Posted on 04/29/2013 4:18:02 AM PDT by markomalley
The pity is that those two paragraphs were evidently all you read of Ott's work. I happen to have a copy of Ott's Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma. In it he preceded his discussion of Grace with the following definitions:
"Habitual grace is a constant supernatural quality of the soul which sanctifies man intrinsically and makes him just and pleasing to God (sanctifying grace or justifying grace). Actual grace or assisting grace or helping grace is a temporary supernatural intervention by God by which the powers of the soul are stirred up to perform a salutary act which is directed to the attaining or preservation or increase of sanctifying grace."
If you accept Ott as an expert (why else would you cite him?) perhaps you would comment on his comments on the Reformation's treatment of the subject:
"While Pelagius denied the supernatural endowment of man, Luther, who strained the doctrine of St. Augustine beyond its proper limits, made grace an essential constituent part of human nature. By its loss human nature was entirely corrupted, as its essential constituent parts were taken away and concupiscence, in which, according to Luther, original sin consists, has ever since ruled man. In Luther's view, therefore: fallen man is, of his own proper power, incapable of achieving knowledge of religious truth, or of performing morally good actions; Man's will is no longer free, and of itself can do nothing but sin ; Grace is not capable of saving or intrinsically renewing and sanctifying human nature, since this is fully and entirely vitiated; What justification effects is merely an external covering of man's sinful state but man himself remains changed intrinsically. Man's will is purely passive and does not cooperate with grace, grace alone performing the work of justification." C£ Luther, In Genesis., c. 19.
Peace be with you
Other than the well-practiced effort to drag it off further into the bushes, with specious definitions of the imagined differences between "actual" and "sanctifying" grace --- which could hardly be obtained from the writings of Paul, though it can be well enough justifiably imagined they are imposed upon his words, nothing, for it was plainly enough stated, even if in otherwise overall duplicitous and misleading presentation.
The use of the word "person" is an accident of the limitations of English. The actual term is hypostasis, and God is the hypostatic union of three hypostases; the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.
Peace be with you
I didn’t say I accepted Ott as an expert. I only quoted that one paragraph to show the two terms you pushed to discuss. Since you continue to refuse to clarify your statements or be more precise as to how my interpretation of your jargon is wrong, I don’t see the point of going off on another tangent where you will have further opportunities to insult my knowledge and understanding. For someone who claims to take the moral high ground and scolds others for failing to demonstrate the fruits of the Spirit, you sure do have a strange way of showing yours. Does saying “peace be with you” absolve you of offensive words?
It’s time for me to quit playing with the TarBaby...
I think the real issue here isn't the showing of an understanding, it is the not sharing an understanding.
I am disappointed that you continue to insist that is is not and cannot be God that works in us to perform the Spiritual and Corporeal Works of Mercy resulting from Salvation and that Catholic teaching is contrary to its actuality. I did not insist that you agree with Catholic teaching, only that you accurately present it in you dissent. I encourage you to reflect on Philippians 2:12-13.
I agree and, after repeated requests, you have not shared your understanding of the jargon you quoted. You still have not explained how my interpretation of your jargon was wrong. I have shared my understanding - both my own as well as the one you keep using jargon to explain. It is this jargon that needs further explanation.
I am disappointed that you continue to insist that is is not and cannot be God that works in us to perform the Spiritual and Corporeal Works of Mercy resulting from Salvation and that Catholic teaching is contrary to its actuality. I did not insist that you agree with Catholic teaching, only that you accurately present it in you dissent. I encourage you to reflect on Philippians 2:12-13.
You are disappointed? Show me where I have denied God works in us both producing the desire and the ability to do what pleases him. This is not where we disagree. That you continue to repeat the same phrase, but castigate me for trying to express my understanding of what it truly means, is my disappointment.
