Dear Friend,
While apostasy is predicted
in Scripture, it still comes as a shock to see it face-to-face.
The apostasy in the October 31, 1999, Roman Catholic Church and The
Lutheran World Federation “The Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of
Justification is being called “a milestone in Christian history” “the end of
reformation” and other similar statements of acceptance.
The Bible believer is to
remember such was foretold and he is to continue to contend for Biblical faith.
The Lord Jesus Christ through the Apostle Paul commands His disciples to
“stand fast in one spirit, with one mind striving together for the faith of
the gospel”. They are likewise commanded to "have no fellowship with the
unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them”. The analysis given
below is simply obedience to that Biblical
word.
I request that you study the
analysis and make it known far and wide, and continue to stand strong in the
precious Love and Truth of our All-Sufficient Lord.
In the Lord’s loving
kindness and grace,
Richard
Bennett
The Catholic-Lutheran
Accord
A Denial of the Gospel and the Righteousness of
Christ
In the dialogue between Evangelicals and the Roman Catholic Church here
have been alarming attempts in recent times to declare Roman Catholics as
“brothers and sisters in Christ” as we saw in the preceding chapter.
However something more authoritative took place in
1999. “The Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification” (an official
doctrinal statement jointly authored by representatives of the
Roman Catholic Church and the Lutheran World
Federation) was signed on October 31st, as a joint confessional
agreement. That this event is important is seen in the many comments
on it that imply that the Catholic Church has indeed changed and that the
Vatican now accepts Reformation truths. Thus for example in
the area of ecumenism it has been said that “the most
significant development to date is the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of
Justification, published in 1999 and signed by the Vatican and the Lutheran
World Federation. The document, with a jointly signed annex
attached which offered genuine clarification to the JD, included the acceptance
by Rome of the sola fide formula! In the Joint Declaration it
is affirmed that ‘the doctrine of justification is the measure or touchstone for
the Christian faith. . .an indispensable criterion.’
The JD specifically states that both Catholics and Lutherans jointly
believe that ‘whatever [works] in the justified precedes or follows the free
gift of faith is neither the basis of justification nor merits
it.’ It acknowledges that Lutherans hold the
Reformation understanding of grace alone by faith alone (sola fide), and the
imputed (alien) righteousness of God to the sinner (‘at the same time righteous
and sinner’). And most significantly, the JD explicitly
states that ‘the mutual condemnation of former times do not apply to the
Catholic and Lutheran doctrines of justification.’”[1]
If this were indeed true it
would mean that the Catholic Church is now fundamentally changed, in that it now
accepts the very principles that made the Reformation.
However, because we know that the Vatican continually claims that it
is “semper eadem’ (always the same) and that her Popes’ teachings are
“irreformable by
their very nature”,[2] we must analyze just what was
jointly accepted on the 482nd anniversary of Martin Luther’s pivotal posting of the ‘95
theses’. What we will see is totally different than
what many claim. In fact, the Lutherans of
Lutheran World Federation have now embraced the doctrine of
the Council of Trent, and in so doing have officially and
formally denied the Gospel and the righteousness of Christ.
Significantly, of the three Lutheran Synods in the USA; the Missouri
Synod (7 million), the Wisconsin Synod (c. 0.5 million) and Evangelical Lutheran
Church of America (20 million), only the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America
signed this accord with
Rome.
The Joint Declaration was the result of thirty years of Lutheran-Roman
Catholic dialogue. This fact alone might dissuade many from
daring to challenge it. The document itself is about nineteen
pages in length depending on which printing one reads.
Arrayed with many footnotes, a sizable appendix, the official response of
the Lutheran World Federation, the Roman Catholic response, the clarifications
to the document, and the added accouterment of John Paul II’s comment on the
Joint Declaration; the document appears very much like the robes of those who
devised it: all very “haut couture” meant to stun anyone who might dare to
analyze it.
In addition to the first rate showmanship with which the Joint
Declaration has been presented, it appears that there is neither grub nor gnat
that has not been strained out of this cleverly worded document and
addenda. Dare anyone be so bold as to ask if a camel has been
swallowed? Daunting circumstances notwithstanding, the Christian, committed to
Scripture as his sole authority, and in the same Holy Spirit that gave the
Scripture, is able to sift error from truth, discerning that which is in accord
with Scripture in the Official Common Statement in which the Joint
Declaration is ratified and approved by both
parties.
