one place in scripture where it talks about “by faith alone”.

***24 You see that a man is justified by works and not ***by faith alone. 26 For as the body apart from the spirit is dead, so faith apart from works is dead. [james 2:24,26]

Back to lurking mode.
 
steve: Martin Luther added “sola” to faith in Romans…

RA: Rom. 3:28

“a man is justified by faith apart from observing the law.” NIV

“a man is justified by faith apart from works of the Law.” NASB

“one is justified by faith apart from works of the law.” ESV

“a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.” KJV

I think this would mean alone – i.e., without anything else; nothing besides faith; not with works or anything else added, etc. etc. etc. The concept of faith ALONE is inherent to the phraseology. To have said “alone” would have been, in a word, *redundant *to Jews since the only choice to Jews was justification by works.

The concept expressed by the disciples that was so radical was salvation/justification APART from works (i.e., without any works of any kind connected to the Law) – and that was BY FAITH, and by very clear implication, by faith alone. This is seen in other passages such as Gal. 3:10:

For as many as are of the works of the Law are under a curse; for it is written, “CURSED IS EVERYONE WHO DOES NOT ABIDE BY ALL THINGS WRITTEN IN THE BOOK OF THE LAW, TO PERFORM THEM.”

Clearly, the whole issue of justification by works/Law vs. justification by faith in the FINISHED work of Christ was a big deal.

The James passage often cited to justify salvation by a “faith + works” formula is flawed. If you read those verses in context, they’re not talking about our justification before GOD, it’s talking about our justification before MEN, which must be demonstrated through works, because MEN cannot read into our hearts.

As for Martin Luther’s letter, he writes: “You also tell me that the Papists are causing a great fuss because St. Paul’s text does not contain the word sola (alone), and that my changing of the words of God is not to be tolerated.”

This is the charge of the PAPISTS that Luther is repeating. It’s how the Papists were interpreting his audacity to say that believers are justified by faith alone and using his translation to say so.

But it was a translation that brought into the text what was there by implication (see above comments). Think of it as any number of modern translation that go thought for thought rather than word for word.

Now, as for the charge itself, they were arguing Luther was wrong simply because the word “alone” wasn’t actually in the biblical text, which to tbh, is a very silly argument since the word “Trinity” isn’t in the Bible either, but we all certainly embrace that. Why? Because it is taught in the text. (As I noted above the concept of “alone” is clearly implied in Rom. 3:28.)

Now, if someone wants to play the “that word isn’t in the text” game, then that can be done with plenty of RC doctrines. Rom. 3:8, for example, also doesn’t say “a man is justified by faith apart from observing the law, but still must be baptized into a particular church structure, and keep observing various extra-biblical rules in that church organization which often change whenever the church’s hierarchy feel like changing them.”

I would have actually had to make Rom. 3:28 much longer in order to make it fit the RC, just FYI. :eek:

R.A.
 
I’m going to come at this from a somewhat different direction than others. My apologies to moderators and to the OP: my response is actually going to take several posts to get to the “Why I Am Not” part of the OP’s question. I am planning to meet with a Catholic priest next week and do plan to take portions of my responses here to that priest so that he and I can discuss my situation. So writing this will be helpful for me in making my thoughts a bit more concrete and definite.

First: I was converted to the RCC as a teenager and then ‘reverted’ to Protestantism about four to five years later, mainly because–in the hothouse environment of the ‘Spirit of Vatican II’ that I found extant among military chaplains, I could find no solace or spiritual support. Frankly, the Catholic chaplain with whom I dealt primarily at my first and longest military assignment was particularly corrosive of faith. He himself was troubled in faith, and the few older, faithful parishioners (‘older’ by about five to seven years than I–they mostly ‘seemed’ older because they had married and had children, and because they had graduated college or were married to officers who had done) often had to comfort and support this priest more than he supported the parishioners. I don’t want to be unkind but I strongly suspect–in fact I believe I heard tell that–this priest eventually left the service of the Church entirely.

He certainly despised the sort of Catholicism which had converted me some years previously–the sort of Catholicism most folks on these boards take for granted, or at least hope they can take for granted. He exalted the likes of Hans Kung and loathed the appointment of Ratzinger to the CDF. He delighted in pointing out practices, beliefs, and customs which he assured us the documents of Vatican II and the post-conciliar documents had rendered obsolete. His attitudes drove me to investigate traditionalist Catholic writings which did not give me much comfort: I was left feeling that the Catholic Church was on the brink of a major apostasy not only from it’s own traditions but from the Christian faith in general.
 
I have rehearsed much of this previously and on these boards. My point expressing them here again is to point out that my reasons for leaving are rather different from the reasons which keep me from returning. I did find fellowship and support among Protestant Evangelicals and fundamentalists. I even dallied with the Mormons, and found their form of fellowship (if not their actual beliefs) very close to what I would have deemed an ideal model of Christian community.

