Hey Brian - I’ll wrestle with ya on this works stuff, and I promise to be nice

Your green, Im black. Let me start by bringing up one of your last posts:
Can 32 says that men can help earn salvation by good works. If this is what the RCC teaches (like OTT says) then embrace and defend it, don’t try to dance around it.
Please **remember here that faith and good works are inseparable to a **
Catholic. I take James at face value when he says faith without works is dead. Your comment that James concerns “justification to other people” is unconvincing to me. It would seem like a uselessly confusing way for God to make an irrelevant point if what you say is true…
I’ll try and restate what I think is being said in Can 32:
Part 1
If anyone says that the good works of the justified man (ie in Christ, no?) are the gifts of God and that they are not also the good merits of that man – let him be anathema
OK so it seems to be saying that good works are not only the gift of God, but that the man who performs them gets merit for doing them. Im OK with that - the perpective changes when Faith and Works are linked
Part 2(after or)
If anyone says that the good works (which are only performed through the Grace of God and the merits of Jesus Christ) of the justified man (who is of the Body of Christ) do not merit an increase of Grace and glory: and also the attainment of eternal life (as long as he remains in a state of grace until he dies) – let him be anathema.
I think you may have created some ambiguity by saying “help earn salvation”. The good works, of themselves, don’t do that. Everything I read was predicated upon Gods grace and Christs merit first and foremost, and then the discussion of the
justified man doing works as a means of cooperating with God’s initiative. So in this light your statement that we can help EARN salvation through our works is innaccurate. They can only keep us on the path(of Grace) that was provided by God and in that sense they are part of that process. An expression of our faith perhaps?
We cannot merit the grace of justification. However, the Catholic Church teaches that there is a spiritual benefit or advantage (aka merit) for those who act as co-workers with God once they are justified. …
Ugh? Clear this up for me please: Does the RCC teach that the believer pleads only the merits of Christ for salvation or does it teach that the beleiver pleads the merits of Christ plus the merits of their own good works done in grace for salvation? I’m not talking about rewards, just about salvation - heaven or hell.
There is no talk of “pleading” in Can 32.
But let me ask you this - Is it a given that “pleading the merits of Christ” and “pleading the merits of Christ…and good works done in grace” are two distinct things? Im not sure that I can do a “good work” separate from Christ. You know…Gal 2:20 "I have been crucified with Christ, yet I live, no longer I, but Christ lives in me…"So here we have a little problem: you appear to have established a distinction which may not exist for me! Why don’t you tell me what you mean by “pleading the merits of Christ”. I will take this opportunity to say that “pleading the merits” of Christ’s Crucifixion is what Mass is all about. The eternal, once for all sacrifice of the Crucifixion is made present, applied to our current needs and offered to the Father. Let’s not drift on that topic though…