Post-initial grace of justification, faith and good works are two sides of the same coin. Faith is not merely a state of mind. Faith, as used by St. Paul, is faith working by, through and under love.
Yes, provided that we maintain that those good works flow from and through faithfulness to the Messiah. Anything - good works or keeping the Torah - apart from the Messiah will not save you. Christ alone saves.Quote:
Is it all the same thing? Can I substitute anywhere I see "faith" with "good works"?
Where did I say anything about being saved by our merit?Quote:
I fail to see how there could be any confusion. He is even so bold to see that this is explained plainly not for the part of Jews, but for OUR part. Those redeemed and in the fellowship of Christ.
Not from works, not from you, not by your merit...
The sixth [article] gives the assurance that it is necessary to do good works but not to be dependent on them according to the passage: "Enter not into judgment with thy servant" [Ps 143:2]. With regard to this we say that faith precedes, and then the works follow and are necessary according to the commandment of God. The one who fulfills them, as he must, receives reward and honor in everlasting life. Indeed, good works are not separate from, but necessary for, true faith. One should not trust in works nor be boastful in a Pharisaic manner. And even if we have fulfilled everything, according to the word of the Lord, "we are unworthy servants" [Lk 17:10]. All things should be referred to the righteousness of God because those things which have been offered by us are small or nothing at all. According to Chrysostom, it has been established that God does not lead those of us who are idle into His kingdom. The Lord "opposes the proud, but he gives grace to the humble" [1 Pet 5:5; see Jas 4:6; Pr 3:24]. One should not boast about works. But to do and fulfill them is most necessary. For without divine works it is impossible to be saved. If, then, we will be convinced by the Lord who says, "If you know these things, blessed are you if you do them" [Jn 13:17], it shall be to our benefit.Quote:
... The same also do the ancient writers of the Church teach; for Ambrose saith: 'This is ordained of God, that he that believeth in Christ shall be saved, without works, by faith alone, freely receiving remission of sins." --Article VI of the Augsburg Confession
Yes, works as a result of faith.Zobel said:
Let us pursue good works. Let us not seek the speck that is in the eye of another, but let us see the log that is in our own [cf. Mt 7:3]. And, thus, with the grace of God, we shall be able to attain worthily the good things to come. Therefore, the power of works is great; and even when they commit sins, God cleanses them through repentance. One should not boast of them nor depend on them, for that would be sinful; but as much as you are able, fulfill the works which are the result of faith and are necessary.
This is good stuff.Zobel said:
The problem is the framing. You're asking for an either or and the answer is yes.
Faithfulness to the Messiah is what saves you. This is a relationship, master to servant, king to subject. Be a faithful servant, a loyal and faithful subject.
It's also husband to bride. Does it make sense to ask these questions about marriage? If someone says, "Be faithful to your wife," do you say that declaring you are faithful is being faithful? Is your faithfulness complete at your wedding altar? Do you ask if your faithfulness is based on works? Or ask how much you have to do to be faithful?
Of course not, because none of that makes any sense.
So yes, the faith - which is your being faithful - justifies you, makes you pleasing to God. Your faithfulness is comprised of what you do, which also makes you pleasing to God. And doing those good things through faith working with God makes you righteous, makes you pleasing to God - even more, it makes you holy and changes you by God working in you as you work and He works through you, which makes you more and more pleasing to God. That is what salvation is.
I think I am just asking about which comes first. Or in other words, can you distinguish the sinner's justification and their sanctification (faithfulness). Or is it basically all one lifelong process.Zobel said:
The problem is the framing. You're asking for an either or and the answer is yes.
It was reckoned as righteousness to Abraham because he DID something.10andBOUNCE said:
"God prefigured and foretold that man would be justified from faith. Therefore, just as it was reckoned as righteousness to Abraham because he had faith, so we too, if we have faith in Christ and every mystery of his, will be sons of Abraham. Our whole life will be accounted as righteous."
-Marinus Victorinus, Ep. Gal 1 (on Gal. 3.7)
"Reckoned" and "accounted" are very forensic terms when it comes to one's justification
Our "whole life"? Is he getting the cart ahead of the horse?
He got up and moved from the land that he knew and went to another place at God's prompting. That was the beginning.10andBOUNCE said:
Yes, he believed. That's it.
10andBOUNCE said:
Genesis 15:5-6
And he brought him outside and said, "Look toward heaven, and number the stars, if you are able to number them." Then he said to him, "So shall your offspring be." And he believed the Lord, and he counted it to him as righteousness.
I am not saying Abraham wasn't faithful in his life, but his righteousness was a one time "counting" at the time of his belief. Marinus is using the same forensic type of language to get the point across.
It says if we have faith, we will become sons of Abraham. Which means if we do not have faith, we will not become sons of Abraham.10andBOUNCE said:
"God prefigured and foretold that man would be justified from faith. Therefore, just as it was reckoned as righteousness to Abraham because he had faith, so we too, if we have faith in Christ and every mystery of his, will be sons of Abraham. Our whole life will be accounted as righteous."
-Marinus Victorinus, Ep. Gal 1 (on Gal. 3.7)
"Reckoned" and "accounted" are very forensic terms when it comes to one's justification
Our "whole life"? Is he getting the cart ahead of the horse?
Quote:
The main point of the letter is this: the Galatians are going astray, because they are linking the gospel of faith, which is a faith in Christ, to Judaism. On account of their corporeal understanding, they observe the sabbath and circumcision, likewise other works they picked up from the Law. Upset by these things, Paul wrote the letter wanting to correct them, and to summon them back from Judaism in order to keep faith in Christ alone, and to have the hope of salvation from Christ, the hope of his promises. For noone is saved based on the works of the Law....So with the authority established (that he received from God the gospel by our Lord Jesus Christ), Paul adds on its very precepts--that is, there is to be no addition of the corporeal understanding characteristic of Judaism. He also relates how he proved the point earlier and acted upon that basis, taking action against even Peter. He follows this up, asserting that there is one gospel, which he taught; those who add the precepts and observation of Judaism go far astray.
Zobel, I agree with this. It got me thinking about the admonition of not judging lest we be judged and how most of us read that admonition as warning against sitting in judgment of someone else's bad acts. But, might we also understand the admonition in a broader context as a warning against judging ourselves as righteous before God (presumption)? Or am I extending Jesus's admonition too far?Quote:
When will our whole life be accounted as righteous? You assume now. I say at the judgment.
I think the distinction to be made is found in your words here. If we pursue other works or any works "in an attempt to become righteous" instead of doing good for the sake of doing good or simply because it is the right thing to do, then the merit of our "works" in God's eyes is less or negated. It's what's in our hearts that matters and our hearts can only move us to do truly good things if God's love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us (Romans 5:5)Quote:
Even though we are not converted Jews and do not pursue works of the Torah in our Christian faith, we still often pursue other works in an attempt to become righteous. Is that a completely different thing?
No. The works of the Torah are about being Jewish, they are what make you Jewish. Every time you see "works of the Torah" that is identical to "being Jewish".10andBOUNCE said:
Would you say that the works of the law are not equivalent to our good works we pursue?
It is applicable to us. The reason we are not to pursue works of the Torah is that we are not Judaeans and becoming Judaean does not save you. So, if you are trying to be saved by following the Torah, you are trying to be saved by being Jewish. That does not work.Quote:
Is the letter to the Galatians not also applicable to us in your mind? Even though we are not converted Jews and do not pursue works of the Torah in our Christian faith, we still often pursue other works in an attempt to become righteous. Is that a completely different thing?