However, the various arguments for-and-against various doctrines–Protestants, especially young Protestants, expend a great deal of energy determining for themselves which are true and which are false understandings of the Gospel–exhausted me for a time and i simply ‘threw over’ all religious belief for a time. During these years–when I left military service and went to college–Pope John Paul II hit his stride as the great corrective of the excesses of Vatican II (or should I say, the 'spirit of Vatican II). So the ‘apostasy’ which I had originally feared was coming to the RCC did not come–far from it.

After college I found the atheism which I had embraced in college to be sterile and vapid. I had no firm idea of how one determines ‘truth’ and rather arbitrarily chose to join the Mormons. I liked their community, I liked their commitment to family, and I believed that I could simply ‘choose’ to believe in the doctrines they taught by some inner force of will.

Oddly enough, at the same time I began listening to the Bible Answerman program, hosted first by Walter Martin, then by a series of co-hosts for a few months, followed of course by Hank Hanegraaf–whose name is utterly impossible to spell on first attempt. My apologies to Hank if he comes across this forum and finds his name butchered. Through listening to BA, and other apologetic programs–eventually including one called Catholic Answers, which some here may have heard of, I went inactive in the LDS Church. I drifted among various Protestant denominations with no particular commitment to any of them until about eight or ten years ago I was exposed to the Episcopal liturgy.

Here I should backtrack. I had read and owned a very ancient copy of the writings of the Early Christian Fathers. (Copyright on that edition was something from the early 20th, if not the late 19th century, so it was very old indeed, and in poor shape. It was however readable). I was aware that the best evidence we have of early Christian belief and practice suggests something more resembling ‘high-Church’ than ‘Bible church’.

This understanding was reinforced when I was in the military by two visits I was able to make to Rome, Italy, one of these in conjunction with a college history class I enrolled in. During that visit, we made several ‘field trips’ to the catacombs in various parts of Rome. I was able to see extremely ancient and primitive places of worship. To me the evidence was fairly strong that early Christianity was sacramental, centered more on worship and Holy Communion than on preaching, and included elements not commonly found in ‘fundamental Christianity’.

(Actually–I believe many Protestants, even some of the Reformers, would have conceded this point. Their point, primarily, was that in many cases no clear evidence could be deduced from the variety of voices available among the Early Church Fathers, nor from the evidences of archaeology. The best contemporary Christianity can do, they would argue, to arrive at a form of worship pleasing to God is to limit ourselves to the best common consensus we can arrive at from the infallible Scriptures–and then to make due allowances among ourselves forr the inevitable disagreements over peripheral issues).

I had never bought that argument entirely: while we cannot entirely settle disagreements about what Scripture teaches from the ECF’s, neither should we be so shy as many Protestants are about using them as signposts towards what we believe. Moreover, the policy of studying Scripture alone has not proven all that sturdy a support. For one thing, the argument about ‘what IS Scripture’, which began with Luther’s exclusion of the Old Testament deuterocanonicals, continued among some learned men to the modern hermeneutical expositions which suggest that we can sift among Genesis, Isaiah, and the Four Gospels to discern which ‘streams of thought’ contributed to each. And from there–to which ‘streams’ are ‘authentic’ as opposed to which are questionable and/or can be discarded or discounted.

(A backdoor way of introducing such skeptical attitudes into the Church, IMHO, is the willy-nilly use of multiple contemporary Biblical translations in public worship. While such translations may be helpful in personal devotion, the translations AND the methods used to arrive at Hebrew and Greek texts presuppose the Word of God to be subject to the whim and will of human scholars. In the vast majority of cases, shucking traditional Biblical sources–the Textus Receptus or Byzantine texts which were the basis of the Vulgate, the Douay-Rheims, the KJV, and a handful of other translations-- and traditional ‘reverential language’ Biblical translations (whether Latin or Greek in the Catholic traditions or the Elizabethan English of the KJV) has led within a generation to all kinds of challenges to Christian tradition on all fronts. Down that way leads apostasy, IMHO).
 
Moreover, even if one sticks to very conservative Biblical exegesis, one simply cannot settle a lot of thorny issues. Calvinism or Arminianism? Certainly soteriology should not be shunted to the status of a ‘peripheral’ issue? Dispensationalism or Covenantalism? Pre-trib, mid-trib, post-trib or ‘pan-trib’? Etcetera. I’m not the first to observe this flaw in the Protestant approach–and Catholicism does have it’s own in-house debates, which are not so frequently aired as Protestants. But I truly believed for several years that making reference back to the ECF’s, something which even Calvin and Luther recommended at times, would be a great aid in settling or minimizing at least some of these fights.

