L
LegoGE1947
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Besides, there were no protestants to speak of until the 16th Century.He’s a saint and a doctor of the Church. That’s good enough for me.
Besides, there were no protestants to speak of until the 16th Century.He’s a saint and a doctor of the Church. That’s good enough for me.
Protestantism was just a rehashing of many other heresies.Besides, there were no protestants to speak of until the 16th Century.Even then many of today’s protestants might be appalled at how “Catholic” some of those early protestants might appear!
PossiblyI promise you guys if you read his homilys on Romans and Galatians you will notice that be believed that man was justified by faith only and not by works of righteousness whihlch we do.
He puts together the forgiveness of sin and justification, showing that the clearing of our immoral stance before God is what is in mind
Can’t we both rightly claim him? Yes, he was of the Eastern Church, but we love and revere him also for his many fine words.He’s Orthodox. He wrote the Liturgy the Orthodox use and he’s vested as an Orthodox bishop.![]()
True, and I trust you don’t mean to imply that either approach is heretical. Eastern Christians, like Christians in general before Augustine and Pelagius (except St. Paul at times, etc.), tend to approach the subject of salvation according to the order of execution rather than the order of divine intention. Both approaches are quite valid and compatible with each other.The Orthodox concept of justification is different from the Protestant concept. Understand that St. John Chrysostom is an Eastern Christian, his way of thinking is different from Western Christians which include Roman Catholics and Protestants. Also, after the Reformation, many Protestants have sought Orthodox theology mostly hoping to use it as polemics with Catholics. Unfortunately for them they did not translate Orthodox teaching faithfully which resulted in faulty theology.
Hey folks,
The question should be can you prove St John Chrysosotom wasn’t a catholic as the only church of Christ around at that time was the Catholic Church. Surely, you cannot mean that Chrysosotom wasn’t a member of the Catholic Church but the leader of some kind of heretical or schismatical sect.I’ve been reading through the homilies on Romans in John Chrysostom, and I cannot help but notice the protestant interpretations that come line after line after line.
I’ve just read through the section in question, which can be found here. I believe this might be the passage you’re referring to:I promise you guys if you read his homilys on Romans and Galatians you will notice that be believed that man was justified by faith only and not by works of righteousness whihlch we do.
He puts together the forgiveness of sin and justification, showing that the clearing of our immoral stance before God is what is in mind
One is justified via “faith” not “works” (by grace!)Just going through romans, it is very clear that he believes that “justification” is by faith alone; unless I am somehow mistaken.
He says that by only believing are we made righteous (Rom 1:16-17)
Such is Catholic. What Paul says about being justified via ‘faith’ not ‘works’ – by grace is what we hold.. Chrysostom teaches that justification comes out of the one time sacrifice of Jesus by faith apart from works.
Read the above again.But Paul and john Chrysostom teach no mixture of faith and works for the righteousness of God. Catholics believe that righteousness of God is a progressive transformation over a life long process. Paul teaches the people have obtained '‘righgeousnsss’ in their faith that gifts then with justification, now and here apart from works because of what christ did on the cross
The whole approach to the faith is different. What do you want examples of?Can you cite us examples of the above, rather broad-brushed claim please?
The Orthodox didn’t exist outside the Church before their schism. They were just Catholic-- inside the Church. St. John Chrysostom died 600 years before the Orthodox broke from the Catholic Church.
Adonia is right on with this one LeeGrizz. The Orthodox and Catholic Churches subsist in one another for 1000 years. You can’t say “they were just Catholic” as if there were demarkation lines that existed back then. The monickers evolved only as a matter of trying to distinguish one from the other, thus around 400AD during the time of St. John Chrysostom, such demarkations did not exist. On the other hand, St. John Chrysostom was the archbishop of Constantinople. We know which side of the demarkation that Church went to at the Great Schism.Can’t we both rightly claim him? Yes, he was of the Eastern Church, but we love and revere him also for his many fine words.
Protestant do not deny the process if conformation to the image of Christ. This is called sanctification. The process of being made holy. Justification is never used this way in any antiquital document.Read the above again.
(oh and Yes Paul sees that there is a “process” as you note in Christian life…we are to become more and more conformed to Christ…and that one may fall away and that one must preservere etc …we agree with him)
Yes - and we profess what Paul teaches.Paul teaches the people have obtained '‘righgeousnsss’ in their faith that gifts then with justification, now and here apart from works because of what christ did on the cross
I’d have to back-read the current book I am reading at it briefly touched on this topic. But essentially when an Orthodox or Eastern Catholic talks about “justified by faith alone,” it is a different understanding than when a Protestant says it. Context is everything. In fact, it is quite possible the Protestants came up with this concept from the Orthodox but didn’t quite understand what the Orthodox really meant by it. Or that they read one line of it and took off with it. I am quite surprised that through my reading of Orthodox theology, a lot of concepts we as Catholics normally treat as Protestant and reject, are actually rooted in Orthodox teaching. Therefore they are valid and Apostolic. But the Protestants do not transmit the faith fully, and that is where their error lies. Perhaps their problem lies in that they do not have the Apostolic Succession of Bishops who safeguard the faith or corrected by others who do. Or that they really sought the Orthodox just to build up their anti-Catholic polemics and didn’t really bother to learn the whole thing.True, and I trust you don’t mean to imply that either approach is heretical. Eastern Christians, like Christians in general before Augustine and Pelagius (except St. Paul at times, etc.), tend to approach the subject of salvation according to the order of execution rather than the order of divine intention. Both approaches are quite valid and compatible with each other.
St. John Chrysostom lived (basically) before the dispute between Pelagius and Augustine broke out, and he lived in the East that was not so involved in that dispute and so was not as affected by it in their later theology. Although, interestingly it is St. John Chrysotom that Thomists sometimes quote as a rare case of a Greek Father and a Father from before the rise of Pelagianism who wrote something relevant to those later Western disputes:
“Therefore thou hast what thou hast received, and not only this or that, but whatever thou hast. These are not thy merits, but God’s gifts.” (This is from a book that gives the citation In I Cor., 4: 7, hom. 12. though I don’t understand the format. It may include a biblical reference made in the text just before the Chrysostom quote.)
This has been used as support for the Augustinian/Thomist position that everything which makes one man better than another, even the better use of his free will, is a gift from God. It is also possible it is something the OP was referring to, though the quote is quite compatible with Catholic theology as long as it’s not taken in a boneheaded way that refuses to acknowledge any sense in which human beings can have merit by the grace of God.