Was John Chrysostom Catholic?

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+JMJ+
He says that the righteousness of God is not a habit of righteous deeds. Rather the quality of being righteous in a forensic sense. This is what Chrysostom teaches
Two questions:
  1. Why are you not answering my questions?
  2. What is “being righteous in a forensic sense”?
 
Well, catholics believe that justification is by works together with faith. Sort of a co-operation together. And St. John Chrysostom teaches even after years and years of already having faith and works, he was still justified by faith alone. See the quote on Romans 4:1-2. Secondly catholics teach that dikaiosune righteousness, even when spoken about as a gift given to man, is not a full gift of Gods righteousness that covers the person (which is what Chrysostom says) rather it is what changes us from being in a habit of sin to being in a habit of good behavior through which Gods declaration is valid. Chrysostom is denying this transformational idea.
 
“Well, Paul states with absolute clarity that this condition of life does not depend on our possible good works but on the pure grace of God: “[We] are justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus” (Rom 3: 24). …”

–Pope Benedict XVI

“Following St Paul, we have seen that man is unable to “justify” himself with his own actions, but can only truly become “just” before God because God confers his “justice” upon him, uniting him to Christ his Son. And man obtains this union through faith. In this sense, St Paul tells us: not our deeds, but rather faith renders us “just”. This faith, however, is not a thought, an opinion, an idea. This faith is communion with Christ, which the Lord gives to us, and thus becomes life, becomes conformity with him.”

–Pope Benedict XVI

(see links above forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=9854321&postcount=39)

One does does not become “justified” by ones works.

And heck - it can even happen that one justified - never gets a chance to do* any *good works…yet goes to heaven.
 
+JMJ+
Well, catholics believe that justification is by works together with faith. Sort of a co-operation together.
Faith comes first before works in justification.

CCC 1991 Justification is at the same time the acceptance of God’s righteousness through faith in Jesus Christ. Righteousness (or “justice”) here means the rectitude of divine love. With justification, faith, hope, and charity are poured into our hearts, and obedience to the divine will is granted us.

Show us an official teaching of the Catholic Church that says otherwise.
And St. John Chrysostom teaches even after years and years of already having faith and works, he was still justified by faith alone. See the quote on Romans 4:1-2.
What is the difference between justification and sanctification again?
Secondly catholics teach that dikaiosune righteousness, even when spoken about as a gift given to man, is not a full gift of Gods righteousness that covers the person (which is what Chrysostom says) rather it is what changes us from being in a habit of sin to being in a habit of good behavior through which Gods declaration is valid. Chrysostom is denying this transformational idea.
Incorrect. Infused righteousness states that we can use Jesus righteousness and really cures our unrighteousness, not just cover ourselves with it while letting our unrighteousness fester on in us.

“To declare His righteousness.” What is declaring of righteousness? Like the declaring of His riches, not only for Him to be rich Himself, but also to make others rich, or of life, not only that He is Himself living, but also that He makes the dead to live; and of His power, not only that He is Himself powerful, but also that He makes the feeble powerful. So also is the declaring of His righteousness not only that He is Himself righteous, but that He doth also make them that are filled with the putrefying sores of sin suddenly righteous.

St. John Chrysostom, Homily 7 on Romans
 
+JMJ+

How about we continue what St. John Chrysostom says:

Romans 3:31. “Do we then,” he says, “make void the Law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the Law.”

… For here he shows that the faith, so far from doing any disparagement to the “Law,” even assists it, as it on the other hand paved the way for the faith. For as the Law itself before bore witness to it (for he says, “being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets”), so here this establishes that, now that it is unnerved. And how did it establish? He would say. What was the object of the Law and what the scope of all its enactments? Why, to make man righteous. But this it had no power to do. “For all,” it says, “have sinned:” but faith when it came accomplished it. For when a man is once a believer, he is straightway justified. The intention then of the Law it did establish, and what all its enactments aim after, this has it brought to a consummation. Consequently it has not disannulled, but perfected it.