So I was drawn into Episcopalianism, where I currently reside spiritually. I truly had hoped that the Evangelical and traditional wings of The Episcopal Church would manage to split, amicably, from the main body of that denomination. We would then be able to rebuild orthodoxy within the TEC and probably–over a few generations, admittedly–rebuild our ranks, while the liberals, gays, and ‘wymynprysts’ of the main body ran their branch of Episcopalianism into literal and spiritual bankruptcy. This now appears less and less likely. TEC and Canterbury continue to block any such amicable and fraternal split. Worse–the traditionalists are grossly divided among themselves. Some like the 1979 prayerbook (roughly equivalent to the Mass of Vatican II, otherwise known among Catholics as the Ordinary Form). Others abhor it and demand only the 1928 or some earlier version (again roughly equivalent to the Extraordinary or Latin Form of the Mass). Some traditionalists find the ordination of women to the priesthood–but not to the episcopacy–acceptable. Some do not, and a few don’t even mind elevating female priests to the Episcopal offices.

So I have been and remain in an extended debate with myself as to whether I should remain with the Episcopal church or move back towards Rome. My biggest obstacles?
  1. Soteriology. The Catholic apologist will suggest that they believe in salvation by grace through faith, as do Protestants. The difference? Catholics do not believe in salvation through faith alone. Indeed the Catholic understanding of grace itself virtually demands that one adjoin one’s faith to one’s works in a way which continues to smack of Pelagian heresy to me. I do plan on doing some further reading–this week I will be purchasing, at long last, two books by Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange which may help address these issues for me.
  2. Hagiology and particularly Mariology: I have seen the graffiti and the formally-carved inscriptions on ancient Christian tombs beseeching departed souls to ‘remember’ the living to God. The idea that those asleep in Christ pray to God on our behalf is not of itself an offense to me. I do not, however, find strong support for the idea they do so based upon our prayers to them. Their knowledge of our precises needs and situations here on earth are likely to be limited if for no other reason that ‘there is no mourning nor weeping there’. How could Saints in heaven be so intimately aware of our situations here without being utterly miserable themselves on our behalf?
Moreover-- Mariology within the RCC crosses the line over to Mariolatry, much too often. She is not and cannot ever conceivably be 'conceived without stain of original sin, she most certainly can be neither Co-Redemptrix nor Co-Mediatrix. Even the title of Mary ascribed to her in English is a heresy: Mary is indeed “Theotokos” or “Bearer of God” in a special way–al Christians are ‘theotokos’ or bearer of God in some general way, through the life of Christ within us. She is not however “Mother of God” which by the very nature of language would make her pre-existent to and superior to God.

To be the ‘mother’ of a thing is to be the progenitor of that thing, and since in nature only like begets like, the use of this title implies the deification of Mary only a Goddess can beget a God. I understand that the RCC does not intend these things nor teach them, but their insistence on the title invariably creates a cognitive dissonance which leads too many Catholics to in fact treat Mary as if she were a Goddess, and indeed a Goddess superior in some way to her Son.
  1. Other excesses: the absolute ban on divorce, never observed in the East and NOT clearly taught in Scripture. The absolute ban even on non-abortifacient forms of contraception–while the use of contraception in most Western countries–simply to limit family size–may well be sinful, there are ample reasons to suggest that the use of certain forms of contraception in Third World nations might be a moral imperative if we are to slow the spread of deadly diseases in those nations. Admittedly, the BEST protection against such diseases would be strict abstinence–but abstinence even in an otherwise licit marriage, where one partner is innocently infected with something due to the poor medical or hygienic practices of such nations? This seems an area where clarity of teaching crosses some unclear line into extremism and even despotism.
Understand: I am still reflecting on these issues, and only providing an insight into a few of the things which yet hold me aloof from rejoining the RCC. I certainly reserve all rights to change my mind based on better understandings. Thus far, however, such understanding has not been granted me by God’s grace and my own poor efforts.

My apologies for the lengthy and multiple posts.
 
For me the list is quite long but I’ll attempt to summarize it as briefly as possible:
  1. Soteriology (which IMO is semi-pelagian in nature).
  2. Marian dogmas
  3. Saintly intercession and patronage
  4. Use of icons and in a more general sense conflation of images with worship or veneration.
  5. It’s view of the role of Peter, Apostolic Succession, Papal Infallibility, and so forth.
  6. It’s view of penance (and associated doctrines).
  7. It’s overall view that grace is transmitted through ritualism.
  8. The overall prism through which it defines and understands the role of “the church”
There are plenty of other objection I omitted for the sake of brevity.

