Some Catholics accept justification(initial ) by faith alone per

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The he needs to explain 1 Macc, Ecclesiasticus, Judith, and others where no doctrinal issues exists.

Actually, he didn’t remove them. They are in his translation. I’ve read his prefaces, and no where does he state that doctrine changed his mind about them. In fact, he held the same views prior to 1517, prior to Leipzig, etc.
Finally, if doctrine were the main factor, then three questions:
  1. Why did he include them in his translation, and encourage Christians to read and study them?
  2. Why did he exclude the ones that did not have these alleged doctrinal problems?
  3. Why did the Lutheran Confessions not exclude them? The Augsburg Confession and Apology dealt specifically with issues between the reformers and the papacy. The canon of scripture is not included as an issue?
Apocrypha is a separation. We can use semantics about intent and say it is inclusion, yet we still see his mindset made fairly clear in post number 38.

Either way, there’s no authority there to do any of the above.
 
Apocrypha is a separation. We can use semantics about intent and say it is inclusion, yet we still see his mindset made fairly clear in post number 38 (with limited research).

Either way, there’s no authority there to do any of the above.
I think sometimes Catholics use “authority” as a side door to not talk about the issues, just like protestants sometimes ignore authority in the same way.

For Luther and for Lutherans and others, it wasn’t a matter of semantics, inclusion or exclusion. It was and is a matter of viewing the disputed books (disputed prior to the Reformation era) with respect for the early Church. Luther, in the start of his preface says,
** Though this epistle of St. James was rejected by the ancients, I praise it and consider it a good book, because it sets up no doctrines of men but vigorously promulgates the law of God. **
Recognizing that some in the Church disputed James, for example, isn’t cause to “throw it out”, and therefore he didn’t. But he shares his opinion about the authorship, and why he believes it.
He finishes by saying:
** In a word, he wanted to guard against those who relied on faith without works, but was unequal to the task in spirit, thought, and words. He mangles the Scriptures and thereby opposes Paul and all Scripture. He tries to accomplish by harping on the law what the apostles accomplish by stimulating people to love. Therefore I cannot include him among the chief books, though I would not thereby prevent anyone from including or extolling him as he pleases, for there are otherwise many good sayings in him. **

Two things:
  1. Luther here defends the doctrine of works, as James states it - faith without works is dead. That is typically glossed over.
  2. He recognizes that, why he doesn’t count as one of his, many consider James to be a chief book.
He doesn’t say. or even act to remove James. And the same can be said of the DC’s.
The “separation” you speak of is more of a distinction between books that are and continue to be scripture, and if they are read at mass, included in instruction, etc., then they indeed can be called canon.

Jon
 
I think sometimes Catholics use “authority” as a side door to not talk about the issues, just like protestants sometimes ignore authority in the same way.

For Luther and for Lutherans and others, it wasn’t a matter of semantics, inclusion or exclusion. It was and is a matter of viewing the disputed books (disputed prior to the Reformation era) with respect for the early Church. Luther, in the start of his preface says,
** Though this epistle of St. James was rejected by the ancients, I praise it and consider it a good book, because it sets up no doctrines of men but vigorously promulgates the law of God. **
Recognizing that some in the Church disputed James, for example, isn’t cause to “throw it out”, and therefore he didn’t. But he shares his opinion about the authorship, and why he believes it.
He finishes by saying:
** In a word, he wanted to guard against those who relied on faith without works,** but was unequal to the task in spirit, thought, and words. He mangles the Scriptures and thereby opposes Paul and all Scripture. He tries to accomplish by harping on the law what the apostles accomplish by stimulating people to love. Therefore I cannot include him among the chief books, though I would not thereby prevent anyone from including or extolling him as he pleases, for there are otherwise many good sayings in him.

Two things:
  1. Luther here defends the doctrine of works, as James states it - faith without works is dead. That is typically glossed over.
  2. He recognizes that, why he doesn’t count as one of his, many consider James to be a chief book.
He doesn’t say. or even act to remove James. And the same can be said of the DC’s.
The “separation” you speak of is more of a distinction between books that are and continue to be scripture, and if they are read at mass, included in instruction, etc., then they indeed can be called canon.

