Hi Julie,I would also like to know. I am in full agreement with the Catholic Church’s position on faith AND works, and reject the Lutheran “faith alone” position. This is the primary source of scripture that I often use with other Lutherans to have them reconcile this with “faith alone”…I’m interested to see some responses.![]()
And what is your view on the difference between the Catholic view of “faith and works” and the Lutheran view of “faith alone”?
I’ll let Catholic speak of “faith and works”, but the Lutheran view of faith alone is clearly described in the Epitome. Luther, however, also speaks of faith working through love:
Faith alone is the expression of our understanding that justification is only by grace through faith in Christ. And that is the only thing it is about. Faith is the way we access justification, not by our own means, merits and actions, but by the grace of God, for Christ’s sake.Faith must of course be sincere. It must be a faith that performs good works through love. If faith lacks love it is not true faith. Thus the Apostle bars the way of hypocrites to the kingdom of Christ on all sides. He declares on the one hand, “In Christ Jesus circumcision availeth nothing,” i.e., works avail nothing, but faith alone, and that without any merit whatever, avails before God. On the other hand, the Apostle declares that without fruits faith serves no purpose. To think, “If faith justifies without works, let us work nothing,” is to despise the grace of God. Idle faith is not justifying faith. In this terse manner Paul presents the whole life of a Christian. Inwardly it consists in faith towards God, outwardly in love towards our fellow-men.
What faith alone is not, is a license to merely proclaim faith and not have actions that are a part of faith. Above, Luther says, “To think, “If faith justifies without works, let us work nothing,” is to despise the grace of God. Idle faith is not justifying faith.”
Also, in the often quoted preface to St. James, Luther counters the argument that “faith alone, combined with faith without works is dead, means Luther thought a dead faith can save”, by saying: We say that justification is effective without works, not that faith is without works. For that faith which lacks fruit is not an efficacious but a reigned faith. “Without works” is ambiguous, then. For that reason this argument settles nothing. It is one thing that faith justifies without works; it is another thing that faith exists without works.”
A saving faith must have good works, but it is not the works that save.
Jon