Blessing,
Sola_Scriptura
 
Rom. 3:28

“a man is justified by faith apart from observing the law.” NIV"a man is justified by faith apart from works of the Law." NASB"one is justified by faith apart from works of the law." ESV"a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law." KJVI think this would mean alone – i.e., without anything else; nothing besides faith; not with works or anything else added, etc.
“works of the law” pertains to the 613 laws of Moses. “Good works” are not the same works. That’s why James can say faith without works (good works) is dead. IOW they have no faith

James would never say faith without good works is dead.
Paul would never say faith without good works justifies

But most importantly

Jesus cursed even a fig tree for not bearing fruit. Why? Because it was not doing what it was created to do. In the last judgement Jesus tells us how He will judge the world. Those who say to Him Lord Lord, but do no “good works” go to hell [Mt 25 : 41-46]

That’s why James said, faith without (good) works is dead.
RA:
To have said “alone” would have been, in a word, *redundant *to Jews since the only choice to Jews was justification by works.
Your mixing up “works of law”, and “good works”.
RA:
The concept expressed by the disciples that was so radical was salvation/justification APART from works (i.e., without any works of any kind connected to the Law)
We agree
RA:
– and that was BY FAITH, and by very clear implication, by faith alone.
No!!! There is NO implication of alone connected to faith. That implication of alone was directly refuted by James and Paul and Jesus. BTW, because of what James said, Luther called James an epistle of straw.
RA:
This is seen in other passages such as Gal. 3:10:

For as many as are of the works of the Law are under a curse; for it is written, “CURSED IS EVERYONE WHO DOES NOT ABIDE BY ALL THINGS WRITTEN IN THE BOOK OF THE LAW, TO PERFORM THEM.”
“works of the law” is what is being condemned, NOT “good works”
RA:
Clearly, the whole issue of justification by works/Law vs. justification by faith in the FINISHED work of Christ was a big deal.
You’re torturing the text. You assume ALL works are connected to the law. They’re NOT. Do you think good works are filthy rags?
RA:
The James passage often cited to justify salvation by a “faith + works” formula is flawed. If you read those verses in context, they’re not talking about our justification before GOD, it’s talking about our justification before MEN, which must be demonstrated through works, because MEN cannot read into our hearts.
Baloney! Luther knew exactly what James meant and that’s why he called James an epistle of straw and originally eliminated James from his translation.
RA:
As for Martin Luther’s letter, he writes: “You also tell me that the Papists are causing a great fuss because St. Paul’s text does not contain the word sola (alone), and that my changing of the words of God is not to be tolerated.”

This is the charge of the PAPISTS that Luther is repeating. It’s how the Papists were interpreting his audacity to say that believers are justified by faith alone and using his translation to say so.
Luther corrupted the text AND context. He couldn’t wiggle from it.
We are NOT justified by faith alone. You can’t find anywhere in scripture that says that unless you have a corrupted version of scripture. “ALONE” isn’t there unless you refer to James where he says NOT by faith alone.
RA:
But it was a translation that brought into the text what was there by implication (see above comments). Think of it as any number of modern translation that go thought for thought rather than word for word.

Now, as for the charge itself, they were arguing Luther was wrong simply because the word “alone” wasn’t actually in the biblical text, which to tbh, is a very silly argument since the word “Trinity” isn’t in the Bible either, but we all certainly embrace that. Why? Because it is taught in the text. (As I noted above the concept of “alone” is clearly implied in Rom. 3:28.)
It’s not just his adding the word alone, he contradicted Paul’s entire message and context by inserting alone after faith. That’s doing violence to the scriptures because it corrupts the message
RA:
Now, if someone wants to play the “that word isn’t in the text” game, then that can be done with plenty of RC doctrines. Rom. 3:8, for example, also doesn’t say “a man is justified by faith apart from observing the law, but still must be baptized into a particular church structure, and keep observing various extra-biblical rules in that church organization which often change whenever the church’s hierarchy feel like changing them.”

  1. *]Trinity was not added to scripture.
    *]Baptism was commanded by Jesus.
    *]There is only ONE faith and ONE baptism.
    As for extra biblical matters, show me where you as a Protestant are allowed in scripture to divide from the Church?
 
“works of the law” pertains to the 613 laws of Moses. “Good works” are not the same works. That’s why James can say faith without works (good works) is dead. IOW they have no faith

James would never say faith without good works is dead.
Correction,

I meant to say
James would not say faith without “good works” is alive.
 
“works of the law” pertains to the 613 laws of Moses. “Good works” are not the same works. That’s why James can say faith without works (good works) is dead. IOW they have no faith.
You raise a good point & one that really does need to be expanded on. Luther is commonly given harsh treatment by many Catholic apologists because of some perhaps brash statements he made (like his famous words “sin boldly”). However, interestingly the more I study Luther the more I actually discover how similar his own view in this area really was to the Catholic view.

For instance, anyone could certainly look to the thousands of pages of text written by Luther and cherry pick some quotes that although may have been a poor choice of words, do not accurately depict his view. I studied Luther a great deal & what follows is a quote that summarizes his view pretty accurately:

“Sin remains in the spiritual man for the exercise of grace, the humbling of pride, and the repression of presumption. For he who is not busily at work driving out sin without a doubt has sin by the very fact of this neglect, even though he has committed no further sin for which he may be damned. For we are not called to idleness; we are called to labor against our passions (What Luther Says, 3:1319; ntrmin.org/Be%20a%20sinner%20and%20sin%20boldly%20web.htm#_edn32)).