There are presuppositions upheld in the Joint
Declaration itself which are not stated as such in the Official Common
Statement. Some of these presuppositions totally negate
Biblical justification as, for example, the idea that justification is by means
of the sacrament of baptism. Both parties to the agreement
accept such a tradition of men. This is listed under the
heading called “4.4 The Justified as Sinner”, the Joint Declaration states: “28.
We confess together that in Baptism the Holy Spirit unites one with Christ,
justifies, and truly renews the person.” This heresy is in
line with the teaching of the Council of
Trent,
Can. 8
“If any shall say that by the said sacraments of the New Law, grace is
not conferred from the work which has been worked [ex opere operato] but
that faith alone in the divine promise suffices to obtain grace: let him be
anathema.”[3]
Biblical truth,
however, is that the believer’s faith cannot be based on any physical works of
men whatsoever, as true faith is in Christ Jesus’ perfect life and sacrifice
alone.[4] To attempt to claim causative effects,
therefore, for that which was given to testify to the Lord’s grace and His
finished work is “to preach another gospel”.[5]
While such deadly landmines as this permeate the Joint
Declaration, this analysis is limited mainly to examining the Official Common
Statement ratified by both parties.
Because God is All Holy and man is dead in trespasses and sins, an
immense gulf exists between the Creator and the human creature.
Because of Adam’s sin, mankind is born spiritually dead.
God justifies His own Holiness in graciously providing the believer’s
rectitude by imputing to the sinner the perfect righteousness of Christ and His
perfect propitiation-sacrifice. The Scriptures proclaim the
Holiness and Righteousness of God in the flawless life and death of the God-man
the Lord Christ Jesus. Justification in the first place has
to do with God Himself, to show that He is just in justifying the sinner in
Christ.
The Gospel has to do with who God is in His Holy and Righteous
nature. The Gospel demonstrates that because of who God is,
He alone justifies. Thus Romans 3:26 states, “To declare,
I say, at this time his righteousness: that he might be just, and the justifier
of him which believeth in Jesus.” The final cause
of justification is the glory of the Divine Holiness, Justice and
Goodness. Thus the one who preaches any other gospel is accursed by God, as the Apostle clearly stated in Galatians
chapter one.
Perversion of the Gospel is an enormous crime. It
debases the perfect righteousness and sacrifice of Christ, and in so doing
stands against the very nature of God’s Holiness. Through the
prophet Isaiah the Lord warns, "But the Lord of hosts shall be exalted in
judgment, and God that is holy shall be sanctified in
righteousness.”[6]
It must be carefully observed that it is not possible for those who
pervert the Gospel to continue unpunished or for God to permit His glory to be
set aside. The time frame is not known; however, the
certainty is inevitable. God who is Holy “shall be
sanctified in righteousness.” God is God, and those who teach a false
gospel may not, by a false fancy, assure themselves of uninterrupted
tranquility. God is Holy by nature. He
must be sanctified in judgment, for God cannot deny
Himself.
The document alleges, “...that a consensus in basic truths of the
doctrine of justification exists between Lutherans and Catholics...” and
“...that the mutual condemnations of former times do not apply to the Catholic
and Lutheran Doctrines of justification as they are presented in the joint
declaration.” These statements notwithstanding, the relevant “condemnations” by the Church of Rome on those
who hold to the biblical Gospel have never been revoked or recanted.
The present day dogma of the Catholic Church
upholds the teaching of the Council of Trent and declares that it is
infallible.[7]
From Sixth Session of the Council of Trent,
the following curses still
stand,
Canon
9. If anyone shall say that by faith alone the sinner is
justified, so as to understand that nothing else is required to cooperate in the
attainment of the grace of justification, and that it is in no way necessary
that he be prepared and disposed by the action of his own will: let him be
anathema.[8]
Canon 11. If anyone
shall say that men are justified either by the sole imputation of the justice of
Christ or by the sole remission of sins, to the exclusion of the grace and the
charity, which is poured forth in their hearts by the Holy Spirit and remains in
them, or even that the grace by which we are justified is only the favor of God:
let him be anathema.[9]
Two Important
Points:
1. From a Roman Catholic
perspective, as will be seen, these condemnations do in fact stand because
the
Joint Declaration does not contradict either.