So, let me ask one more time. You said:
Works do, however, have an efficacious effect on Grace which is an input to Salvation. As the Holy Spirit is the manifestation op the love between the Father and the Son, Grace is the manifestation of the love between God and man. Agape is the sharing of that Grace / love, with each other. Passing on the Grace we receive, through corporeal and spiritual works of mercy, is the only way we can cooperate with and retain the Grace God gives us freely.
Now, explain to me - and anyone else who is scratching their heads wondering the same thing - how that is not saying "our works enable us to retain the grace necessary for salvation". Explain how this somehow doesn't mean the works we do contribute to our salvation. Explain how you can rectify the clear Scripture passages that state we are saved by faith APART from our works with doctrine that makes our works necessary in order to "keep" or retain the grace we must have in order to be saved. Can you do that? If not, then admit it and we are done for now.
I agree, albeit it straw man in this case.
Peace be with you
Key operative word here being "resulting", which if put the way you just have, could be a teaching of pretty much any Reform-minded theologian.
"...and that Catholic teaching is contrary to its actuality."
Show me where she is disagreeing with good works being a result of salvation, or retract the statement.
Also; According to your own presentation in reply #154, how you state it in that to which I'm replying (#267), it DOES disagree with RCC teaching, being you said in #154 that "works...effect...grace...[and] grace...an input to salvation" along with you then further stating; (and here I will again use ellipses, for it all has been quoted back to you numerous times already) Passing on the grace...through...works...is the only way...we can...retain....grace..."
I do not blame you for the creation of such slippery language, but I do blame you for continuing in it, and repeating it, then trying to wiggle out of it. I further blame you, and have some ought against you for falsely accusing my friend for "continuing to insist" that it "is not and cannot be God that works in us to perform [good]...works", for that my FRomish FRiend, is what FRoman's here are fighting against -- that "works" flow as a result, and that the only actual "good" works, are God working within us, for that is reformist teaching also.
That [blame] is tempered by seeing you now seem to adopt Reformer's approach, ie., [good] works RESULTING from Salvation, leaving our salvation not inextricably bound up in ongoing, partial reliance upon our own [good] works to "retain" that grace which itself is a necessary "input" to salvation (according to you).
Nowhere in the scriptures do we see such twisting, turning pretzel logic, as was evidenced in reply #154. But THAT is RCC doctrine? Or would it be better said "but that IS RCC doctrine" as a positive statement. This latter is the real and actual case & circumstance, for otherwise one of your co-religionists wouldn't have stated "faith and works" X 3(!).
Perhaps it is the Romanists who do not understand Reform theology, instead of the other way around.
I much prefer this sort of pretzel logic.
Bonus track Don't take me alive
I saw it before it happened, for @154, when it first surfaced, wrote a reply in effort to step-by-step trace how [a man's] works were being blended with "grace", with that grace being said at the same time "only" retained by those "works", with such retained grace being said "an input to salvation", but then accidently deleted it, after other duty took me away from the 'puter. Upon return, I closed a tab instead of opening it, with the results being, I found it difficult to rewrite.
Have written several other replies since, as I've been following this all along, but didn't hit the final "send".
Frustrating is too kind of a word. I find it infuriating. The passive-aggressive game well blended with it, is the part that rankles. Disagreement is one thing, game-playing is another. But our FRomish FRiends excell at the indulging themselves (though not *all* of them) in the latter, while engaging in the former.
Because as members of the Body of Christ we are to love one another and encourage each other to continue to grow in Christ.
I’m still not understanding how that translates to inviting someone who is not a member of a given church to that church. I think it’s odd to expect it.
Have you heard of the Great Commission?
That’s a different topic - you said “weird desire for public shame.” — the sacrament of confession is not “public shame”
it's not only Greek orthodox but all other Orthodox, 300 million of them, plus the Oriental Orthodox and the Assyrian. Chip in the Lutheran and they are not "a small group"
And Church belief is that we believe in a merciful God who would save such a child. We just don't know in scripture, so will not comment, but we believe God to be merciful and loving, especially to innocent children
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