DallasBear9902 said:
Quote:
Quote:
You normally have so much more to say, but you went straight to your need for public validation here.
What does James 2:22 mean to you?
Alternatively, can you please quote the part of the CCC that makes you take issue with Catholic teaching justification?
I'm going to be rather curt, because so much words seems to be wasted when someone is trying to dodge the issue. I'm just gonna go right to the point - you're still dodging. I'll ask again - how can justification come from baptism and the other sacraments, if Romans 10:10 says that with the heart we are justified, by our belief? Are you saying that James is saying that Paul is wrong?
Nobody is interpreting James as saying Paul is wrong. Can you provide a quote or a Catholic teaching from where you are getting this?
Initial justification comes via faith (grace) alone. But the life of a Christian is a journey (oftentimes) with ups and downs. The Simon who follows Jesus at that beach is flying spectacularly high in his life following the Messiah. Then renamed Peter denies Jesus three times in the eve of the crucifixion marking a horrible low in his Christian life and eventually Peter's faith is so strong he died a martyr for the Gospel.
Peter's willful participation in God's plan (the "works", if you will), is the more "perfection" of his faith and sanctification of his spirit. The Simon who meets Jesus on the beach is not ready to die for the Lord. Certainly the Peter who denied Jesus is not ready. But by the end, Peter is ready. That is what the RCC is getting at in its teachings on works and justification. That, as part of a lifelong spiritual journey, works are cooperation with God's will to maintain and increase justification in, for example, the way they can be seen in Peter's life. What happens to Peter if he disregards God's will and retreats to his life as a fishermen after the crucifixion?
Can you cite the paragraph of Catholic teaching on works and justification that has you so fired up?
What does James 2:24 mean to you?
You: "Nobody is interpreting James as saying Paul is wrong. Can you provide a quote or a Catholic teaching from where you are getting this?
This is getting really frustrating. You really do have comprehension problems. Read what I said again
You: "Initial justification comes via faith (grace) alone"
This is vastly different from what was originally claimed by your colleague, who said that initial justification came with the sacrament of water baptism. So thank you for helping me show him he's wrong. Also, thanks for showing that the article he gave was wrong too, since he said that article expresses his view. Do you finally see why giving links as answers to questions about one's beliefs isn't valid? It turns out that YOU don't believe what that link says, even after you defended it. This demonstrates what I was talking about
perfectly.
Now regarding your particular view, which is seemingly that justification is an
ongoing process that only begins intially at faith but must be developed or maintained, and which can also be lost by our sin - is this correct? This is the central difference between the RC and biblical Christianity view of "justification" - RC views it as involving BOTH initial justification and sanctification, while biblical Christianity sees those two as separate things.
James 2 is NOT saying that our works are the
mechanism by which we are justified to righteousness and thus saved, because that would be directly contradicting the clear teaching of Paul, who says it is by faith alone. James 2 is maybe the most misunderstood and misapplied verse. James is merely saying this: our faith alone justifies us to righteousness and salvation, but our works justifies our faith as a true, saving faith. So we are "justified" by BOTH our faith and works,
but in different senses. Paul was dealing with "justification" only in the sense of what makes one righteous and thus saved. James was dealing with "justification" in that sense as well, but also how one's faith is proven, i.e. "justified" (evidenced) as being a true, saving faith.