Luther does call on us to “labor against our passions” – which is very similar (if not the same) to what the RCC would say. However, IMO both Luther and the RCC fail to understand how we are reckoned righteous by God (even though Luther affirmed total depravity, in some cases he seems not to understand the idea very well, since WE cannot effectively labor to avoid sin in a way that can be pleasing to God).

I believe Calvin presents the best solution for understanding how we are made righteous, summed up by these simple words from Ezekiel:

"I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My statutes, and you will be careful to observe My ordinances (Ezekiel 36:27).

God does not only justify us for past sins, but He perfects our faith and causes us to become righteous. However, it’s always a matter of faith. We must believe God can and will do this in order for it to happen.

Just look to the tenor of scripture, particularly the NT, to see how this works. Here’s one of my personal favorites on this topic:

"Come," he said. Then Peter got down out of the boat, walked on the water and came toward Jesus. But when he saw the wind, he was afraid and, beginning to sink, cried out, “Lord, save me!” Immediately Jesus reached out his hand and caught him. “You of little faith,” he said, “why did you doubt?” (Matthew 14:29-30).

All Peter had to do was believe Jesus would maintain him on the water and Jesus would have. So it’s always a matter of faith.

We cannot render ourselves righteous, yet God demands righteousness. Sort of a paradox unless we understand and believe that God can and will cause us to be righteous. So we’re not just saved from sin in a fictional sense, but God can and will actually save us from sin if we believe He can. All we really have to do is ask.

The same treatment applies to good works. God not only prepares us for good works but He also has prepared those works for us beforehand (or from the foundation of the world).

In other words when we do something good from an outpouring of faith, it is really God working in us both to will and to do for His good pleasure. In other words it’s God doing it not us. So the glory goes to God alone!
 
**Steve: **“works of the law” pertains to the 613 laws of Moses. “Good works” are not the same works.

**RA: **I suggest you read Matthew 22:36 where Jesus was asked directly: “which is the greatest commandment in the Law?” he answered, not with a list from the 613 laws. He distilled ALL of them – i.e., the ENTIRE LAW – down to the following:

Jesus replied: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.” This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: “Love your neighbor as yourself. All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”

This crystalization of the law covers any and all “good works” that might be done in the name of Christ. By doing these “good works” and all they are, in whatever form, you are keeping all the 613 Laws of Moses.

HOWEVER, neither you, nor anyone else, can perfectly keep the whole Law, even in this crystalized form. Therefore, you will not be, indeed, you CANNOT be, justified by the Law or “good works.” Consequently we read; "“a man is justified by faith apart from observing the law.” NIV

steve b: That’s why James can say faith without works (good works) is dead. IOW they have no faith…

RA: As I said, the James passage often cited to justify salvation by a “faith + works” formula is flawed. If you read those verses IN CONTEXT, they’re not talking about our justification BEFORE GOD, it’s talking about our justification before MEN, which must be demonstrated through works, because MEN cannot read into our hearts.

Read the passage IN CONTEXT, my friend. In declaring that a professed faith without works is dead, James (James 2:14-17) is NOT teaching that salvation is DEPENDENT on works. he is merely saying that if you profess a faith, but have no works that others can see, the profession is dead/false, because if a person truly has a living faith, the that faith will work itself out as visible good works. You’ve got backwards from what he is saying.

James is not saying that we do good works FOR salvation/justification, he is saying we see good works BECAUSE of salvation. And because of those good works, we are justified BEFORE MEN. There is nothing in that passage that links our justification before GOD to our good works. Our justification before GOD is mirrored in Abraham who was justified by faith, as Paul tells us in Romans 4:1-5. You might want to read that since THAT is where justification “before God” is discussed.

So, if you have accepted Jesus as your Lord and Savior, you ARE justified (per Romans 4). And if indeed you ARE justified by faith, apart from works, as was Abraham, then your real/living faith will be shown “before men” through good works that will justify you in their eyes (James 2:14-17). That is what the Bible says. In this way professed faith is perfected and shown to be sincere and real and alive to the world (James 2:21-24).

steve: Those who say to Him Lord Lord, but do no “good works” go to hell [Mt 25 : 41-46]

RA: And why didn’t they do those good works??? Because they didn’t know Jesus.

You cannot turn this into some treatise on the conditions of salvation/justification to the exlusion of other biblical passages. It’s merely a look at the outer proof from these people that inwardly they did NOT know God – which fits with both Romans and James per my explanation above. if they HAD known God and HAD a true faith, they would have done those good works like the others who were accepted.

Steve: Your mixing up “works of law”, and “good works”.

RA: Read above.

Steve: That implication of alone was directly refuted by James and Paul and Jesus.

RA: No, it was refuted by those who have added works to salvation. That’s partly what the Reformation was all about. getting back to what was initially taught about salvation being a free gift of God apart from works, through faith, becuase good works will never get you right with God – no matter how hard you try.