But since after this grace, whereby we were justified, there is need also of a life suited to it, let us show an earnestness worthy the gift. And show it we shall, if we keep with earnestness charity, the mother of good deeds. Now charity is not bare words, or mere ways of speaking (prosrhseij) to men, but a taking care (prostasia) of them, and a putting forth of itself by works, as, for instance, by relieving poverty, lending one’s aid to the sick, rescuing from dangers, to stand by them that be in difficulties, to weep with them that weep, and to rejoice with them that rejoice.

St. John Chrysostom, Homily 7 on Romans

Indeed, this is a great illustration of justification by infusion by St. John Chrysostom himself and not this “forensic righteousness”.
 
You are misinterpreting him. He does not say that faith is the way we fulfill good works in order to be justified. Rather that faith is the way we are justified apart from any works. Again read the comment on Romans 4:1-2.

With regard to the lifestyle after being justified, protestants have always preached that faith must express itself worthy of the gift received in christ Jesus does god make alive the dead when he justifies? Of course. But justification itself is the free gift of righteousness that is not inside of us but remains over us.
 
+JMJ+
You are misinterpreting him. He does not say that faith is the way we fulfill good works in order to be justified.
Actually I never said anything like that. Read again what I posted please.
With regard to the lifestyle after being justified, protestants have always preached that faith must express itself worthy of the gift received in christ Jesus does god make alive the dead when he justifies? Of course. But justification itself is the free gift of righteousness that is not inside of us but remains over us.
Correct, in a way. Justification is a one time event. That is why a Catholic can never stop being a Catholic ever once he or she is baptized.
 
Just because we can find statements in John Chrysostom which say that in salvation God renews us, sanctifies, justifies, adopts, makes us new creatures, participants in the mystical body of jesus Christ, raises us up to a resurrection with His Son, out of the kingdom of darkness and into the light where Satanic forces have no rule and reign, etc,etc. Protestants do not teach that salvation is all forensic. But that justification, as a small fact to the diamond of salvation, is forensic.

With regard to John Chrysostom’s view of the original sin it is clear he has in mind a forensic understanding and the traditional reformed protestant view:

Ver. 13. For until the Law sin was in the world, but sin is not imputed where there is no law.
People were bound to conduct themselves according to their conscience, and being that man is created in Imageo Deo, they had a conscience before Moses.

The divine image in man was obscured but not obliterated. His free choice has been restricted in its exercise but not destroyed. Even in a fallen world man is still capable of self-sacrifice and loving compassion. Even in a fallen world man still retains some knowledge of God and can enter by grace into communion with him. There are many saints in the pages of the Old Testament, men and women such as Abraham and Sarah, Joseph and Moses, Elijah and Jeremiah; and outside the Chosen People of Israel there are figures such as Socrates who not only taught the truth but lived it. Yet it remains true that human sin - the original sin of Adam - has set a gulf between God and man such that man by his own efforts could not bridge. (The Orthodox Way, 62)

As you can still see today in Eastern Orthodox theology, they do not use a model of Total Depravity, or even a Catholic view of the result of the fall!

