doctrine wise, work from majors to minor doctrine, thanks
SUMMARY OF MAIN DIFFERENCES
I will try to give a detailed response to your question although I doubt you are reading or really interested to know (but I could be wrong about that )
First let us be clear by what we mean by Bible Christians. I will use this term to refer to those Christians who go by the Bible alone, so really the correct term is Bible Alone Christians.
DIFFERENCES:
This can be broken down to Foundation and Doctrine.
FOUNDATION:
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**Catholics are those who belong to the Church founded by Jesus Christ.
Bible Alone Christians (or BAC for short) belong to whatever Church some Tom, Dirk or Harry founded in disagreement with another Tom, Dirk and Harry who founded a Church in defiance of a further Tom, Dirk and Harry and so on who may be able to trace themselves back to either Luther, Zwingli or Calvin or some other early follower of the three or a break away. Some are creedal others not.
DOCTRINE
This again can be narrowed down to two : Authority and Justification although really it is only about Authority for if the theCatholic Church through her magisterium really is infallible then she has the authority to decree doctrine and that that doctrine will be infallible.
AUTHORITY
This is a slippery slope for BACs because by accepting the Bible as the sole rule of faith because it is inerrant, they are in effect accepting that the Church would have to have been infallible when she came up with the canon. The Bible was not compiled in the 19th or 20th century when most of these BACs sprouted.
Neither was it compiled during the protestant deformation although there was an attempt to mangle it which is now the reason the BACs have a truncated Bible.
The Bible cannot be held to be the authority because it is precisely the interpretation of the Bible that is being questioned.
JUSTIFICATON
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**Are we saved by Faith Alone (as per BACs) or by Faith working in love (Catholics).
I think the sticking points here are on how we understand the following:
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I will present first what I believe are the BACs answers to these, show where the errors are and explain why the Catholic view is the correct one.
1) What are we saved from.
The obvious answer is sin. Both Luther and (and would assume Zwingli) believed in total depravity i.e. we are so totally vile and corrupt that we are not capable of even the tiniest movement towards the good.
It is very important to get a clear understanding of what we are being saved from since the how will also depend on this.
2) What are we saved for?
Simple answer is heaven.
BACs can correct me on this but I think they believe heaven is the place of bliss that you go to if you are lucky enough to be “saved”.
Just as important as getting the “saved from” aspect of salvation right, it is equally important to get this one right as well as this will matter a lot in determining the HOW.
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**3) So now we come to the How – How are we saved**
BAC’s and I think all protestants claim by Imputed Justification or Forensic Justification.
This is the idea that justification is imputed on the person, I.e. one is declared just on account of one’s faith in Christ. But, this doctrine also says that one is merely declared just while one actually remains a sinner.
To put this simply, it would be like saying that your clothes are clean even though they are still dirty.
God covers you with the righteousness of Christ and this righteousness is what He sees, though underneath you are still the same miserable sinner as before.
If we conceive of heaven as just a place where we are deposited after being plucked from the clutches of death on earth, then a forensic view of justification will suffice especially since being totally corrupt we are unable to cooperate in our own salvation.
PROBLEMS WITH THE FOREGOING VIEW.
The questions we need to ask are:
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are we really totally depraved,
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is justification really merely forensic and
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is heaven only a place to go to after death (just so you are not suffering the torment of hell).
Reality disproves the doctrine of total depravity. A quick tour of our friends, acquaintances and even people we don’t personally know show that there are many non-Christians who do good deeds and who love their neighbours. We know that not every single non-Christian is an out and out morally depraved person. They are capable of natural goodness.
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