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TertiumQuid
Guest
Hi Catholic Dude-
These responses are directed towards post 374.
Catholic Dude:
Catholic Dude:
Catholic Dude:
Catholic Dude:
Catholic Dude:
Catholic Dude:
Catholic Dude:
Catholic Dude:
Catholic Dude:
Regards,
James Swan
These responses are directed towards post 374.
Catholic Dude:
I’ve explained Luther to you repeatedly. I don’t know how you can possibly say this- unless of course you’re just kidding around at this point.I guess its the idea that a single moment of faith cant be considered instant complete justification if your not going to go out to do the work. The problem is thats what I hear a lot of protestants today say, and I see Luther almost, if not fully saying the same thing.
Catholic Dude:
Yes. 1 John 3:23 “This is his command: to believe in the name of His Son, Jesus Christ and to love one another as he commanded us.” 1 John 2:12 “I write to you dear children, because your sins have been forgiven on account of his name.” 1 John 5:13 “I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God so that you may know that you have eternal life.”That a moment of faith alone justifies totally and perfectly, (good works are supposed to follow but thats really secondary). The important point is AFTER that moment of FA can a person really tell themself that they are sure of their justification?
Catholic Dude:
I have never met a Roman Catholic who knows they are saved. In fact, the very well respected Roman Catholic theologian Ludwig Ott has said, “The reason for the uncertainty of the state of grace lies in this: that without a special revelation nobody can with certainty of faith know whether or not he has fulfilled all the conditions which are necessary for achieving justification.”I see people like “isfatherwrong” saying this very thing here, paraphrased loosely:" Im so glad that I can be assured of my justification, unlike you Catholic’s who are subject to doubts like ‘did I do enough’, etc".
Catholic Dude:
I say you would have every right to be mad. If you think your works somehow contribute to your eventual justification, if I’m right, everything you have done has been in vain. I might be kinda mad if it were me- mst probably I would be very relieved.Im not getting mad here, Im just trying to reconcile this idea that a single moment of faith is certain justification.
Catholic Dude:
Sin is any want of conformity unto, or transgression of, any law of God, given as a rule to the reasonable creature. (1 John 3:4, Gal. 3:10,12)And as I have said before it all hinges on the idea of what sin is,
Catholic Dude:
“Roman Catholic theology distinguishes between mortal and venial sins. A mortal sin removes your justification, and if you die with unconfessed mortal sin on your soul, you will be sent to hell. Venial sins only reduce your rewards or add to your time in purgatory. The Reformation rejected this works-orientation, but the Reformers did not reject the idea of degrees of sin. John Calvin said that all sin is mortal in the sense that it deserves death, but no sin is so severe that it can destroy the grace of justification. All sins are serious, though some sins are judged by both God and our society to be worse than others.” Source: Sproul, R. (2000, c1993). Vol. Book two: Before the face of God : Book two: A daily guide for living from the Gospel of Lukeis all sin “grave sin” or are there different degrees?
Catholic Dude:
Salvation is a gift- Gifts usually aren’t “hard”. They are things given to us that we didn’t earn or make ourselves. (See Ephesians 2:8-10)This doesnt make sense, how hard is being justified then?
Catholic Dude:
The Bible teaches that fallen man thinks believing in Jesus is foolish: read1 Corinthians: 1:18-31.It looks like it takes no effort at all then, if works are not part of it then what is left? Faith? How hard is it to have faith in Jesus? It should be easy enough for anyone. Yet is this what Jesus teaches?
Catholic Dude:
I find the response of those listening to Jesus in Matthew 18 quite telling: “Who then can be saved?” Indeed, those hearing Jesus realized if even a guy who (allegedly) kept almost all the commandments outwardly wasn’t close to being saved, no one was.This kind of mentality of faith—>Justification—>works by Luther flies in the face of what Jesus said to a crowd to which the people were so shocked they said in Lk18:26- "Then who can be saved?"Why would they ask such a question if there was instant justification and good works to follow?
Regards,
James Swan