Jon
He just “mangles the Scriptures”, too…
 
See post number 38.
Not sure how that “mangles” James. He states his opinion. I don’t happen to agree with him, and I think he here overreacts to what he sees as the Catholic Church of his time overemphasizing works. But I don’t see it as mangling at all. There were others who questioned the authorship. That’s not mangling either.
 
Not sure how that “mangles” James. He states his opinion. I don’t happen to agree with him, and I think he here overreacts to what he sees as the Catholic Church of his time overemphasizing works. But I don’t see it as mangling at all. There were others who questioned the authorship. That’s not mangling either.
Read it again. He said James mangles the scriptures and opposes Paul.
 
Read it again. He said James mangles the scriptures and opposes Paul.
Matt,
Yes, and I said I disagree with him on the point. He also only uses this preface once, in his 1522 NT translation. I’m not sure what you’re driving at. Luther sees James as contradicting the whole of scripture, particularly Paul, when he speaks of justification through works. Paul never speaks of works in that way.

Jon
 
Matt,
Yes, and I said I disagree with him on the point. He also only uses this preface once, in his 1522 NT translation. I’m not sure what you’re driving at. Luther sees James as contradicting the whole of scripture, particularly Paul, when he speaks of justification through works. Paul never speaks of works in that way.

Jon
OK… Now read the last sentence.

“I will not have him in my Bible to be numbered among the true chief books”

Luther was trying to keep James out based on Luther’s own doctrine.

He was deeming James as unacceptable because he didn’t line up with his own views on justification and his own interpretation of Paul.

Therefore, based on that, it couldn’t possibly be of apostolic origin - according to him.
 
OK… Now read the last sentence.

“I will not have him in my Bible to be numbered among the true chief books”

Luther was trying to keep James out based on Luther’s own doctrine.

He was deeming James as unacceptable because he didn’t line up with his own views on justification and his own interpretation of Paul.

Therefore, based on that, it couldn’t possibly be of apostolic origin - according to him.
He’s talking about his own personal view - his “chief books”. He wasn’t trying to keep it out of the Bible. If that was his goal, all he had to do was not translate it and include it. Don’t read more than what’s here. At the end, he lets you know this is his personal opinion. The partial quote you have here finishes with,** “… though I would not thereby prevent anyone from including or extolling him as he pleases, for there are otherwise many good sayings in him.”**
Luther is giving a personal opinion. I disagree with his opinion, but not his right to have one.

Jon
 
He’s talking about his own personal view - his “chief books”. He wasn’t trying to keep it out of the Bible. If that was his goal, all he had to do was not translate it and include it. Don’t read more than what’s here. At the end, he lets you know this is his personal opinion. The partial quote you have here finishes with,** “… though I would not thereby prevent anyone from including or extolling him as he pleases, for there are otherwise many good sayings in him.”**
Luther is giving a personal opinion. I disagree with his opinion, but not his right to have one.

Jon
The other Protestants opposed him, so he backed down.

The words are clearly there.

“I will not have him in my bible.”
 
Yes, I’m serious. From whom has Dave received “flak” for this view? On what official or respected sources do they base their objections?
Well Robert Sungenis for one and that was when he was in the good graces of Catholic. And if you know Mr Sungenis it is fond of quoting Trent and other sources.
Dave’s view on this is the standard, mainstream Catholic view. Based on this post of his, it looks like he got flak from some Catholic commenter for using what sounded like Protestant language. But that appears to have been an uninformed, knee-jerk reaction.
Well it seems even Dave in that article was not making the case that this is a standard Catholic view, but instead he was making the case that it could be used with the correct qualifiers.
So I’ll rephrase: I don’t think any well-informed, theologically educated Catholic would disagree that the “first grace” cannot be earned. Merit in Catholicism is always about how grace works in you (with your cooperation) to make you worthy of further grace. You can’t merit the initial gift.
I don’t know if Sungenis meets the criteria of “well-informed, theologically educated” but he is one. Also if you read any Catholic vs Protestant debate on justification you never hear the Catholics claim initial justification is by faith alone, even in the examples from Scripture where it clearly is by faith alone. Instead they resort to some form of explanation where faith itself is a work or hearing or breathing or the person was not dead so they were doing something. If that tactic is not used they resort to some type of defense that “faith alone” is not mentioned.

