luke warm, on 2011-February-09, 06:09, said:
i appreciate all the help i can get... tell me, in your theology is keeping the Law (capitalized to differentiate it in your mind from 'law' - although i still maintain it is a whole) necessary for salvation?
Ah, you *must* be an evangelical now
.
I am not 100% sure that your question makes sense from a Catholic perspective. I think to answer it fully I would need to write an essay, so instead I will offer a few short comments, that together hopefully add up to at least half an answer.
(1) The Divine Law is precisely an expression of God's Love. It is uncontroversial in Christianity to say that the Law is based entirely on those actions which further Divine Love. See Mt 22:37. In a sense, then keeping the Divine Law is simply to Love God and one another, and do only those actions in keeping with that. Thus we have come in essence to the question of whether faith and works are necessary to salvation, or only faith.
(2) I am sure that we can agree that repentance is a necessary part of salvation, and repentance would be impossible without some conception of the Law.
(3) I will describe here a catholic interpretation of how salvation proceeds according to the council of Trent:
God freely gives Grace enabling a man to choose to turn away from his sin.
Man retains his free will, and rather that overrule free will, grace rather perfects it by granting men strength enough to refuse further sins.
Following this, man must co-operate in his justification. He is at any time free to return to a state of sin. Justification proceeds precisely by continuing to choose what is Holy over what is not.
If a man should fall from this path of justification, he may again choose to repent and start again.
Thus, one might say, that if you fail to keep the Law you endanger your salvation, and must repent again. Of course, strictly, it is faith and repentance that return you to a state of Grace, but keeping the Law still has an important Role to play in this sequence.
Finally, returning to point (1), on the question of faith and works, this has been the major point of contention between Catholics and Protestants for centuries.
Doubtless you will quote Paul from Romans and Galatians. I will quote The letter of James, and Revelation. (James writes"faith without works is dead....and thus we see that salvation proceeds from both faith and works", revelations "And Hades will give up its dead, and each shall be judged according to their deeds, as they are recorded in the book of life"). It is one aspect of of Protestant theology where I have never really been able to see where they are coming from tbh. It seems to me that even in the beatitudes, and as a general rule, Jesus infers that your actions in this life will reflect your judgement in the next life. He warns against all kinds of behaviour that will lead to damnation. Even while Paul goes onto develop justification through faith, he still writes early on that "For it is not those who hear the law who are righteous in Gods sight, but it is those who obey the law who will be declared righteous." (Romans 2).
I suppose, then that the short answer is basically yes, I think that it is necessary to (attempt to) obey the Law, but I do not think that failing necessarily condemns you, provided you have repentance.
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