With that in mind, Orthodox theology fits perfectly into St.John Chrysostom’s discourse on Romans, being that he was Eastern in thought!
The phrase till the Law some think he used of the time before the giving of the Law— that of Abel, for instance, or of Noah, or of Abraham— till Moses was born. What was the sin in those days, at this rate? Some say he means that in Paradise. For hitherto it was not done away, (he would say,) but the fruit of it was yet in vigor. For it had borne that death whereof all partake, which prevailed and lorded over us. Why then does he proceed, But sin is not imputed when there is no law? It was by way of objection from the Jews, say they who have spoken on our side, that he laid this position down and said,** if there be no sin without the Law, how came death to consume all those before the Law?** But to me it seems that the sense presently to be given has more to be said for it, and suits better with the Apostle’s meaning. And what sense is this?*** In saying, that till the Law sin was in the world, what he seems to me to mean is this, that after the Law was given the sin resulting from the transgression of it prevailed, and prevailed too so long as the Law existed. For sin, he says, can have no existence if there be no law. If then it was this sin, he means, from the transgression of the Law that brought forth death, how was it that all before the Law died? For if it is in sin that death has its origin, but when there is no law, sin is not imputed, how came death to prevail? From whence it is clear, that it was not this sin, the transgression, that is, of the Law, but that of Adam’s disobedience, which marred all things. Now what is the proof of this? The fact that even before the Law all died:*** for death reigned, he says, from Adam to Moses, even over them that had not sinned.
Notice how if what John Chrysostom taught here was that we all became morally corrupt and suffered the penalty of death for it because in Adam we become corrupted (which we all did) he would not have a need to question “Why did those human beings who lived in between Adam and Moses die”?.
Or, because Adam’s sin it caused a rift throughout the universe. There was a fall, and we inherit a fallen world, because the world has fallen we sin, we are not GUILTY of Adam’s sin, but because of Adam’s sin,(which ushered in a fallen world/nature) we sin! This can be viewed as INHERITED rather than ORIGINAL, which is most likely the view of St.John Chrysostom!
The reason he is asking this because he is exegeting Paul. Where there is no law there is no transgression, even so all died from Adam to Moses. Death is a result of the law bringing forth sin, but this did not happen for those who lived from Adam to Moses. Therefore they die and become mortal because they are imputed with Adam’s disobedience. That is what Paul has in mind. The guilt that was incurred from eating the forbidden fruit is shared by all of humanity, and we suffer the legal consequences of that, which is death. Of course there is a sense in which we became dead in sin from Adam, but this is not what Paul has in mind here about original sin.
You are inserting a Western (more specifically Protestant) view of the fall, into St.John Chrysostom’s writings. As I asked before can you show that St.John Chrysostom had a Penal view of the atonement, over a Christus Victor view? NO you can’t, so until you can, all your statements about what St. John Chrysostom was REALLY saying here is no more than a modern day invention, and historical revisionism in an attempt to justify a preconcieved notion, hell bent on poor theology!
 
I hold to a Christy’s victor view of atonement as well as penal substitution.

And if you would like to show us how Chrysostom teaches what you think he teaches, that would be great. For it is clear to me and to any normal reader that what he is saying is that Adam and christ both do one thing which affects all mankind without the contribution of the mankind. People died fro. Adamnto moses, even when sin is not imputed since the absence of law, because Adams sin has a universal effect in making all men mortal, notthat they are individually sinful in their actions, though this is true. In the same way the death of Jesus is the one thing that he does that typifies Adam, since he does it all alone by himself with no contribution from anyone, and yet it affects everyone in that it gives them justification out of condemnation
 
*Ver. 19. For as by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of One shall many be made righteous.

What he says seems indeed to involve no small question: but if any one attends to it diligently, this too will admit of an easy solution. What then is the question? It is the saying that through the offense of one many were made sinners. For the fact that when he had sinned and become mortal, those who were of him should be so also, is nothing unlikely. But how would it follow that from his disobedience another would become a sinner? For at this rate a man of this sort will not even deserve punishment, if, that is, it was not from his own self that he became a sinner. What then does the word “sinners” mean here? To me it seems to mean liable to punishment and condemned to death. Now that by Adam’s death we all became mortals, he had shown clearly and at large. But the question now is, for what purpose was this done? But this he does not go on to add: for it contributed nothing to his present object. For it is against a Jew that the contest is, who doubted and made scorn of the righteousness by One. And for this reason after showing that the punishment too was brought in by one upon all, the reason why this was so he has not added. For he is not for superfluities, but keeps merely to what is necessary. For this is what the principles of disputation did not oblige him to say any more than the Jew; and therefore he leaves it unsolved. But if any of you were to enquire with a view to learn, we should give this answer: That we are so far from taking any harm from this death and condemnation , if we be sober-minded, that we are the gainers even by having become mortal, first, because it is not an immortal body in which we sin; secondly, because we get numberless grounds for being religious (φιλοσοφας). For to be moderate, and to be temperate, and to be subdued, and to keep ourselves clear of all wickedness, is what death by its presence and by its being expected persuades us to. But following with these, or rather even before these, it has introduced other greater blessings besides. For it is from hence that the crowns of the martyrs come, and the rewards of the Apostles. Thus was Abel justified, thus was Abraham, in having slain his son, thus was John, who for Christ’s sake was taken off, thus were the Three Children, thus was Daniel. For if we be so minded, not death only, but even the devil himself will be unable to hurt us. And besides there is this also to be said, that immortality awaits us, and after having been chastened a little while, we shall enjoy the blessings to come without fear, being as if in a sort of school in the present life, under instruction by means of disease, tribulation, temptations, and poverty, and the other apparent evils, with a view to our becoming fit for the reception of the blessings of the world to com*

