Susanlo. You asked . . .
But how many works does it take to become justified?
Well how much
faith does it take to become justified?
Faith “the size of a mustard seed”? Or more?
In Luke 17:5 when the Apostles asked Jesus to “increase our faith” do you think that supplication was superfluous?
We already saw Judas was implicitly described as having “little” (not “no” and not “none”) faith.
The truth is God doesn’t save us (initially) BECAUSE of our faith (or our works).
He saves us in virtue of His mercy.
But once we are saved, once we are “in the Vine”, once we are gifted with unearned “talents”, once we are IN JESUS, it’s a different story.
Then it is a situation of “to whom much is GIVEN, much will be REQUIRED.”
Once we are in Christ Jesus, we are expected by the graces He continually gives us, to GROW in faith. To grow in hope. To grow in charity.
That’s exactly WHY St. Paul says of faith, hope, and charity, ABIDE these
three.
And then St. Paul says something that NONE of my Baptist teachers would ever dream of saying.
St. Paul says the GREATEST virtue of these three is not faith.
But the greatest virtue of these is . . . . charity (love) says St. Paul.
(“If you love me you will keep my commandments”–Jesus)
If we were justified by faith ALONE, St. Paul should never have said “love” or “charity” was the greatest virtue.
St. Paul SHOULD have said, of faith, hope, and charity abide these three but the greatest of these is . . . .FAITH. FAITH because after all, faith and faith ALONE is how we are justified. And what could be more important to us than our justification?
But St. Paul DIDN’T say that.
And the argument that this is a “false faith” in 1st Corinthians 13 doesn’t pursuade either because St. Paul says in that same context to “ABIDE” in it.
He would never tell us to “ABIDE” in a false faith.
Now you COULD say . . .
“OK. After we are IN Christ, how many works does it take to keep being justified?”
But it could be asked the same question about “faith” too.
But those are the wrong questions. We don’t know. That’s part of WHY we undergo judgment. God knows. But we don’t know how “much” faith it takes. We don’t know the extent of hope or charity either.
But those in Christ have a moral assurance of our salvation.
Not an apodictic certitude. Not metaphysical certainty.
St. Paul doesn’t have that himself.
1st CORINTHIANS 4:2-4 2 Moreover it is required of stewards that they be found trustworthy. 3 But with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged by you or by any human court.
I do not even judge myself. 4 I am not aware of anything against myself, but I am not thereby acquitted. It is the Lord who judges me.
1st CORINTHIANS 9:26-27 26 Well, I do not run aimlessly, I do not box as one beating the air; 27 but I pommel my body and subdue it, lest after preaching to others
I myself should be disqualified.
“Disqualified” or “adokimos” is a word that means someone who won’t have salvation.
But St. Paul and other Catholic Christians DO have a moral certitude of our salvation.