S
Steven_Merten
Guest
Isfatherwrong?:
So you are saying that Protestants get “certainty of the state of grace” then even though they turn to grave sin and loose all thier faith, they still go to heaven? Once saved always saved is the phylosophy right? Even though one turns from faith and goes out and murders a thousand times a day or commits adultery a thousand times a day they still go to heaven, according to your phylosophy. One can use free will to hate God with all their heart and still go to heaven as long as they have at one time in life attained a “certainty of the state of grace”.
Yes we Catholics reject the “Once saved always saved” Protestant phylosophy.
We Catholics believe that if a baptized baby dies they go to heaven without the baby performing any works. Not even the work of “acccepting Jesus as their personal saviour” is needed. As the baptized grow older, if they turn to unrepentant mortal sin, they can loose their state of grace. Baptized who turn to sin can come back to a state of grace again through repentance and the sacrament of reconciliation.
Isfatherwrong?:I say our good works have ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with getting us to heaven when it comes to our being accepted before God, for if Abraham was justified by works he had something to boast about - but not before God. Our “justification by works” on the last day is for the benefit of the world ONLY - just like the woman in in Luke who washed Jesus’ feet with her tears. The Pharisees were so blind (as is the unbelieving world) that they needed to see that evidence of her love for Jesus so Jesus could make the point that HER FAITH had saved her.
I say all of this while simultaneously saying that sin drives out faith and that Christians can lose their faith in Christ for the forgiveness of sins. I don’t deny that sin has crouched at the door of many Christians (not just Protestants), has been welcomed in, and has driven out true faith and trust in Jesus Christ. Many who believe they are Christians likely have an imaginary friend named “Jesus” who as Paul would say, is no Jesus at all.
Hello isfatherwrong,At a glance, I think the one thing you’re missing in all this is the one thing that I think is the most important issue: certainty of the state of grace.
So you are saying that Protestants get “certainty of the state of grace” then even though they turn to grave sin and loose all thier faith, they still go to heaven? Once saved always saved is the phylosophy right? Even though one turns from faith and goes out and murders a thousand times a day or commits adultery a thousand times a day they still go to heaven, according to your phylosophy. One can use free will to hate God with all their heart and still go to heaven as long as they have at one time in life attained a “certainty of the state of grace”.
Yes we Catholics reject the “Once saved always saved” Protestant phylosophy.
We Catholics believe that if a baptized baby dies they go to heaven without the baby performing any works. Not even the work of “acccepting Jesus as their personal saviour” is needed. As the baptized grow older, if they turn to unrepentant mortal sin, they can loose their state of grace. Baptized who turn to sin can come back to a state of grace again through repentance and the sacrament of reconciliation.