concluded…
Calvin taught that union with Jesus Christ in His death burial and resurrection is the major structure of salvation, under which there are many sub-structures. Justification is one of those sub-structures which do not make up the whole structure. Justification is by faith alone because faith is the only thing that God accounts for righteousness (Rom 4:1-4) as in Abraham’s case.
Calvin, in his typical legalistic style, applied legal structual terms where they simply weren’t necessary. By trying to be clear he only wound up muddying the waters even more.
Justification is not a “sub-structure”. I dismiss any terminology that relegates justification as some sort of legal or business transaction. A covenant is more than just a contract.
Chrysostom believed this as well, confessing Abraham had many works but that God put them aside and only reckoned faith for righteousness.
Again, without Abraham’s comtinuation in faith by circumcising his household his faith would have become un-faith, or sin. God “reckoned” Araham’s faith because in His omnipotence God knew that he had given through grace a level of faith such that Abraham would follow through and thus complete his justification.
If god had “put them(works) aside” then God’s command that Abraham circumcise himself and his household is pointless. And God doesn’t do pointless things.
So either God gave a pointless command and forced Abraham to bloody himself and his household for no reason, or (as James says in his letter) that for Abraham to be justified he had to complete the command God had given him in order to be in a covenant relationship with God. That Abraham showed his faith through his works and was therefore justified.
This is very in keeping with Calvin’s points on Romans. However, Calvin also believe another sub-structure of salvation is sanctification, definitive and progressive without which a person cannot be said to have been or to receive salvation. Therefore, faith and good works are there in the saved person, but the good works are not contributing payments for appeasing God’s wrath or making one holy and pure enough to enter heaven.
Again you, and Calvin, are wrong:
““Which He freely bestowed on us,” he says. He does not say, “Which He has graciously given us,” (ἐ χαρίσατο) but, “wherein He has shown grace to us.” (ἐ χαρίτωσεν) That is to say,
He has not only released us from our sins, but has also made us meet objects of His love. It is as though one were to take a leper, wasted by distemper, and disease, by age, and poverty, and famine, and were to turn him all at once into a graceful youth, surpassing all mankind in beauty, shedding a bright lustre from his cheeks, and eclipsing the sun-beams with the glances of his eyes; and then were to set him in the very flower of his age, and after that array him in purple and a diadem and all the attire of royalty.** It is thus that God has arrayed and adorned this soul of ours, and clothed it with beauty, and rendered it an object of His delight and love. **”
Again, John demonstrates how our souls are transformed by God through his grace and NOT merely an imputation.
“Please the leader under whom you serve, for from him you receive your pay. May none of you turn out to be a deserter. let your baptism be ever your shield, your faith your helmet, your charity your spear, your patience your panoply.
Let your works be your deposits, so that you may receive the sum that is due to you.”
St Ignatius. Letter to Polycarp, Chpt 6.
'Why was our father Abraham blessed? Was it not because he performed justice and truth through faith?"
St. Clement of Rome, Letter to the Corinthians, chpt 31
“What merit, then, has man before grace which could make it possible for him to receive grace, when nothing but grace produces good merit in us; and what else but His gift does God crown when He crowns our merits?” St. Augustine, Letters, 194:4:6
“Buy for yourself a white garment, that you, who according to Adam had been naked and were before frightful and unseemly, may be clothed in the white raiment of Christ. And you who are a rich and wealthy matron anoint your eyes not with the stibium of the devil but with the eye-salve of Christ, that you can come to see God, when you merit God by character and good works.”
St. Cyprian, Works and Almsgiving, chpt 14.