2. From a
Biblical and historical Lutheran viewpoint, however, these anathemas of Trent
fall under the wrath of God.
The Joint Declaration consists of five main divisions with the entirety
subdivided into forty-four numbered paragraphs. The fourth
main division, the lengthiest of the five, is broken down into seven sections,
an overview being as
follows:
Preamble (7 paragraphs the Joint
Declaration (JD)
1-7)
1. Biblical Message of Justification (JD
8-12)
2. The Doctrine of Justification as Ecumenical Problem (JD
13)
3. The Common Understanding of
Justification (JD
14-18)
4. Explicating the Common Understanding of
Justification (JD 19-39)
This 20-paragraph section has seven
subheadings.
1. Human Powerlessness and Sin in Relation
to Justification (JD
19-21)
2. Justification as Forgiveness of Sins and
Making Righteous
(JD
22-24)
3. Justification by Faith and through
Grace (JD
25-27)
4. The Justified as Sinner (JD
28-30)
5. Law and Gospel (JD
31-33)
6. Assurance of Salvation (JD
34-36)
7. The Good Works of the
Justified (JD
37-39)
5. The Significance and Scope of the
Consensus Reached (JD
40-44)
The Official Common
Statement ratifies the Joint Declaration. This begins
with three paragraphs (OCS 1-3) followed by the
words, “By this act of signing The Catholic Church and The Lutheran World
Federation Confirm the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification in its
entirety.” The Official Common Statement has an Annex with
four sections. Finally, Section 2 has five subsections,
A-E.
The Joint Declaration must be analyzed in the light of
Biblical truth. What was true for Israel in the Apostle
Paul’s analysis applies in this instance. But Israel, which followed after
the law of righteousness, hath not attained to the law of
righteousness. Wherefore? Because they
sought it not by faith, but as it were by the works of the law.
For they stumbled at that stumbling stone; As it is written, Behold, I
lay in Zion a stumbling stone and rock of offence: and whosoever believeth on
him shall not be ashamed...For they being ignorant of God's righteousness, and
going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves
unto the righteousness of God.[10]
The Biblical “rock of offence” is
Christ Jesus Himself, the Rock on which one believes for extrinsic
justification, that is, imputed righteousness. One must
remember from the outset that the issue at hand is “Justification”.
Error always cloaks itself in reasonable sounding phrases and often makes
use of the scheme of the evil one to twist the Scriptures.
The Joint Declaration is replete with “Reformation-like”
language and Scripture quotations. A characteristic vagueness
and impreciseness permeates the document. Certain sentences
can be read and assented to by a Biblical Christian, but when the slant of
meaning is examined each is seen to be the opposite of what it first seemed to
say. The conclusions arrived at are similar to the
deception of Jacob in Genesis Ch. 27, “The voice is Jacob’s voice, but the
hands are the hands of Esau.” “The voice” of the Joint
Declaration is distinctly that of the
Scriptures; “the hands”, however, are the hairy hands of Rome.
The document is excelsior of doublespeak. It
claims to explain a common understanding of the doctrine of justification, and
then adds encumbrance upon impediment to the purely Scriptural, wholly
objective, wholly juridical nature of the doctrine.
There is no better way to assess the guile of
the
Joint Declaration in its attendant Official Common Statement than by comparing
it to what the Scripture, the Word of God, declares to be
truth.
Trent in new garments
In the Joint Declaration, imputed righteousness is cleverly
sidestepped for the old lie of establishing one’s own righteousness.
The central point that separated the Reformation from Rome was the
Biblical doctrine of extrinsic justification. A person is
accepted by the All Holy God only “in the beloved” “to the praise of
the glory of his grace.”[11] The
doctrine of imputed righteousness struck at the very heart of the Roman Catholic
insistence on one being made inherently just, i.e., just within
oneself. In the Joint
Declaration, the doctrine of extrinsic or imputed righteousness has been wiped
out in favor of the Catholic
Church doctrine of inherent
righteousness. Clearly, the Joint
Declaration is an attempt to do away with the biblical Gospel.
