G
gabjus
Guest
Here are some stuff that I read about which I found useful about salvation by faith/works.
It was written by Alister McGrath, titled “What Shall We Make of Ecumenism?”
There was much misunderstanding going on during the Reformation, and I sometimes wonder how things would have been different if such misunderstandings were cleared up 1st.
The below is a list of common beliefs by both Luther and the Roman Catholic Church during the 16th century, some of which they failed to see at that time (according to McGrath, feel free to correct this pls).
I’m not saying that there are no difference, however, I don’t think we should let our differences blind us from seeing significant doctrine that are actually similar (and sometimes merely just differently worded, with different definitions of the word).
It was written by Alister McGrath, titled “What Shall We Make of Ecumenism?”
There was much misunderstanding going on during the Reformation, and I sometimes wonder how things would have been different if such misunderstandings were cleared up 1st.
The below is a list of common beliefs by both Luther and the Roman Catholic Church during the 16th century, some of which they failed to see at that time (according to McGrath, feel free to correct this pls).
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We cannot take the initiative in beginning the Christian life – it is God who moves first. Original sin prevents our finding our way back to God unaided by grace. Popular Catholic religion in the later Middle Ages was obsessed with the doctrine of justification by works, however, pointing to a radical divergence between what theologians taught and what the common people believed. Although some evangelicals continue to insist that the Roman Catholic Church officially teaches justification by works, that is not the case. -
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**The foundation of the Christian life is the work of Christ and not anything we ourselves can do.** Once more, popular Catholic piety tended to lay considerable emphasis upon merit and showed an obsessive interest in the various ways in which this merit could be gained and stored, rather like funds in a bank account. -
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** Although the Christian life is not begun on the basis of good works, good works are the natural result of an expression of genuine Christian faith.** -
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The Christian life takes place at the communal, not just the individual level. By beginning the Christian life, the believer finds himself within a community of faith.
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Christians have no hope of final salvation and basis for justification before God other than through God’s free gift of grace in Christ, offered to them through the Holy Spirit. **Our entire hope of justification and salvation rests on the promises of God and the saving work of Jesus Christ**, expressed in the gospel. -
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As a result of original sin, all human beings – whoever they are and whenever and wherever they live – stand in need of justification. -
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Justification is a complete free act of God’s grace, and **nothing we can do can be said to be the basis or ground of our own justification. Even faith itself must be recognized as a divine gift and work within us.** We can not turn to God unless God turns us first. The priority of God’s redeeming will and action over our own actions in bringing about our salvation is expressed (and its mystery safeguarded) by the doctrine of predestination. -
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In justification we are declared righteous before God, and the process of making us righteous in His sight through the renewing action of the Holy Spirit is begun. In that justification, we receive by faith the effects of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ as we respond personally to the gospel (the power of God for salvation), as we encounter the gospel through Scripture (the proclamation of the Word of God) and the sacraments, and as it initially awakens and subsequently strengthens faith in us. -
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**Whoever is justified is subsequently renewed by the Holy Spirit and motivated and enabled to perform good works. That is not to say that individuals may rely on these works for their salvation, because eternal life remains a gift offered to us through the grace and mercy of God.**
I’m not saying that there are no difference, however, I don’t think we should let our differences blind us from seeing significant doctrine that are actually similar (and sometimes merely just differently worded, with different definitions of the word).