Realitybites said:
Are works required for salvation? Works (or fruit, if you prefer the word) are the evidence of saving faith. So yes, works are required. The Lord demands a return on the talents he gives you.
Mothra said:
Edit: I am also curious what scripture you rely on for the opinion that salvation is a process.
Matthew 24:13, for example, straight from the horse's mouth so to speak. Obviously Jesus isn't saying that those who persevere till they get to the end of the sinner's prayer are saved. Those who persevere to the end of their lives are saved.
The whole "walk the aisle, pray the sinner's prayer, do business with God, get your boarding pass for your flight to heaven" gospel that has been so prevalent in evangelicalism is unbiblical. It has created a lot of false disciples, and is in large part responsible for the collapse of the evangelical church. Even Ray Comfort identifies this problem in his sermon "Hell's Best Kept Secret" though he doesn't continue to the logical/biblically supported conclusion.
As I mentioned above, you - like many of your Catholic brethren - seem to have a severe misconception about evangelical belief. You seem to be laboring under the misconception that evangelicals believe merely saying a prayer evidences salvation, and that the individual can go on to live whatever manner of lifestyle he or she wants because he or she has a "get out of jail" free card, so to speak. As I tried to explain above, that is a misunderstanding of evangelical belief. We are not Gnostics, who believe merely saying a prayer and then living a hedonistic lifestyle contrary to the Word of God makes one saved.
To the contrary, evangelicals believe that works are an outcropping of true conversion, and are evidence that the person is a true convert, instead of the seed that falls in rocky soil. In other words, works demonstrate a changed heart and true conversion.
So, the question isn't whether works are important. The question is, are works necessary, and as the thief on the cross demonstrated, indeed they are not. Any view that holds as such is diametrically opposed to the explicit words of scripture that it is by grace alone we are saved, and not by works.
As for Matt 24:13, unfortunately you are misunderstanding what Christ is saying here. If you read Matthew 24:13 in context, you will see Christ is talking about the trials Christians will experience in life. It is a simple statement that there are struggles and trials. This text is stated in the context of the destruction of Jerusalem in particular, and it is an exhortation to persevere. When someone is given an exhortation, it does not mean there is necessarily a doubt as to their future destiny. And he is certainly not explicitly stating that any work is necessary.
As for Ray, I am quite familiar with him. If you understood what he is saying, it does not logically flow that works are necessary to save man from condemnation. That is you once again interpreting his words through your Catholic works-based prism. He is discussing what I said above, which you have clearly misunderstood.
How many times can the NT writers tell you Catholics that it is by grace, and not by works we are saved before you actually believe them?