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Posts Tagged ‘justification’

Sane men can choose their opinions, but they cannot choose their facts.  The Holy Scriptures are not just a collection of God’s opinions, but rather they are factual assertions.  (2 Peter 1:12-16).  The Scriptures say: “This happened.”

Many think that faith is defined as belief apart from evidence.  Some even say that faith is virtuous because it believes without evidence.  In so doing, they actually define faith as self-delusion.

On the other hand, true faith is trust in Christ who himself is the factually incarnate evidence of God’s love and mercy.  God does not expect us to trust in him apart from the evidence (Christ), but rather that we trust in him only because of the evidence (Christ).

True faith is created only by Christ through the promise of word and sacrament, not by our choices.  True and reliable trust is created only by that which factually is trustworthy.  God alone is factually true, reliable, and trustworthy, therefore, he alone can create and maintain true faith.  (Hebrews 12:2 & 2 Peter 1:20-21).

We are saved through faith, and faith is not from ourselves, “it is the gift of God—not by works, so that no one can boast.”  (Ephesians 2:8-9).

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Obedience to the Law apart from faith does not justify, but those who have been justified will necessarily produce fruit worthy of the Holy Spirit, repentance, and justification.

“[W]hen obedience happens in those who have been justified, it merits other great rewards.  [However] God puts His saints to work in various ways, and often holds back the rewards of works-righteousness.  He does this so that they may learn not to trust in their own righteousness, and may learn to seek God’s will rather than the rewards.  This can be seen with Job, Christ, and other saints.”

Book of Concord; “Apology of the Augsburg Confession:”
Love and Fulfilling the Law, paragraphs 76-77.  Emphasis added.

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Scott Hahn is a popular apologist who converted to Roman Catholicism from Presbyterianism.  He is very popular on the speaking circuit and has numerous books in print and CDs in circulation.  One of his more popular books has been Rome Sweet Home, a recounting of his family’s journey home to the Roman Catholic Church.  Mr. Hahn writes in a folksy disarming way, and is often hailed as a leader in the Protestant return to Rome.

A number of years ago, I was invited to read Rome Sweet Home, and I did.  About three months ago, I decided to read it again, but the waiting list at the library was quite long.  It finally arrived at the tail end of July, and I wanted to review Mr. Hahn’s writing on justification and sola fide.

Reflecting on his time in a Presbyterian seminary, Mr. Hahn writes:

Saint Paul (whom I had thought of as the first Luther) taught in Romans, Galatians and elsewhere that justification was more than a legal decree; it established us in Christ as God’s children by grace alone.  In fact, I discovered that nowhere did Saint Paul ever teach that we were justified by faith aloneSola fide was unscriptural!

I was so excited about this discovery.  I shared it with some friends, who were amazed at how much sense it made…

I remembered how one of my favorite theologians, Dr. Gerstner, once said in class that if Protestants were wrong on sola fide — and the Catholic Church was right that justification is by faith and works — “I’d be on my knees tomorrow morning outside of the Vatican doing penance.”  We all knew, of course, that he said that for rhetorical effect, but it made a real impact.  In fact, the whole Reformation flowed from this one difference.

[Rome Sweet Home: Our Journey to Catholicism, Ignatius Press, 1993, page 31].

First an observation: before he became Roman Catholic and while he was in a Presbyterian seminary, Hahn thought of St. Paul as “the first Luther”?  That’s a strange thing to say.  In fact, Mr. Hahn has strange statements about his Protestant experience interspersed throughout his book.  For example, just one page later Hahn writes that Luther was his “main source of inspiration and powerful proclamation of the Word.”

I grew up Lutheran.  Luther is revered, and I could imagine a zealous nine-year-old claiming that Luther was the second Paul, but not Paul the first Luther.

Anyway, even though Hahn claims Luther as his “main source of inspiration,” Hahn wasn’t Lutheran, he was a Presbyterian.  Here is a very mild example of what Luther said about people like the Presbyterians:

We earnestly believe that … all … who deny that the body and blood of Christ are taken with the bodily mouth in the venerable Eucharist are heretics and estranged from the church of God.

["Against the Thirty-Two Articles of the Louvain Theologists," Luther's Works, vol. 34].

Second, Hahn has a propensity to say that Protestant doctrine doesn’t encompass even the most basic tenets of Christianity, such as the concept of God as Father.  Hahn claims that the concept of God as Father was foreign to Luther and Calvin.  In his journey to Rome, says Hahn, “I was beginning to see that … God was our Father.”  (Page 30).  However, every Christian who prays the Lord’s Prayer knows that God is our Father.  This is not unique to Rome.

Hahn ties the concept of God as Father into the doctrine of justification “by faith and works,” after all, children are expected to behave.  According to Hahn, we are saved “by faith and works.”  (Page 31).  Fine.  He is bound by his conscience here.  However, he also claims that justification through faith alone is unscriptural, and “that nowhere did Saint Paul ever teach that we were justified by faith alone!”  (Page 31).

Nonetheless in Romans 1:17, Paul declares that the righteousness of God “is by faith from first to last.”  And again he declares that those who do not “know the righteousness that comes from God,” and instead seek to establish their own, do not attain righteousness.  They stumble.  (Romans 9:30-10:3).