Thus the Official Common Statement 2. A) reads,
“We confess
together that God forgives sin by grace and at the same time frees human beings
from sin’s enslaving power ” (JD 22). “Justification is
forgiveness of sins and being made righteous, through which God “imparts the
gift of new life in Christ” (JD 22). “Since we are justified
by faith, we have peace with God” (Rom 5:1). We are “called
children of God; and that is what we are” (1 Jn 3:1). We are
truly and inwardly renewed by the action of the Holy Spirit, remaining always
dependent on his work in us. “So if anyone is in Christ,
there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see, everything has
become new!” (2 Cor 5:17). The justified do not remain
sinners in this sense”.
This is a convoluted mixture of the
doctrines of justification and sanctification rather than merely a problem of
semantics. Justification nowhere in Scripture ever means
inherent righteousness (i.e. “being made righteous”). The
believer’s justification is not based on a single iota of anything in him: it is
based wholly in his standing in Christ. This is the crux of
the matter in the Joint Declaration. One goes the
way of all flesh to the judgment of hell if he adds anything to the pure and
perfect righteousness of Christ. One needs to be, “afraid,
lest as the serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, minds should be led astray
from the simplicity and purity of Christ”[12]
Justification is not “being made righteous”, but the Joint
Declaration follows such statements as these with numerous Scriptural quotations
and phrases cloaking its errors in the semblance of truth.
It is quite like Rebecca’s word to Jacob, “Now therefore, my son,
obey my voice according to that which I command thee.”[13]
Thus “Rebecca took goodly raiment of her eldest son Esau, which
were with her in the house, and put them upon Jacob her younger son.”[14]
In the Joint Declaration, the voice of some of the best
Scripture texts on justification is heard. The conclusion,
however, is similar to what Isaac discerned, “The voice is Jacob’s voice, but
the hands are the hands of Esau.”[15] The
hands of the Joint Declaration are distinctly those of Rome; the
material that is manipulated, however, is that of Scripture.[16]
In the justifying act of God, He imputes Christ's perfect righteousness
to the individual. It is a legal and one time, finished,
irrevocable act which cannot be misconstrued to be a process or ongoing
occurrence, such as the term “being made righteous” will allow.
The simple truth of Scripture is stated Romans 3:22, "Even the
righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all
them that believe.” God’s demonstration of His own
righteousness is the faithfulness of Jesus Christ in His perfect life and
sacrificial death. The great news is that this absolute
righteousness is by imputation “unto all and upon all them that
believe.” Being “called children of God” and “a
new creation” is the fruit. It is what follows on this
act. “Being made righteous” here is just a rewording of the
old lie of the Council of Trent in which it was officially declared,
“Justification…which is not merely remission of sins, but also of the
sanctification and renewal of the interior man…whereby an unjust man becomes a
just man.”[17] In this final word of the Joint Declaration
Official Common Statement is the age old Roman Catholic mixing of sanctification
with the act of justification, returning to the age old fabrication that
righteousness is supposedly within the soul, rather than to the biblical truth
that by Holy God the believer is credited with the everlasting righteousness
that is in Christ Jesus. “Surely, shall one say, in the
Lord have I righteousness and
strength....”[18]
What is proposed in the Joint Declaration as the “doctrine of justification”
is deficient in two essential ways. It neither upholds the
perfect standard of God’s Holiness nor does it demonstrate the perfect
righteousness of Christ in life and death. In the words of
the Apostle Paul, "For they being ignorant of God’s righteousness, and going
about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto
the righteousness of God.”[19] The
Bible emphasizes and declares the righteousness of God, “the righteousness of
God revealed from faith to faith”[20].
This is not proclaimed nor taught in the Official Common Statement on
the
Joint Declaration. Destitute and sinful human beings
need the perfect righteousness of Christ. This is what the
Scripture clearly says is now manifest, “But now the righteousness of God
without the law is manifested.”[21]
What precisely is omitted in the Joint
Declaration is “the righteousness of God without the law the righteousness
which is of God by faith” of Philippians 3:9, “the
righteousness of the one”, “the obedience of the one”
of Romans 5:18-19[22], the
righteousness of Jesus Christ “the righteousness of God and our Saviour Jesus
Christ” of 2 Peter 1:1. The verdict act of God in
declaring that a sinner is acquitted and counted righteous because of the
obedience and death of Jesus Christ alone is not contained in the Joint
Declaration. What is proposed in its place is a combination
of some Biblical truths (such as grace alone, faith alone) with the old lying
definition of “justification” being seen as a quality of the soul within the
believer.
