L
Lucretius
Guest
Moments ago I was given this insight:
In the beginning, God created everything by the Spirit, the Giver of Life, through the Word, the Son, from and with the Father, creator of all things visible and invisible, from no thing else, with no obligation to do so.
Since salvation is recreation, rebirth, into sons of God, to say that we can be saved somehow without absolute, freely given grace, is saying that we can recreate ourselves, which is like saying we can create ourselves. It was really Adam who formed the clay, and it was really Adam who breathed life into himself!
In other words, just as creation was ex nihilo, so recreation be. It follows that grace must be as absolute, freely given now as it was in the beginning.
My questions are: did any Fathers or Doctors view, approach, and word the doctrines of grace like this? This seems too juicy to be something that that originates with me. I usually find that any “original” thoughts I have or figure out myself were already thought of by St. Augustine, St. Thomas, etc., all ready, and usually explained more clearly and connect insightful to many other truths.
Second, how do you think this account might relate to the relationship between human freedom and grace? (And yes, I know I’m opening up a can of worms, but I’m not familiar with the Thomist-Molinism debates).
Thank you. Christi pax
In the beginning, God created everything by the Spirit, the Giver of Life, through the Word, the Son, from and with the Father, creator of all things visible and invisible, from no thing else, with no obligation to do so.
Since salvation is recreation, rebirth, into sons of God, to say that we can be saved somehow without absolute, freely given grace, is saying that we can recreate ourselves, which is like saying we can create ourselves. It was really Adam who formed the clay, and it was really Adam who breathed life into himself!
In other words, just as creation was ex nihilo, so recreation be. It follows that grace must be as absolute, freely given now as it was in the beginning.
My questions are: did any Fathers or Doctors view, approach, and word the doctrines of grace like this? This seems too juicy to be something that that originates with me. I usually find that any “original” thoughts I have or figure out myself were already thought of by St. Augustine, St. Thomas, etc., all ready, and usually explained more clearly and connect insightful to many other truths.
Second, how do you think this account might relate to the relationship between human freedom and grace? (And yes, I know I’m opening up a can of worms, but I’m not familiar with the Thomist-Molinism debates).
Thank you. Christi pax