One very bothersome aspect of Rome Sweet Home is the almost complete lack of serious theological discussion.  Hahn takes a difficult issue like justification, and flippantly declares that Paul never taught that we are saved by faith and not by works.  Case closed, according to Hahn, and he moves on to the next topic.  Justification is not an easy issue, but in Rome Sweet Home the conclusion that “justification is by faith and works” comes across as all too easy.  (Page 31).

I believe that God wants us to struggle to reconcile James with Paul.  Only by struggling through this difficult issue can we even begin to properly understand it.  Only by wrestling with the Word of God do we show that we are Israel, the man who struggles with God, and not Jacob, the deceiver.  (Genesis 32:22-30).

Here is a small excerpt of what I consider to be a serious wrestling with the issue of faith and works taken from the Apology of the Augsburg Confession (one of the authoritative Lutheran Confessions):

[True] faith is not an easy thing, as our opponents imagine; nor is it a human power, but a divine power that makes us alive and enables us to overcome death and the devil…  Since this faith is a new life, it necessarily produces new impulses and new works.  Accordingly, James is correct in denying that we are justified by a faith without works.   When he says we are justified by faith and works, he certainly does not mean that we are regenerated by works.  Nor does he say that our propitiation is due in part to Christ and in part to our works.  Nor does he describe the manner of justification, but only the nature of the just who have already been justified and reborn.

“To be justified” here does not mean that a wicked man is made righteous but that he is pronounced righteous in a forensic way, just as in the passage (Romans 2:13), “the doers of the law will be justified.”

[The Book of Concord : The Confessions of the evangelical Lutheran church, Tappert (143).  Philadelphia: Fortress Press].

Here is another example of good theology from Saint Augustine:

But the statement that “the doers of the law shall be justified” (Romans 2:13) must be so understood, as that we may know that they are not otherwise doers of the law, unless they be justified, so that justification does not subsequently accrue to them as doers of the law, but justification precedes them as doers of the law.

[St. Augustine; On the Spirit and the Letter, Chapter 45].

Rome Sweet Home is about a family’s journey into the Roman Catholic Church, but on the most important issue of justification, it stumbles.  It stumbles badly.  Dr. Hahn believes that we are saved “by faith and works,” and that is why he made his journey.  Everyone should join the denomination that they believe confesses the most truth.

Jesus builds his Church on the Rock of Truth, and that Truth is the confession of Jesus as Christ.  (Matthew 16:16-18).  Where we find the truth, there we find the Church.  (John 4:23).  However, the difference between salvation through faith alone and salvation “by faith and works” is the difference between salvation with Jesus as Christ and salvation with Jesus as Helper.

The Church can be seen where She makes a clear pure profession that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living God.  (Matthew 16:16-18).  Those titles “Christ” and “Son of the living God” have eternal significance.  They do not mean mere “helper for those seeking to establish their own righteousness,” but rather they do mean “Savior,” and they encompass every possible meaning of that word “Savior.”  Jesus is Savior.  Jesus alone is Savior.

Works are the evidence of our salvation, not the cause.  We are saved by Christ alone, by grace alone, through faith alone, and not by works.

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“Now if any man had it in his power confidently to declare, “I justify you,” it would necessarily follow that he could also say, “Believe in me.”  But it has never been in the power of any of the saints of God to say this except the Saint of saints, who said: “You believe in God, believe also in me;” (John 14:1) so that, inasmuch as it is He that justifies the ungodly, to the man who believes in him that justifies the ungodly his faith is imputed for righteousness.”

— St. Augustine (354-430 A.D.),
On Merit and the Forgiveness of Sins, and the Baptism of Infants,
Book I, Chapter 18.

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The favors of God so far exceed human hope and expectation, that often they are not believed.  For God has bestowed upon us such things as the mind of man never looked for, never thought of.  It is for this reason that the Apostles spend much discourse in securing a belief of the gifts that are granted us of God.  For as men, upon receiving some great good, ask themselves if it is not a dream, as not believing it; so it is with respect to the gifts of God.  What then was it that was thought incredible?  That those who were enemies, and sinners, neither justified by the law, nor by works, should immediately through faith alone be advanced to the highest favor.

Upon this head accordingly Paul has discoursed at length in his Epistle to the Romans, and here again at length.  “This is a faithful saying,” he says, “and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners.”

- St. John Chrysostom (347-407 A.D.), Saint & Doctor of the Church: Homily 4 on First Timothy.

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“And we, too, being called by His will in Christ Jesus, are not justified by ourselves, nor by our own wisdom, or understanding, or godliness, or works which we have wrought in holiness of heart; but by that faith through which, from the beginning, Almighty God has justified all men; to whom be glory for ever and ever.”

Clement of Rome (also known as Pope St. Clement I);
First Epistle to the Corinthians, Chapter 32.

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“The righteousness of the law is proposed in these terms—that whosoever shall do it shall live in it; and the purpose is, that when each has discovered his own weakness, he may not by his own strength, nor by the letter of the law (which cannot be done), but by faith, conciliating the Justifier, attain, and do, and live in it.  For the work in which he who does it shall live, is not done except by one who is justified.  His justification, however, is obtained by faith;”

— St. Augustine; On the Spirit and the Letter, Chapter 51.

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“But the statement that ‘the doers of the law shall be justified’ (Romans 2:13) must be so understood, as that we may know that they are not otherwise doers of the law, unless they be justified, so that justification does not subsequently accrue to them as doers of the law, but justification precedes them as doers of the law.”

— St. Augustine; On the Spirit and the Letter, Chapter 45.

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