I will have to check my copy of the debate where Patrick Madrid, Robert Sungenis, and William Marshner presented the Catholic position to see if they affirmed it. I don’t think they did, but it has been a while since I listened to it.
 
SolaScriptura - have you read these yet?
Pope Benedict XVI on the subjects of Faith and Works in St. Paul

vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/audiences/2008/documents/hf_ben-xvi_aud_20081119_en.html (part 1)

vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/audiences/2008/documents/hf_ben-xvi_aud_20081126_en.html (scroll down) (part 2)

Plus earlier one:

vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/audiences/2006/documents/hf_ben-xvi_aud_20061108_en.html

Take the time to read through them all slowly…they can help one understand what we believe.
 
Well Robert Sungenis for one and that was when he was in the good graces of Catholic. And if you know Mr Sungenis it is fond of quoting Trent and other sources.
Well, you’ve shown me that my initial statement was too strong. I stand by the revised version, though. Sungenis has pretty uniformly bad judgment and is a marginal figure these days (thank goodness).
Well it seems even Dave in that article was not making the case that this is a standard Catholic view, but instead he was making the case that it could be used with the correct qualifiers.
He’s arguing that the language could be used, because Trent clearly affirms that the first grace cannot be earned. Chapter 8 of the Decree on Justification seems pretty clear to me: "But when the Apostle says that man is justified by faith and freely,[44] these words are to be understood in that sense in which the uninterrupted unanimity of the Catholic Church has held and expressed them, namely, that we are therefore said to be justified by faith, because faith is the beginning of human salvation, the foundation and root of all justification, without which it is impossible to please God[45] and to come to the fellowship of His sons; and we are therefore said to be justified gratuitously, because none of those things that precede justification, whether faith or works, merit the grace of justification.

For, if by grace, it is not now by works, otherwise, as the Apostle says, grace is no more grace.[46]"
I don’t know if Sungenis meets the criteria of “well-informed, theologically educated”
Not in my book 😃
but he is one. Also if you read any Catholic vs Protestant debate on justification you never hear the Catholics claim initial justification is by faith alone, even in the examples from Scripture where it clearly is by faith alone. Instead they resort to some form of explanation where faith itself is a work or hearing or breathing or the person was not dead so they were doing something. If that tactic is not used they resort to some type of defense that “faith alone” is not mentioned.
Because they understand the debate to be about whether anything other than faith has any causal role in justification at any point. And these are all valid arguments.

But as Trent says, faith is the beginning. Nothing that precedes faith (and indeed not faith itself) can merit God’s grace. But once God’s grace is infused into the believer, it transforms the will so that our actions are done by God in us and “merit” further grace, in the sense that they make us the kind of people in whom God’s Spirit can increasingly dwell. (I don’t like the word “merit” myself, but coming from a Wesleyan background, when I actually read Trent carefully and came to understand the historical background of the language I realized that there wasn’t much of a divide between what I had been brought up to believe and what the Church taught.)

Edwin
 
SolaScriptura - have you read these yet?

Originally Posted by Bookcat View Post
Pope Benedict XVI on the subjects of Faith and Works in St. Paul

vatican.va/holy_father/be…081119_en.html (part 1)

vatican.va/holy_father/be…081126_en.html (scroll down) (part 2)

Plus earlier one:

vatican.va/holy_father/be…061108_en.html

Take the time to read through them all slowly…they can help one understand what we believe.
Wow!! The first two paragraphs of that first link was so moving and written so beautiful!! All I could say was Amen and Amen!! This is pretty encouraging from my perspective and also so surprising, because very seldom do I hear Catholics say anything close to this.

Edwin and I are having a similar discussion, but this seems to even be closer to what Protestants believe. Maybe we would diverge a bit more if he started talking about the eschaton judgment?
 
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