The verse that would be most explicit in the teaching that we are not guilty of Adams sin but that we are sinners ourselves from him john Chrysostom actually recanted from this and teaches the exact oppositte. Such a thing is demonstrating that both eastern and catholics, if they understand this verse to teach that we are not guilty of Adams sin but rather we sin and so are guilty, that one is not interested in understanding truth but is committed to some claim to infallibility. John Chrysostom here teaches that Paul is not teaching in Romans 5 that we are sinners ourselves but that we are held liable to the condemnation of death, not in the sense of our own doing, but because of Adams sin. This is protestant theology right in the midst of the teaching of a doctor and a saint in the roman catholic churchchurch
 
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How did it reign? After the similitude of Adam’s transgression, who is the figure of Him that was to come. Now this is why Adam is a type of Christ. How a type? It will be said. Why in that, as the former became to those who were sprung from him, although they had not eaten of the tree, the cause of that death which by his eating was introduced; thus also did Christ become to those sprung from Him, even though they had not wrought righteousness, the Provider of that righteousness which through His Cross He graciously bestowed on us all. For this reason, at every turn he keeps to the one, and is continually bringing it before us, when he says, As by one man sin entered into the world— and, If through the offense of one many be dead: and, Not as it was by one that sinned, so is the gift; and, The judgment was by one to condemnation: and again, If by one (or, the one) man’s offense death reigned by one; and Therefore as by the offense of one. And again, As by one man’s disobedience many (or, the many) were made sinners. And so he lets not go of the one, that when the Jew says to you, How came it, that by the well-doing of this one Person, Christ, the world was saved? You might be able to say to him, How by the disobedience of this one person, Adam, came it to be condemned? And yet sin and grace are not equivalents, death and life are not equivalents, the Devil and God are not equivalents, but there is a boundless space between them. When then as well from the nature of the thing as from the power of Him that transacts it, and from the very suitableness thereof (for it suits much better with God to save than to punish), the preëminence and victory is upon this side, what one word have you to say for unbelief, tell me? However, that what had been done was reasonable, he shows in the following words.

MY WORDS: Do you see how Chrysostom understands the “cause of death” to be Adam’s sin?
Of course, Adam’s sin caused the fall, which death is a result. Christus Victor!
Well, many catholics understand this to mean that we are created in Adam and because of that we are born with an original unholiness of ourselves.
Sure many Catholics, but No Eastern Orthodox do, and St. John Chrysostom was Eastern in thought. Christus Victor! Inherited sin!
We have lost out original righteousness. This is true. But this is not what Paul is teaching here and this is not what Chrysostom is teaching here. Notice how he asks “How is Adam a Type of Christ”? and “Why in that, as the former became to those who were sprung from him, although they had not eaten of the tree, the cause of that death which by his eating was introduced; thus also did Christ become to those sprung from Him, even though they had not wrought righteousness, the Provider of that righteousness which through His Cross He graciously bestowed on us all.”
Adam’s sin ushered in the fall, which turned us away from God, where Christ death and Resurrection ushered in divine energies (grace) to turn us back towards our Father! Christus Victor!

.
Notice how Chrysostom also understands “righteousness” to come from the cross of Jesus, whereas the Catholics are more to join the cross with the holy Spirit (for in their view it means a re-creation into holiness). Also understand how this “righteousness” is not wrought in the saved just as the sin of Adam was not wrought in humanity (at least for the sake of the argument- we know that we were). It is clear that what chrysostom has in mind is the forensic legal consequences that both Adam and Christ have on us. And it is clear because you can see how Chrysotom argues that it is not the present sin or righteousness in human beings that cause our death or life, but rather Adam’s one sin and Christ’s one sacrifice.
No, a legal consequences and forensic view of God is foreign to Eastern thought.

