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MarkBrown
Guest
For clarification, I am a former protestant minister both Anglican and Southern Baptist.I was discussing this issue with a friend who is a faithful Baptist. Even as a Prostestant, I’ve had a difficult time wrapping my mind around “faith alone”, so I asked her perspective. It is that once a person commits their life to God through baptism and proclamation, they are saved. The only end to this salvation is an outright denial of God’s grace. This means that everyone who does this goes directly to heaven.
So my question was, what about men like Dennis Rader (A.K.A. “BTK”), who viciously stalked, murdered, tortured, and killed over a dozen people? He was baptized and attended church every Sunday; he was a deacon in his church and I can’t find anywhere that says he’s renounced God. Is he going straight to heaven, just like someone with the virtue of Theresa of Calcutta? Yes, she says, because Jesus died for our sins on the cross.
I threw out the possibility that maybe someone of that calibur could use our prayers for mercy, and that this person may have to (at best) pay a price in purgatory to cleanse himself of his sins against God. No, she says, for that is assuming that we have to work for our mercy. I ask what keeps us bound to God’s laws, especially the 10 commandments, and she says that we do this because God says to.
I am very confused. Am I misunderstanding the perspective of “faith alone”? I don’t want to start an argument, I just want to understand this for future reference. Many of my family members are Baptists and, as my reconciliation with the Catholic church becomes known, I will be having this conversation regularly.
Your friend is mixing or confusing faith alone with once saved always saved. Many protestants and catholics confuse the two.
Faith alone deals with salvation. Protestants, and as a minister I was taught, to pick a verse or collection of verses and from there a doctrine or theology is formed. These verses are usually taken out of the content in which they were written either the epistle or gospel or secular history. One such passage is Romans 4:1-4 where St Paul talks about Abraham’s faith and how it appears Abraham did nothing working out his salvation. It would appear ST Paul contradicts Jesus when Jesus responds to the young man in Matt 19:17 by telling him to keep God’s commandments if he wanted to enter enteral life.
What some protestants are doing out of their great love for God is going to far, like some in the early church when too far one way or the other in Christology. To protect God they feel they have to take away the gift or curse of freewill. Some go too far the other way with process theology in which free will trumps God and God has no idea what we are going to do and even if Christ will be successful upon the cross.
Faith Alone I can see and understand with out agreeing. But Once saved always saved is a theology most protestants reject. The more baptistic or fundamentalist the more the group is into OSAS. They believe if you walk the aisle, say the prayer and ask Jesus into your heart you are saved. They take verses like Jesus saying those the father has given me I will not cast aside or lose, etc. What they fail to understand is are they assuming they are inthe hands of Christ. Just because you did a certain ritual, it does not bind Christ to your will or desires. In Matt 7:20-25 Jesus talks about those who have the outward signs but not the inward change.
As a Baptist minister, I buried many people who lived outwardly evil lives. Lives rejecting Christ and God and all of the teachings. But, because when they were 8 years old and walked an aisle and said a prayer…they were saved and are now in heavy. Even if in the subsequent 80 years they lived like a demon.
Again most protestants reject OSAS. Your friend is in a minority group, they are vocal that is why they seem so numerous, that hold to this non-scriptural teaching.
Salvation is a work, a constant work. Jesus on the cross was a work. Someone presenting the gospel to us a work. our acceptance or not a work and how we live our lives a work. Not a burden at all.
My 2 cents.
Mark