Because righteousness is of and from God, it is absolutely
perfect. The one-time act of God in justifying a sinner in
Christ Jesus is perfect. Because man in himself cannot be
perfect, righteousness can only be communicated through imputation or
reckoning. God’s provision of the perfect righteousness of
Christ is acquired by faith alone. This faith, in itself, is
not seen, rather it is “the evidence of things not
seen”.[23] The “righteousness of God without the
law” is not to be seen on earth. The fruitfulness of such
righteousness is indeed seen; nevertheless, the righteousness itself is in
heavenly places in Christ.[24]
What is proposed to be “justification” in the Official Common Statement
on the
Joint Declaration is to be seen here on earth, and not the Scriptural,
declarative justification “in heaven”. Rather justification
is presented as taking place “on earth” in the believer, as for example, in
Annex Para 2,
“Together we
confess: By grace alone, in faith in Christ's saving work and not because of any
merit on our part, we are accepted by God and receive the Holy Spirit, who
renews our hearts while equipping and calling us to good works” (JD
15). (Emphasis
added.)
The simple truth of
Scripture is that God never accepts an individual as such.
Rather, he is accepted only in the Beloved,[25] in the righteousness of the One, Christ Jesus, that is, in the
righteousness of faith. Receiving the Holy Spirit and the
renewal of hearts is the old confusion of justification with
sanctification. Because the purpose of these statements is to
define justification, such stupefaction is studied
deceit.
The phrases, “being made righteous” and “we are accepted by God and
receive the Holy Spirit” both make room for what is to be concluded, i.e., that
“justification” is within the person and a quality of the soul within the
believer. Basically the Biblical truth is this: the perfect
righteousness of Christ imputed to the believer is an act of God in
Christ.
The official statement ratifying the Joint
Declaration states,
C)
Justification takes place “by grace alone” (15 and 16), by faith alone, the
person is justified “apart from works” (Rom 3:28, cf. JD 25).
“Grace creates faith not only when faith begins in a person but as long
as faith lasts” (Thomas Aquinas, S. Th II/II 4, 4 ad
3).
The use of the phrase
“Justification takes place” rather than the Biblical concept, “to whom it
shall be imputed,”[26] is studied deceit because the word “justification” is be made to
imply a process rather than a one-time act of the God. In
Scripture justification is a one-time declarative act
in which God pronounces the sinner just or righteous, as it is stated,
“God…not imputing their trespasses unto them.”[27]
And as the Apostle specifically states, “Blessed is the man to whom the Lord
will not impute sin.”[28]
The Joint Declaration and the Official Common Statement on
the
Joint Declaration use the noun “justification” and carefully avoid the verb
“justifies”. The Greek word “justifies” (logizomai) means to
count esteem, impute, number, reason, reckon. It is a verb
denoting a one-time action. The repetition of the noun
“justification” in the Joint Declaration and in the Official Common
Statement on the Joint Declaration conveys the concept of a quality
within a person that totally contravenes the Scripture.
Not mentioning “imputed righteousness” and continually
speaking of “justification” is seductive
sophistry.
Thus in the Official Common Statement’s endorsement of the Joint
Declaration, the basis for the Gospel is given as within man rather than the
perfect righteousness of the God-man, Christ Jesus. This is
speaking against God and is worse than anything proposed by Israel or the
Pharisees. The words of the Lord Christ Jesus therefore
apply, "for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men: for ye neither go
in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go
in.”[29]
The Roman Catholic Church cannot conceive of the act of justifying in
which man remains a sinner. Catholic theology understands
justifying as “justification”, something that God graciously pours into a man’s
heart, displacing sin and sinfulness in the process.
Biblically speaking, however, justifying righteousness is something that
always resides in the person of Christ alone. The imputation
of this righteousness is what makes a believer acceptable to God.
As long as the believer lives, he is in himself guilty, but in Christ He
is righteous and accounted precious in God’s
sight.
