G
Gadgeteer
Guest
I guess I’m still not completely understanding how you perceive Scripture.Gadget:
Not to me.What if justification is complete, and was complete for Abraham, but is not fully received until one’s faith is complete? Therefore works are part of “completing one’s faith”, but are not actually part of the justification. Doesn’t that make sense of all of the verses?
Gadget:
But then you replied:Jesus either completed our justification on the Cross, or we have something of our own to add to what He did to justify us.
De Maria:
And that is exactly my confusion. To me, “we-have-something-to-add”, by definition means that Jesus’ sacrifice was insufficient. And that sounds opposite to Rom4:Yes. We have something to add.
De Maria:
Verse 4:2 says “If it was works, Abraham could brag”. And 4:3 “Abraham’s belief was credited as righteousness/justification”. How do you read that?Not the way we read it.
DeMaria:
Soooo — I am confused about which understanding you perceive?Gadget:
Exactly right. James2:19 “You believe God is one; you do well, (but) even demons believe and shudder.”… Works make our faith complete; and completed faith receive Jesus’ justification, finished for us on the Cross!
Do you agree, disagree, gadget-has-hit-the-bull’s-eye, or gadget is off base?![]()
Welllll, Paul is saying to “look at your works, your works will expose if you are in Christ (justified and sanctified and regenerated), or not”.So, is he asking, “Examine yourselves, test yourselves to see if you are justified. Do you not realize that Christ died for you, unless you fail the test?”
I don’t see that (you knew I was gonna say that!). We are either “in Christ” (and will display good works/deeds), or we are “in sin” (and ungodly works will manifest).It sounds to me as though he expects everyone to add something to their justification.
Ohhh, this is a sore point with me – I’m glad you brought it up! From blueletterbible, the Greek is:In fact, he uses the words, “add to your faith”, doesn’t he? In addition, he is speaking to people who are already justified.
παρεισφέρω/pareispherō (applying)
πᾶς/pas (all)
σπουδή/spoudē (diligence)
ἐν/en (in)
σύ/sy (your)
πίστις/pistis (faith)
ἐπιχορηγέω/epichorēgeō (supply)
[list of godly qualities]
New American Standard, “supply in your faith”. You see, if we read “ADD to your faith”, there is an implication that there is a saved faith which LACKS these qualities! No, they’re not optional; plainly stated Peter says “he who lacks these is blind/shortsighted/FORGOTTEN-former-purification-from-sins”! Then Peter continues, "as LONG as these godly qualities are yours you are useful and will not stumble/ptaio/BECOME-WRETCHED, in this way the gates of eternal life will be provided (and in no other way!).
And that is my “sore-spot”, the implication that we ADD TO our saved faith, the godly qualities. No, we “supply-IN-our-faith” — that is, we make sure we have the (saved!) kind of faith which HAS these qualities…
I don’t think so. He is merely using a shorthand way of speaking. Like we do when we say, “the sun rose”. We know the sun doesn’t actually rise, but the earth spins on its axis until the sun is again, visible. But its easier to say, the sun rose. So, its easier to say, “by works we are justified.” Because we assume that someone doing good works is doing them from faith.Gadget said:Does James “jump ship” and declare that justification is in some part by our own works of righteousness?
And that is what I said, "works do not justify us directly, but they justify us indirectly because they perfect our faith so that we are THEN (consequently!) justified.
…but I can’t fit that in with your statement, “we have something to add to what Jesus did on the Cross to justify us”.
They are all saying the same thing. This I know. We can compare two verses which are rarely compared but which show that St. James and St. Paul are saying the same thing:
Jams 1:22 Be doers of the word and not hearers only, deluding yourselves. 23 For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man who looks at his own face in a mirror. 24 He sees himself, then goes off and promptly forgets what he looked like. 25 But the one who peers into the perfect law[l] of freedom and perseveres, and is not a hearer who forgets but a doer who acts, such a one shall be blessed in what he does.
Romans 2:13 For it is not those who hear the law who are just in the sight of God; rather, those who observe the law will be justified.
You’re right. And to make that fit all of the “not-by-works” verses (Rom11:6, Eph2:8, Rom4:3 etcetera), it means that God justifies those who have the faith which produces those good and righteous deeds…Those say the same thing, right? In any case, Romans 2:13 again shows that God justifies those who do good and righteous deeds. But not those who don’t.
No. I don’t.Gadget said:As everyone already knows, I perceive “works-are-our-measure”, not part of justification. Does anyone disagree?
You do not disagree?
(Reminds me of a line from “Corpse Bride” — “No, I do not not want to be married! I mean, I do want to be married!”) :hypno:
Two reasons.
…or, perhaps, we continue in justification…
- Because if one has works to measure, one has faith and works.
- It shows that we are justified again, after we’ve already been justified before. Thus, continual justification.
(and you knew I was gonna say that too!!!)