Steve: You’re torturing the text. You assume ALL works are connected to the law. They’re NOT. Do you think good works are filthy rags?

**RA: **Read Matthew 22:36

Steve: [The James passage] … Baloney!

RA: James says the works about which he is talking is to show PEOPLE his faith and to prove his justification/faith to them – GOD: “I will SHOW YOU my faith by my works.” He doesn’t say “I will obtain my justification by my works.”

Steve: Luther corrupted the text AND context. He couldn’t wiggle from it. We are NOT justified by faith alone. You can’t find anywhere in scripture that says that unless you have a corrupted version of scripture. “ALONE” isn’t there unless you refer to James where he says NOT by faith alone.

RA: Read Romans 4:1-5 (see above) and Ephesians 2:8-9: “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast.” Fairly clear.

**Steve: **We are NOT justified by faith alone.

**RA: **You’ll have to tell God that one when you meet him. But before that day, I suggest you carefully and thoughtfully read Rom. 4:4 if you are trying to be saved by works: “Now to the one who works, his wage is not credited as a favor, but as what is due.” Ouch.

For the life of me, I can’t understand why in all the world’s religions everyone wants to make sure they get some credit for working their way to God, whether its through “good works,” certain prayers, rites, rituals, ceremonies, etc., etc., etc.

peace and best wishes,

R.A.

Are you Catholic or Mormon. I’m curious.
 
**Steve: **“works of the law” pertains to the 613 laws of Moses. “Good works” are not the same works.

**RA: **I suggest you read Matthew 22:36 where Jesus was asked directly: “which is the greatest commandment in the Law?” he answered, not with a list from the 613 laws. He distilled ALL of them – i.e., the ENTIRE LAW – down to the following:

Jesus replied: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.” This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: “Love your neighbor as yourself. All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”

This crystalization of the law covers any and all “good works” that might be done in the name of Christ. By doing these “good works” and all they are, in whatever form, you are keeping all the 613 Laws of Moses.
I suggest you read Matthew 25. Jesus tells us how He will separate the sheep from the goats.
RA: As I said, the James passage often cited to justify salvation by a “faith + works” formula is flawed. If you read those verses IN CONTEXT, they’re not talking about our justification BEFORE GOD, it’s talking about our justification before MEN, which must be demonstrated through works, because MEN cannot read into our hearts.
Read the passage IN CONTEXT, my friend. In declaring that a professed faith without works is dead, James (James 2:14-17) is NOT teaching that salvation is DEPENDENT on works. he is merely saying that if you profess a faith, but have no works that others can see, the profession is dead/false, because if a person truly has a living faith, the that faith will work itself out as visible good works. You’ve got backwards from what he is saying.
James is not saying that we do good works FOR salvation/justification, he is saying we see good works BECAUSE of salvation. And because of those good works, we are justified BEFORE MEN. There is nothing in that passage that links our justification before GOD to our good works. Our justification before GOD is mirrored in Abraham who was justified by faith, as Paul tells us in Romans 4:1-5. You might want to read that since THAT is where justification “before God” is discussed.
Paul also tells us to “work out” our salvation with fear and trembling, because it is God who is working in us.
So, if you have accepted Jesus as your Lord and Savior, you ARE justified (per Romans 4).
OK I just read all of Romans 4 and didn’t find anything about “accept[ing] Jesus as your Lord and Savior” - which version are you using?
And if indeed you ARE justified by faith, apart from works, as was Abraham, then your real/living faith will be shown “before men” through good works that will justify you in their eyes (James 2:14-17). That is what the Bible says. In this way professed faith is perfected and shown to be sincere and real and alive to the world (James 2:21-24).
So good works are important, aren’t they?
RA: No, it was refuted by those who have added works to salvation. That’s partly what the Reformation was all about. getting back to what was initially taught about salvation being a free gift of God apart from works, through faith, becuase good works will never get you right with God – no matter how hard you try.
True, saving faith works. Paul in Galatians calls it “faith working through love.” It’s not MY good works that will make me right with God, but God working through me “both to will and to do of His good pleasure.” The Church didn’t “add works” to salvation, the Reformation subtracted them from the original teachings of Jesus and His Apostles. We cannot merit justification on our own, it is only by the Grace of God. He gives us His grace to do the works he has ordained for us. (Eph 2:10)
For the life of me, I can’t understand why in all the world’s religions everyone wants to make sure they get some credit for working their way to God, whether its through “good works,” certain prayers, rites, rituals, ceremonies, etc., etc., etc.
Not I in my own strength, but God working through me. That is the Catholic faith. You seem to be battling a straw man of your own making rather than authentic Catholicism.
 
**Pixie: **I suggest you read Matthew 25

RA: I did and I addressed it: "And why didn’t they do those good works??? Because they didn’t know Jesus. You cannot turn this into some treatise on the conditions of salvation/justification to the exclusion of other biblical passages. It’s merely a look at the outer proof from these people that inwardly they did NOT know God – which fits with both Romans and James per my explanation above. if they HAD known God and HAD a true faith, they would have done those good works like the others who were accepted.

