Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:
"James is not making an absolute claim about works being necessary for salvation."
Neither is the Church. That's the whole point.
from the link you seemingly want to ignore:
"Baptism is necessary for salvation for those to whom the Gospel has been proclaimed and who have had the possibility of asking for this sacrament."
Thank you.
Double talk! Thank YOU.
No more so than your own.
No double talk here. I'm not the one who's saying that water baptism is an absolute requirement for salvation for people with the opportunity, but then say that without it they still can be saved because "God is not bound by his sacraments".
My position, the biblical position, is that salvation is by faith through grace, a gift of God that we don't have to perform anything for, but just receive through faith. According to the Roman Catholic position, one must perform sacraments dispensed by their church in order to receive this grace, in addition to faith.
I also wonder if you recognize the conundrums you put yourself in with your church's view: where is the dividing line between where it's too early be held accountable for not receiving water baptism and where it's considered ample opportunity? In other words, where's the cutoff point where the sacraments become an absolute requirement? You can "ask" for the sacrament on the same day of your conversion, right? So if you die the next day without getting one, are you eternally lost? Or is it a week? A month? Aren't you forcing God to make an arbitrary dividing line from which to base one's eternal destination? Is God's justice arbitrary like that?
And if you decide on an arbitrary dividing line, then your conundrum becomes this: why can God save someone at one point in that line, but must send to Hell someone who is just a smidgeon across it? A person who dies after a week from converting is given a pass on the sacraments.... but a week and one day is too much, and so they go to Hell? Both truly believe, yet one goes to Hell on a technicality. Is that the Gospel?
It's neither the Gospel nor is it Catholicism.
You presumably believe works are necessary (see again James 2:26), but not for someone like the thief on the cross.
They ("protestants") think that if Jesus or God tells them to do something, commands them to do certain things, and they dont, but they decided if they just believe just for an instant one time long ago and float along in life, that they are good. They base this on one verse.
A verse the church fathers and those that walked with Christ or his next generation almost 100%
Never even reference. But they are their own pope and read it and know they are correct
It's the laziest way to eternal salvation. The least common denominator. I pray for them it works out.
Catholics take the tougher road and work to struggle and endure until the end living in fear of God our Creator knowing our weaknesses and limitations and thankful forHis grace but know he has high expectations and pray to never hear "away with thee, i never knew thee" because so much more is required and commanded than to just say I believe when we were 7 years old.
Keep the faith! Endure! Struggle to the end!!! It is hard. Especially in todays world controlled by leftists dragging humanity to the abyss