M
manualman
Guest
Penance in my experience rarely involves direct restitution to a person harmed. Rather, it focuses on strengthening the relationship with God from whom Grace comes. This might (speculating here) be because the protestant reformation has reminded priests to be careful that people not get the impression that their penance “earns” them forgiveness somehow.
“Cheap Grace” is a buzzword coined by protestants to describe the results of a particular kind of theological problem in the EP world. Here is a better description by what appears to be an EP website (I know little about the site and don’t necessarily endorse it) gotquestions.org/cheap-grace.html
While the website noted seems to agree that Cheap Grace is a problem, it fails to recognize where it comes from. In combination with fallen human nature, Cheap Grace is what happens when faith is held up as the only trigger of salvation (and as a single event) and “works” (badly defined) are a marker that Grace has been received, but not something to strive after. The problem is that even with Grace, virtue doesn’t develop all by itself. You have to consent to it and cooperate with it every step of the way. Perhaps you’ve noticed. I sure have. I’m still a lazy bum after all these years!
Protestants are right to insist that salvation is impossible without Grace. We’ve always agreed. But just like a hiker trapped in a steep canyon, we have to hold onto Grace the way the hiker must cling to the rescue rope when it’s tossed to him. Clinging to a rope while being hauled up in NO way means the hiker “rescued himself” nor does the Christian have anything to boast of by clinging to Grace by cultivating virtue. But similarly, the hiker who shouts out for help while refusing to grasp the rope is just a fool, much like the Cheap Grace Christian who professes faith in Christ while being unwilling to repent of sin.
“Cheap Grace” is a buzzword coined by protestants to describe the results of a particular kind of theological problem in the EP world. Here is a better description by what appears to be an EP website (I know little about the site and don’t necessarily endorse it) gotquestions.org/cheap-grace.html
While the website noted seems to agree that Cheap Grace is a problem, it fails to recognize where it comes from. In combination with fallen human nature, Cheap Grace is what happens when faith is held up as the only trigger of salvation (and as a single event) and “works” (badly defined) are a marker that Grace has been received, but not something to strive after. The problem is that even with Grace, virtue doesn’t develop all by itself. You have to consent to it and cooperate with it every step of the way. Perhaps you’ve noticed. I sure have. I’m still a lazy bum after all these years!
Protestants are right to insist that salvation is impossible without Grace. We’ve always agreed. But just like a hiker trapped in a steep canyon, we have to hold onto Grace the way the hiker must cling to the rescue rope when it’s tossed to him. Clinging to a rope while being hauled up in NO way means the hiker “rescued himself” nor does the Christian have anything to boast of by clinging to Grace by cultivating virtue. But similarly, the hiker who shouts out for help while refusing to grasp the rope is just a fool, much like the Cheap Grace Christian who professes faith in Christ while being unwilling to repent of sin.