Pixie: Paul also tells us to “work out” our salvation with fear and trembling, because it is God who is working in us.

RA: You answered your own question and solved the problem at the same time with that one statement. 1. Paul didn’t say “work for” your salvation, did he? He said work it out – i.e., show it in life, work it out, move with it, through each day, be obedient, do good works unto others. Yes, we are to work it out, meaning we already have it! And now, we are to work that inner salvation outwardly in our lives to effect others. Awesome, isn’t it? Moreover, who does it say is doing the work in us? That would be God.

Pixie: I just read all of Romans 4 and didn’t find anything about “accept[ing] Jesus as your Lord and Savior” - which version are you using?

RA: The passage IN CONTEXT is about our salvation in Christ – read Romans 3 (our guilty place before God because of the Law), particularly Rom. 3:21 that starts talking about our God’s righteousness being revealed “apart from the law,” which leads into us being justified then “apart from works of the law” (v. 28). This leads directly into Chapter 4, which shows how someone can indeed be justified apart from the law and good works – i.e., Abraham. This is the model for showing how we, too, are justified in Christ.

Chapter 4 then talks about our justification in Christ.

Chapter 5 gives the results of that justification, which is a finished work by faith (chapter 4).

People, please, I beg you, read in context.

Pixie: So good works are important, aren’t they?

RA: For what they are intended to do, yes. But they are not FOR salvation. They are BECAUSE of salvation and show to the world the genuineness of one’s faith – i.e., whether it is a living or a dead faith; whether it is a true or false faith.

Pixie: the Reformation subtracted them from the original teachings of Jesus and His Apostles.

RA: That’s odd. i still seem to be doing good works all over the place…Hmmm.

**Pixie: **We cannot merit justification on our own, it is only by the Grace of God. He gives us His grace to do the works he has ordained for us. (Eph 2:10)

**RA: **Yes, yes, I know. I was once Roman Catholic myself. I understand the party line. The problem is that the Bible doesn’t say you are justified through good works done by God’s grace that is empowering you to do those good works. The Bible says that justification comes THROUGH Jesus Christ, his death on the Cross, and subsequent resurrection. Eternal life/justification is the FREE gift of God (Free means Free) that is appropriated through faith (i.e., like taking a present from someone).

AFTER justification is completed, the good works manifest themselves as a RESULT of the completed justification becuase you have become a slave to righteousness in Christ. You are STILL empowered by God to do those good works that does not change. WE AGREE ON THAT! Weeeeee!

Any and all good works that are done are ONLY capable by the empowerment of God. Cool. But you say those “good works” are still FOR salvation/justification to be justified before God (unbiblical), while I say those are “good works” are BECAUSE of salvation/justification to justify us before men (Paul/James).

That is the difference.

**Pixie: **Not I in my own strength, but God working through me.

**RA: **I never said RCs do “good works” under their own power.

BTW, Pixie, just FYI, the position you articulated has pretty much also spread throughout Mormonism. That is actually the whole Mormon teaching on “good works,” which you as a RC prety much echoed. Interesting.

R.A.
 
[BTW, Pixie, just FYI, the position you articulated has pretty much also spread throughout Mormonism. That is actually the whole Mormon teaching on “good works,” which you as a RC prety much echoed. Interesting.

R.A.
Oh oh… LOL!
[/quote]
 
Reformed: Oh oh… LOL!

RA: yeah, this actually marks a kind of shift in Mormonism away from a full-blown works righteousness to the RC position wherein the works do accomplish final justification/salvation (or in the LDS case, godhood), but the works are only able to be done/completed by God’s grace, which empowers them to do the works. Interesting.

R.A.
 
I suggest you read Matthew 25. Jesus tells us how He will separate the sheep from the goats.
You bring up an excellent point. Here’s one striking verse from that section of Matt. 25:

"Then the King will say to those on his right, 'Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world (Matt. 25:34).

As this portrayal by Christ unfolds He distinguishes between the “righteous” (who wind up in the fold with the “goats”) and those who fed and clothed the least of their brethren. The entire chapter is no different than what we learn in the discourse at John 15:1-6 or in the many references to the Pharisee’s throughout the NT.

However, as Christ hints at the outset of “The sheep and goats” it is only those whom are chosen from the foundation of the word who will do these things. Even more than that it is God who will cause us to do these things (see also Ezekiel 36:27).

The depictions we see in James are a tool for the elect to identify our brethren. It also provides us with a solid understanding that good works and obedience are a witness to an indwelling of the Holy Spirit.
Paul also tells us to “work out” our salvation with fear and trembling, because it is God who is working in us.
Yes, but John also tells us:

In this way, love is made complete among us so that we will have confidence on the day of judgment, because in this world we are like him. There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment. The one who fears is not made perfect in love (1 John 4:17-18).

