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Gottle_of_Geer
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Many protestant doctrines go against what the Holy Spirit has said in the bible. For example the Spirit says “not by faith alone” clearly in the bible, but they say “by faith alone.”
Different things are being talked about, that’s why. That is like equating all assertions that Jesus is man, with the assertion that He is nothing more than man - context is essential.
Yet they consider all scripture inspired. However there beliefs do not believe this. For the doctrine of faith alone raises faith above charity which is not correct.
It does no such thing…
##…because there can be no charity, if there is not already faith in Christ. Faith is what makes charity possible. Or do we say that those who are without faith, who are therefore not reconciled to the Father, can have the charity which is possible only once one is united with the Father through Christ ? In that case, Caiaphas & Herod & Pilate & the other murderers of Christ could love Christ without having faith in him; for if we can, so might they. The teaching of 1 Cor. 13 remains intact - some Catholics appear to overlook Hebrews 11. ##Charity is an action not only internal. Faith and hope are temporary, though good, but charity will last forever.
The OSAS doctrine is EXTREMELY DANGEROUS in the sense that not everyone precieves it the same way. While some Protestants understand the need to ask for forgiveness, some do not feel the need to.
The Calvinistic doctrine that you should not pray is against the Bible since the many times the letters in the New Testament say “Pray Always.”
Then why did Calvin, and why do Calvinists, insist on the need for prayer ? It is simply wrong to accuse them of teaching that we do not need to pray. Calvin wrote about it, & so did John Bunyan, Vincent, Jonathan Edwards, the Westminster Confession of Faith & the documents that go with it; and many others, from the Puritans to today.
Here is some of Calvin’s writing on prayer:ccel.org/c/calvin/prayer/prayer.html
And for much more on prayer, including:
Calvin on the Necessity of Prayer:
“…We clearly see how destitute and devoid of all good things man is, and how he lacks all aids to salvation. Therefore, if he seeks resources to succor him in his need, he must go outside himself and get them elsewhere…But after we have been instructed by faith to recognize that whatever we need and whatever we lack is in God, and in our Lord Jesus Christ, in whom the Father willed all the fullness of his bounty to abide [cf. Col. 1:19; John 1:16] so that we may all draw from it as from an overflowing spring, it remains for us to seek in him, and in prayers to ask of him, what we have learned to be in him.”
Calvin, ‘Institutes of the Christian Religion’, III.xx.1
- go to: .htmlcalvin
Jesus even prayed himself and he is our brother and our example.