An astonishing quote from Aquinas
It is a surprising thing that a section of Thomas Aquinas’ teaching is
affirmed in this final word confirming the conclusion of the Joint
Declaration and the Official Common Statement. The question
Aquinas was answering in S. Th II/II 4, 4 ad 3 is, “Whether Formless Faith Can
Become Formed or Formed Faith Formless?”[30] The
abstruseness of the question itself gives one a taste of the intricacies of
scholastic theology. Why quote from a most intricate question
in Aquinas rather than simply giving the words of Scripture that are referred to
in the brackets? The Romans 3:28 text given in brackets
before the Aquinas quote states, “Therefore we conclude that a man is
justified by faith without the deeds of the law.” The
word “conclude” in this text is the Greek word “logizometha” meaning, we esteem,
impute or reckon “that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the
law.” Had the Scripture been cited rather than the words
of Aquinas, “righteousness reckoned” would have been obvious, and the sophistry
exposed. The official statement however chose the words of
Aquinas to suppress biblical truth and to uphold the concept of inherent
righteousness.
The statement
agreed on says,
C)
Justification takes place “by grace alone” (JD 15 and 16), by faith alone, the
person is justified “apart from works” (Rom 3:28, cf. JD 25). “Grace
creates faith not only when faith begins in a person but as long as faith lasts”
(Thomas Aquinas, S. Th II/II 4, 4 ad
3).
Biblically
speaking it ought to say,
The
righteousness of Christ is credited to the believer “by grace alone” and by
faith alone, and thus the person is justified in Christ alone, “apart
from works”. As is stated by the Apostle Paul, “Therefore
we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the
law.” (Rom 3:28)
Cancerous Cuisine
Earlier in the same work cited, Aquinas teaches that grace is a quality
of the soul. In the “Treatise on Grace”, he asks the question
“Is Grace a Quality of the Soul?” In the body of his article,
he cites Aristotle’s physics saying, “motion is the act of the mover in the
moved.” Then in Reply Obj. 1, he states, “Grace, as a
quality, is said to act upon the soul not after the manner of an efficient
cause, but after the manner of a formal cause, as whiteness makes a thing white,
and justice, just.”[31] The whole idea of grace being moral justice
located inside a person, rather than Holy God imputing Christ's righteousness to
each person whom He places in Christ, blatantly contradicts Biblical
truth. Such teaching is a negation of consistent Biblical
teaching of positional legal righteousness in Christ
alone.[32]
Complete perfection in Christ, not in the
individual
Endorsing the teaching of Aquinas and all such teaching in the Joint
Declaration as “Justification takes place”, “being made righteous”, and “we are
accepted by God and receive the Holy Spirit” is quite cleverly teaching
“inherent righteousness” without using those words. Such
teaching opposes both the Gospel and the righteousness of
Christ.
The distinction between the righteousness of faith (justification) and
the righteousness of the law (i.e., sanctification) was foundational in Luther’s
understanding of the Gospel. After Luther, the Formula of
Concord of 1577 reiterated the basic Biblical insights of double
righteousness. This was bedrock of historical
Lutheranism. It was recognized that if active righteousness
(sanctification) were brought into the definition of the passive righteousness
by faith, then both the glory of Christ and the Gospel are denied and one
returns to the old lie of Satan that what is inside a man makes him right before
God. "Ye shall be as gods” (Genesis
3:5).
The written Word of the Lord continually shows the believer where he or
she is eternally and splendidly saved. “And ye are
complete in him, which is the head of all principality and
power.”[33] The Roman Catholic Church does not rest
satisfied with Christ alone, her process program in fact nullifies the grace of
God.[34] What is literally damming in the Official
Common Statement of the Joint Declaration is that an attempt has been made to
masquerade the perfect righteousness of Christ as inherent
righteousness. What was truly Biblical in Luther’s
understanding of imputed righteousness is now subsumed under Rome’s idea of
“inner” righteousness, the source of her power over the minds and hearts of men,
which power she covets. What is most serious, the very truth
of the Gospel is thus made void. The “inner” process system
is a hopeless practice born of a blasphemous idea. Rather,
“It is God that justifieth.”[35]
The Lord forewarned of stumbling at the Rock of offence, "unto you
therefore which believe he is precious: but unto them which be disobedient, the
stone which the builders disallowed, the same is made the head of the corner.”