Adam sinned the world fell, including all of humanity by entering into a fallen world, people sin and turn away from God!

Christ is ushering in a restoration, turning us towards the Father and away from sin, thus restoring the world in the kingdom of God. It is not Legal, forensic, or Penal, but Holistic

I’m a Latin rite Catholic, but I also can be objective and truthful enough to realize that St.John Chrysostom was Eastern in his views.

If St.John Chrysostom was to appear in the world today, he would be Eastern Orthodox or Eastern Catholic and the view that you espouse, would be foreign to him. Most likely the Satisfaction model of St. Anselm and St. Thomas Aquinas would be foreign to him too.

Christus Victor better represents St. John Chrysostom’s view of the atonement, legal, penal and forensic views are completely at odds with the Christus Victor view!

Prove St. John Chrysostom had a penal view, rather than a Christus Victor view!

Christ has Risen!
Truly Risen!
 
I can very well accept the understanding the restoration if the human creation and the cosmos, and that this included divine energies given to the human tarnished from the pure immortal image of God, and that Christ’s death and resurrection wages ware against the enemies of Gods good creation, sin death satanic dominion and all rebellion and ultimatley create the new humanity who is freed from all these things. That one day the people of God will judge all things, etc etc… I can accept this very well.

But you are not intellectually dealing with chrysostoms words and you didn’t respond to my last post.
 
Lets not get sidetracked about the atonement. We are speaking of original sin first then we can get to the atonement.
 
*Ver. 19. For as by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of One shall many be made righteous.

What he says seems indeed to involve no small question: but if any one attends to it diligently, this too will admit of an easy solution. What then is the question? It is the saying that through the offense of one many were made sinners. For the fact that when he had sinned and become mortal, those who were of him should be so also, is nothing unlikely. But how would it follow that from his disobedience another would become a sinner? For at this rate a man of this sort will not even deserve punishment, if, that is, it was not from his own self that he became a sinner. What then does the word “sinners” mean here? To me it seems to mean liable to punishment and condemned to death. Now that by Adam’s death we all became mortals, he had shown clearly and at large. But the question now is, for what purpose was this done? But this he does not go on to add: for it contributed nothing to his present object. For it is against a Jew that the contest is, who doubted and made scorn of the righteousness by One. And for this reason after showing that the punishment too was brought in by one upon all, the reason why this was so he has not added. For he is not for superfluities, but keeps merely to what is necessary. For this is what the principles of disputation did not oblige him to say any more than the Jew; and therefore he leaves it unsolved. But if any of you were to enquire with a view to learn, we should give this answer: That we are so far from taking any harm from this death and condemnation , if we be sober-minded, that we are the gainers even by having become mortal, first, because it is not an immortal body in which we sin; secondly, because we get numberless grounds for being religious (φιλοσοφας). For to be moderate, and to be temperate, and to be subdued, and to keep ourselves clear of all wickedness, is what death by its presence and by its being expected persuades us to. But following with these, o*r rather even before these, it has introduced other greater blessings besides. For it is from hence that the crowns of the martyrs come, and the rewards of the Apostles. Thus was Abel justified, thus was Abraham, in having slain his son, thus was John, who for Christ’s sake was taken off, thus were the Three Children, thus was Daniel. For if we be so minded, not death only, but even the devil himself will be unable to hurt us. And besides there is this also to be said, that immortality awaits us, and after having been chastened a little while, we shall enjoy the blessings to come without fear, being as if in a sort of school in the present life, under instruction by means of disease, tribulation, temptations, and poverty, and the other apparent evils, with a view to our becoming fit for the reception of the blessings of the world to com
Christus Victor!
The verse that would be most explicit in the teaching that we are not guilty of Adams sin but that we are sinners ourselves from him john Chrysostom actually recanted from this and teaches the exact oppositte. Such a thing is demonstrating that both eastern and catholics, if they understand this verse to teach that we are not guilty of Adams sin but rather we sin and so are guilty, that one is not interested in understanding truth but is committed to some claim to infallibility. John Chrysostom here teaches that Paul is not teaching in Romans 5 that we are sinners ourselves but that we are held liable to the condemnation of death, not in the sense of our own doing, but because of Adams sin. This is protestant theology right in the midst of the teaching of a doctor and a saint in the roman catholic churchchurch
I was pointing out that in the Eastern view of sin, it is inherited, not Augustinian.

