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Assurance
Guest
When understood correctly, how true. God justifies not the “righteous”, who need no doctor, but rather the wicked (the evil men Jesus, who is the only One who is good, speaks of in Matthew 7). He regenerates them as well, but he does not justify them because they are regenerated. His Word alone justifies. Regeneration is an effect of this justification, but does not constitute our acceptance or justification before God.Luther
Whoever teaches that good works are indispensable unto salvation, that to gain heaven a person must suffer afflictions and follow the example of Christ and of the saints, is a minister of the Law, of sin, wrath, and of death
When small sins are considered small, they become great.but I do remember some protestant posts in this thread explaining that for Luther any sin was grave sin
I even read in this thread that Luther even considered temptations as sins.
Do you think all the evils from within man (Mark 7) are just temptations to sin and not already sin themselves? Do you not worry, on ocassion, that you have perhaps been deceived here? Whoever has lusted has committed adultery… Whoever is angry with his brother…. Catholic Dude, don’t go down this path.
Catholic Dude:
But how can a person say “we are only unworthy servants – we have only done what you required” if they believe in works of superrogation?Also “believing” in Jesus doesnt mean a single prayer and instant justification, it means do you believe He is your Lord?..then OBEY what he says and you will be rewarded just as He says. Faith Alone has no grounds here at all, for it rests entirely on words, just like the second son.
Quote:
TertiumQuid: None of us keeps the Great Commandment for five minutes. We may think that we do in a surface way, but upon a moment’s reflection it is clear that none of us loves God with our whole heart or our whole mind or our whole strength. No one loves his neighbor as he loves himself. We may do everything in our power to avoid thinking about this at a deep level, but there is always that nagging sense in the back of our minds to accuse us of the certain knowledge that in fact we violate the Great Commandment every day.
CD: This is totally unChristian and unBiblical. As I have said before, show me where the Bible even hints that Christians cant avoid doing evil for 5 minutes. This kind of talk is anti Gospel for it gives people the impression that sins cant be avoided and that pleasing God is impossible.
This is just amazing to me, where is the hope, desire to do good, love, etc with the way Luther is talking? This leads to total devistation of the worst level. And as I concluded from the earliest posts, FA was not the issue, it was the solution. This is truly a disease and unChristian attitude to teach people we cant avoid sin for five minutes and that as Christians we all break the greatest commandment every day.
You then, though you are evil know how to give good gifts to your children. (Matthew 7)This total depravity is unChristian on all levels, not one passage of the words of Jesus will give people such an impression.
Show us one passage from Jesus that indicates this depraved attitude, JUST ONE!
Quote:
Tertium Quid: 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.”
Catholic Dude – this is basically what Lutherans believe. Further, TertiumQuid’s quote here shows how in official Catholic teaching, one may not have absolute assurance that one currently resides in God’s grace.Catholic Dude: There is a distinction that needs to be made here. Catholics believed we are saved, being saved, and will be saved. The issue your talking about here lies on the “will be saved” aspect.
Here is an example that I have used before, a man has fallen in a pit and is falling down down down, Jesus throws him a rope, the man grabs on and the man is saved, but is not out of the pit. The man is being pulled up out of the pit, being saved, but is not out of the pit. The man will finally be taken out of the pit for good, will be saved. When the man disobeys Jesus he chooses to resist the work Jesus is doing by pulling him out, if it is a bad enough sin its like he let go of that rope. Jesus will not abandon him and toss the rope to him again if the man requests. The man is never sure he is going to make out of the pit, not because Jesus is not trustworthy, but because the man has the option to turn away at any time.