[36]
The Catholic Church and Lutheran World Federation in publicizing their
apostasy in the Joint Declaration have to fear a revelation of
something much more serious; the very wrath of God. "For the wrath of God is
revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who
hold the truth in unrighteousness.”[37]
The intent to continue dialogue “to reach full church community” is a
conclusion mentioned in paragraph 3 of the Official Common
Statement. The actual words are as
follows,
“The two
partners in dialogue are committed to continued and deepened study of the
biblical foundations of the doctrine of justification. They
will also seek further common understanding of the doctrine of justification,
also beyond what is dealt with in the Joint Declaration and the annexed
substantiating statement. Based on the consensus reached,
continued dialogue is required specifically on the issues mentioned especially
in the Joint Declaration itself (JD 43) as requiring further clarification, in
order to reach full church communion, a unity in diversity, in which remaining
differences would be ‘reconciled’ and no longer have a divisive force.”
It is quite
revealing that the stated conclusion here is one of the primary goals as defined
in the Church of Rome’s conditions for dialogue.
The Dart through the Liver: Rome's own first basis
© 2003 Berean Beacon Ministries All Rights
Reserved
For the Catholic Church the first basis on which ecumenical dialogue works is
not Sola Scriptura[38],
“the Scripture cannot be broken” (John 10:35);
rather it is a “community of spiritual goods”. This
basis is exactly the same as the premise on which the Catholic Church
builds her doctrine and which is spelled out in her latest official
Catechism,
Para.
80 “Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture, then, are bound
closely together and communicate one with the other. For both
of them, flowing out from the same divine wellspring, come together in some
fashion to form one thing and move towards the same
goal.”
Thus the first basis for all the
dialogue with the Lutheran World Federation was the
Catholic Church’s own measure of “truth”.
The rules following on this first basis were also her own rules of
engagement. Some of the rules are these:
“Each
partner should seek to expound the doctrine of his own community in a
constructive manner, putting aside the tendency to define by opposition....
[Interestingly, the Bible teaches much by means of contrast.]
The partners will work together towards a constructive synthesis, in such
a way that every legitimate contribution is made use of, in a joint research
aimed at the complete assimilation of the revealed datum.”[39]
The words “revealed
datum” are carefully chosen. For a Bible believer, the term
would mean just the Written Word; for the Catholic Church, however, the term “revealed datum” consistently refers
to Scripture plus Tradition as her first basis. Proceeding
from this impure base, the “constructive synthesis” rules are simply the old
line of evolution, “truth” by synthesis, or relative “truth”.
Excluded from start to finish is the principle of Sola
Scriptura. To the Catholic Church who by so exquisite an application of her rules of engagement has “thrust through” the
Lutherans, the words of the Lord
speak directly, “[You are]
making the word of God of none effect through your tradition, which ye have
delivered.”[40]
According to Vatican Council II
Document No. 42, the final goal of the dialogue between the Lutherans and the
Roman Catholic Church is that the Lutherans be
brought “into that unity of the one and only Church...This unity, we
believe, dwells in the Catholic Church as something she can never
lose.” For the Catholic
Church, the final conclusion has not yet
been attained until her stated objective is secured. Until
then, “continued dialogue is required…in order to reach full church
communion”. And to this, the Lutherans apparently have agreed
fully--snared by thirty years of hearing her “much fair speech...till a dart
strike through his liver”, as indeed it has. The Catholic Church has
been clear in laying out her agenda toward all Christians who are not part of
her organization. She has applied her method skillfully,
relentlessly since Vatican Council II. Ought one to be
surprised by the conclusions to which she and the Lutheran World Federation have
come?
For those who are the Lord’s own within the Lutheran Churches, the
warning of the Lord is clearly given “Hearken unto me now therefore, O ye
children, and attend to the words of my mouth. Let not thine heart decline to
her ways, go not astray in her paths. For she hath cast down many wounded: yea,
many strong men have been slain by her. Her house is the way to hell, going down
to the chambers of death.”[41]
The Joint Declaration as ratified in the Official Common
Statement is indeed outwardly stunning, but the message is dead men’s bones in
that it attempts to cleverly establish man’s own righteousness.