We are not guilty of Adam’s sin, but we are guilty, because of Adam’s sin. We enter a fallen world and sin! That’s it! You said it "John Chrysostom here teaches that Paul is not teaching in Romans 5 that we are sinners ourselves but that we are held liable to the condemnation of death, not in the sense of our own doing, but because of Adams sin

We are bound to die, due to death reigning in a fallen world! We sin ourselves, because Adam ushered in a fallen world, one in which we sin, and one in which we will die!

Like I said I am a Catholic of the Latin Rite, but I can say objectively, that St. John Chrysostom, had a view that was Eastern. If you think that every past Saint held to some sort of Satisfaction view of the Atonement, because modern day Catholics and Protestants do, then you are either not being impartial and objective, or you are forcing your preconceived views into their writings!

If you hold to an Augustinian view of Original sin, fine, so do I, but St.John Chrysostom did NOT!
 
Your right. He held that Adams sin and guilt is the sole and grounds cause for our original guilt and mortality. Chrysostom clearly says that in the bold.
 
From what I understand, protestants believe that Holy Scripture is the sole rule of faith which teaching stems from Martin Luther. Luther disregarded the Tradition of the Catholic Church as also a rule of faith or a source of revelation which catholics believe. Now St John Chrysostom holds the tradition of the Church as worthy of belief as can be seen here:

“Therefore, brethern, stand fast and hold the traditions which you have been taught, whether by word or by our letter” ( 2 Thess. 2:15). From this it is clear that they did not hand down everything by letter, but there was much also that was not written. Like that which was written, the unwritten too is worthy of belief. So let us regard the tradition of the Church also as worthy of belief. Is it a tradition? Seek no further. ( Homily on the Second Epistle to the Thessalonians).

Consequently, Chrysostom does not hold the protestants view that Holy Scripture is the sole rule of faith or source of revelation.
 
I do not hold that belief either.

All I am doing is showing proof that protestant interpretation if Romans and the justification passages DID NOT COME ABOUT WITH LUTHER, it was there in the early fathers, right here in Chrysostom. Now protestants firmly believe that simultaneous to forensic justification that there is the powerful inward sanctifiying grace that cleanses the soul from all sin and sets them to walk in righteousness. Indeed this happens at the same time as justification. But as Chrysostom ands other Protestants teach, Adams sin is imputed to us and it the original cause of our condemnation and death apart from any of our doing, so also christ in his sacrifice and resurrection is the sole original cause of our being righteous in Gods eyes. By this is not meant that we are ttansfromed into a righteous person by habit, but that we are forgiven and justified. Of course sanctifying grace comes with justification but is different in concept altogether. Just like pardon itself is different from the person being reformed but can be together.
 
Your right. He held that Adams sin and guilt is the sole and grounds cause for our original guilt and mortality. Chrysostom clearly says that in the bold.
What did sin usher in, Guilt, or Death, according to St. John Chrysostom?
 
From what I understand, protestants believe that Holy Scripture is the sole rule of faith which teaching stems from Martin Luther. Luther disregarded the Tradition of the Catholic Church as also a rule of faith or a source of revelation which catholics believe. Now St John Chrysostom holds the tradition of the Church as worthy of belief as can be seen here:

“Therefore, brethern, stand fast and hold the traditions which you have been taught, whether by word or by our letter” ( 2 Thess. 2:15). From this it is clear that they did not hand down everything by letter, but there was much also that was not written. Like that which was written, the unwritten too is worthy of belief. So let us regard the tradition of the Church also as worthy of belief. Is it a tradition? Seek no further. ( Homily on the Second Epistle to the Thessalonians).

Consequently, Chrysostom does not hold the protestants view that Holy Scripture is the sole rule of faith or source of revelation.
St. John Chrysostom would also have had no knowledge of the Great Schism, and the resulting contending views east and west as to what Saced Tradition says and means.

Jon
 
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