So obviously there’s more to the idea of “fear and trembling” than you’re representing here. The fear we are to have of God should not take away from our confidence at the day of judgment. Paul also aptly points out this fact, in the many other letters where he uses the term “fear and trembling” (such as 2 Cor. 7 & 1 Cor. 2).

This was a charge Luther made against the church, as exemplified by these words:

“Therefore let us arm our hearts with these and similar statements of Scripture so that, when the devil accuses us by saying: You are a sinner; therefore you are damned, we can reply: The very fact that you say I am a sinner makes me want to be just and saved. Nay, you will be damned, says the devil. Indeed not, I reply, for I take refuge in Christ, who gave Himself for my sins. Therefore you will accomplish nothing, Satan, by trying to frighten me by setting the greatness of my sins before me and thus seducing me to sadness, doubt, despair, hatred, contempt, and blasphemy of God. Indeed, by calling me a sinner you are supplying me with weapons against yourself so that I can slay and destroy you with your own sword; for Christ died for sinners. Furthermore, you yourself proclaim the glory of God to me; you remind me of God’s paternal love for me, a miserable and lost sinner; for He so loved the world that He gave His Son (John 3:16). Again, whenever you throw up to me that I am a sinner, you revive in my memory the blessing of Christ, my Redeemer, on whose shoulders, and not on mine, lie all my sins; for “the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all” and “for the transgression of His people was He stricken” (Is. 53:6-8). Therefore when you throw up to me that I am a sinner, you are not terrifying me; you are comforting me beyond measure.” (What Luther Says 3:1315; ntrmin.org/Be%20a%20sinner%20and%20sin%20boldly%20web.htm#_edn30)).
True, saving faith works. Paul in Galatians calls it “faith working through love.” It’s not MY good works that will make me right with God, but God working through me “both to will and to do of His good pleasure.” The Church didn’t “add works” to salvation, the Reformation subtracted them from the original teachings of Jesus and His Apostles. We cannot merit justification on our own, it is only by the Grace of God. He gives us His grace to do the works he has ordained for us. (Eph 2:10)
You’re words, which I bolded, is exactly the right way to understand this idea. I would contend that neither Catholicism nor Luther actually understands or teaches this idea properly.

It is God who works in us both to will and to do for His good pleasure. Any works we do are actually God’s works performed through us, they are not our works.

The idea that man maintains any ability without God is the real fallacy here.
Not I in my own strength, but God working through me. That is the Catholic faith. You seem to be battling a straw man of your own making rather than authentic Catholicism.
I would say that your view is not the predominant view within Catholicism today – although I applaud your personal view and it is very much in line with Augustinian (and Calvinist) theology; IMO contemporary Catholicism has become very semi-pelagian in character. So I guess this is perhaps more an issue you need to address within your own faith community?

There are many reasons why I say this. I heard someone citing a priest on another thread here on CAF & the priest was explaining ways that we can help ourselves die (in a spiritual sense) so we can be reborn. When he said die I suppose he meant this as a form of penance and suffering. Frankly, I have no idea where any Christian would get such an idea from? IMO he has it backwards, taking up the cross is something those who are alive in Christ do, not those who are still dead in unbelief. This can only be wrought from an erroneous understanding of justification and sanctification in my view.

Without faith mankind is already dead. The law only helps us come to that realization. The Gospel offers the only means by which we may become alive. By grace through faith!
 
Although he has problems unrelated to his apologetic work, Robert Sungenis has written a Magnum Opus on the subject presently under scrutiny by Richard Abanes and company. The book is called “Not By Faith Alone A Study of the Catholic Doctrine of Justification”, published by Queenship Publishing Company, 1997.

A couple of articles by Sungenis on the same subject from his website:

catholicintl.com/epologetics/articles/justification/works1.htm

catholicintl.com/epologetics/articles/justification/sproul-just.htm

These might move the discussion along a bit. Sungenis has written or edited two other significant books, each of them monstrous in length and very slow reading. Just to be helpful: webforum discussions tend to re-invent the wheel over-and-over again, which may be useful for those of us who aren’t quite sure yet how a wheel actually works–but which can make a discussion tedious for those who have gotten the basics down somewhat better.

A head’s up on Sungenis–he tends to favor very severely conservative, even traditionalist Catholicism to the point that he has gone off the edge on some issues–a polite way of saying he has been alleged to be somewhat anti-Semitic at times, among other things. His apologetics don’t touch on such issues, but he does sully his reputation by the association.
 
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The same treatment applies to good works. God not only prepares us for good works but He also has prepared those works for us beforehand (or from the foundation of the world).

In other words when we do something good from an outpouring of faith, it is really God working in us both to will and to do for His good pleasure. In other words it’s God doing it not us. So the glory goes to God alone!
That’s why James said, if we do NOT do good works our faith is dead and it won’t save. Therefore it is NOT faith alone.
 
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