The words of the Lord are indeed appropriate, “I say unto you, that
except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and
Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven.”[42]
¨
Richard
Bennett of “Berean Beacon” WebPage: www.bereanbeacon.org
Permission is given by the author to copy this article if it is done in its entirety without any changes.
Endnotes
[2] “The Roman
Pontiff … enjoys this infallibility…For this reason his definitions are rightly
said to be irreformable by their very nature...” From Vatican Council II
Documents, Lumen Gentium p. 380 Austin Flannery, Ed., 1981 ed.
(Northport, NY: Costello Publ. Co.,
1975)
[3] Henry
Denzinger, The Sources of Catholic Dogma, Tr. by Roy J Deferrari from
Enchiridion Symbolorum, 30th ed. (St. Louis, MO: B. Herder Book Co., 1957),
#851. Bolding in any quotation indicates emphasis added in
this work.
[4]
John 6:29; Romans 2:28, 29; Ephesians 2:8, 9; Colossians 2:11; Romans
3:21-26.
[5]
Galatians 1:9.
[6]
Isaiah 5:16.
[7]
Catechism of the Catholic Church (Ligouri, MO:
Ligouri Publications, 1994) Para.
891.
[8] Denzinger,
#819.
[9]
Ibid., #821.
[10]
Romans 9:31-10:3.
[11]
Ephesians 1:6.
[12] II Corinthians11:3
[13]
Genesis 27:8.
[14]
Genesis 27:15.
[15]
Genesis 27:22.
[16]The Apocryphal books are also
quoted. These are whole books added to Scripture and also
include additions to existing Old Testament books of the Scripture.
This was done the Roman Catholic Church at the Council of Trent in
1546. The Catholic Church itself refers to these books as the
“deuterocanonical books”, the term meaning second
canon.
[17] Denzinger,
#799.
[18] Isaiah
45:24.
[19] Romans 10:3
[20] Romans 1: 17
[21] Romans 3:21
[22] "Therefore
as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by
the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of
life. For as by one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by the
obedience of one shall many be made righteous.”
[23] Hebrews
11:1
[24] Ephesians
1:3.
[25] Ephesians 1:6
“To the praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he hath made us accepted in
the beloved.”
[26] Romans 4:23-25
“Now it was not written for his sake alone, that it was imputed to him; but
for us also, to whom it shall be imputed, if we believe on him that raised up
Jesus our Lord from the dead; Who was delivered for our offences, and was raised
again for our
justification.”
[27] 2 Corinthians
5:19
[28] Romans
4:8
[29] Matthew
23:13.
[30] Summa
Theologica, Tr. by Fathers of the English Dominican Province, Rev. by Daniel
J. Sullivan, Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc. (USA: Wm. Benton, Publisher, 1952)
Vol. II, p. 405.
[31] Ibid., p. 349.
[32] Psalm 32:2,
71:15-16, 130:3; Isaiah 45:24-25, 54:17, 61:10; Jeremiah 23:6, 33:16, 51:10;
Daniel 9:24; Luke 18:14; Romans 1:17, 3:21-22, 4:6, 11, 5:18-19; I Corinthians
1:30; II Corinthians 5:21; Ephesians 1:6; Colossians 2:10, 3:3; II Peter 1:1,
and elsewhere.
[33] Colossians
2:10.
[34] “Christ is
become of no effect unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the law; ye are
fallen from grace.” Galatians
5:4.
[35] Romans
8:33.
[36] 1 Peter 2:7
[37] Romans 1:18
[38] The principle of “sola Scriptura” is consistent with the
very way in which the word of truth that comes from God, is to be interpreted,
as Psalm 36:9 explains, “For with thee is the fountain of life; in thy light
we see light.” God's truth is seen in the light of
God’s truth. This is exactly the same as the Apostle Paul
says, “Which things also we speak, not in the words which man’s wisdom
teacheth but which the Holy Ghost teacheth, comparing spiritual things with
spiritual” (I Corinthians 2:13). It is precisely
in the light which God’s truth sheds, that His truth is
seen.
[39] Vat. Council
II Doc., No. 42, p. 548.
[40] Mark
7:13.
[41] Proverbs 7:24-27
[42] Matthew 5:20