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Part 2
Justification (continued)
It is not a figure of speech: we are really made partakers of the divine nature. St. Augustine says, “He descended that we might ascend, and whilst retaining his own divine nature, he partook of our human nature, that we, while keeping our own nature, might become partakers of his. “O felix culpa” – Oh happy fault. The ceiling of the Sistine Chapel shows God touching Adam with his finger, and in touching us has transformed us into something like himself. For that purpose, the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity became man and gave us ‘power to be made sons of God”.
In Catholicism, we stress the fact, and rejoice in it that grace makes us truly sons of God, and heirs of the kingdom of heaven. Before Christ can sanctify us and make us sons of God, we must ‘receive’ him and believe in his name. St. Paul says that the just man lives by faith, and we are ‘children of God by faith in Christ Jesus’.
The Catholic doctrine is very different from the Protestant Doctrine. Luther held that faith alone brought Justification, to the exclusion of all good works. “Good works’ were impossible, according to his theory of the essential corruption of our nature. And his faith was not so much an intellectual assent to the divinity of Christ and the Redemption, as a personal persuasion that our sins are ‘covered over’ and no longer imputed to us.
We must not be confused by the importance Luther placed on accepting Christ as our redeemer with the vicious character of his theory which leads to the inevitable disregard to the moral law.
No man can have faith in Christ unless the grace of God first draw him. It is for man to accept or to reject this grace. If he accepts it, he is led on to make a true act of faith, that is, he is led by God to believe what has been divinely revealed. With this faith, he is led to hope in God and to love him, and to urn his heart away from sin. Thus, under the influence of actual grace, a soul is prepared for Justification. Hence, it is not a matter of faith only, but of faith which leads to hope and love, and genuine sorrow; yet, faith is the foundation of the whole process. All is now ready for incorporation in Christ, which will bring life to the soul.
It is a fundamental principle of Catholic theology that we can do nothing of ourselves towards salvation, and this is true of the growth in grace. We can correspond with grace; and by corresponding with grace we can increase the supernatural life which we already possess.
It is clear this is clear from the teaching of the NT.
Peter says (2Pet 3: 18) “Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ”. Protestant Justification does not allow growth: our sins are either imputed to us or they are not. St. Peter’s passage and similar others are meaningless unless there be a supernatural life in which we go from virtue to virtue, are renewed from day to day, and thus become more and more justified. The fact is that we can grow in grace as the result of our own efforts, the question arises: How do our efforts bring about this increase? Our answer is by meriting an increase of grace that we are able to develop our supernatural life. Our efforts do not actually produce the increase, but God grants it as a reward. And with the increase of sanctifying grace there is a corresponding increase in the infused Virtues and the Gifts of the Holy Spirit, all as a result of merit.
God alone gives grace and God alone increases it. The increase can be merited, and it is in this sense that with the help of God, our own actions can bring about the growth of the life of grace.
Remember, the increase in grace may be merited by us, but is not directly produced by us.
Protestants deny that there is such a thing as merit.
The Christian soul has it with his powers to increase the treasure of grace, which has been committed to him. He can pray for it, he can approach the sacraments with the knowledge that these are the divinely instituted means of advancing in grace, and he can exercise himself in good works.
peace