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VBF’S
Position on Roman Catholicism
At Vancouver Bible
Fellowship we would fully agree with the following Statement on Roman
Catholicism from Grace Community Church:
IN
TODAY’S SPIRIT OF ECUMENISM, many evangelicals have called for the
Protestant Church to lay aside its differences with Rome and pursue
unity with the Catholic Church. Is that possible? Is Roman Catholicism
simply another facet of the body of Christ that should be brought into
union with its Protestant counterpart? Is Roman Catholicism simply
another Christian denomination?
While
there are many errors in the teaching of the Catholic Church (for
example its belief in the transubstantiation of the communion wafer and
its view of Mary), two rise to the forefront and call for special
attention: its denial of the doctrine of sola Scriptura and its
denial of the biblical teaching on justification. To put it simply,
because the Roman Catholic Church has refused to submit itself to the
authority of God’s Word and to embrace the gospel of justification
taught in Scripture, it has set itself apart from the true body of
Christ. It is a false and deceptive form of Christianity.
The
Doctrine of Sola Scriptura
In
the words of reformer Martin Luther, the doctrine of sola Scriptura
means that “what is asserted without the Scriptures or proven
revelation may be held as an opinion, but need not be believed.” Roman
Catholicism flatly rejects this principle, adding a host of traditions
and Church teachings and declaring them binding on all true
believers—with the threat of eternal damnation to those who hold
contradictory opinions.
of Grace Community Chrch.
In
Roman Catholicism, “the Word of God” encompasses not only the Bible, but
also the Apocrypha, the Magisterium (the Church’s authority to teach and
interpret divine truth), the Pope’s ex cathedra pronouncements,
and an indefinite body of church tradition, some formalized in canon law
and some not yet committed to writing. Whereas evangelical Protestants
believe the Bible is the ultimate test of all truth, Roman Catholics
believe the Church determines what is true and what is not. In effect,
this makes the Church a higher authority than Scripture.
Creeds and doctrinal statements are certainly important. However,
creeds, decisions of church councils, all doctrine, and even the church
itself must be judged by Scripture—not vice versa. Scripture is to be
accurately interpreted in its context by comparing it to
Scripture—certainly not according to anyone’s personal whims. Scripture
itself is thus the sole binding rule of faith and practice for
all Christians. Protestant creeds and doctrinal statements simply
express the churches’ collective understanding of the proper
interpretation of Scripture. In no sense could the creeds and
pronouncements of the churches ever constitute an authority equal to or
higher than Scripture. Scripture always takes priority over the church
in the rank of authority.
Roman
Catholics, on the other hand, believe the infallible touchstone of truth
is the Church itself. The Church not only infallibly determines the
proper interpretation of Scripture, but also supplements
Scripture with additional traditions and teaching. That combination of
Church tradition plus the Church’s interpretation of Scripture is what
constitutes the binding rule of faith and practice for Catholics. The
fact is, the Church sets itself above Holy Scripture in rank of
authority.
The
Doctrine of Justification
According to Roman Catholicism, justification is a process in which
God’s grace is poured forth into the sinner’s heart, making that person
progressively more righteous. During this process, it is the sinner’s
responsibility to preserve and increase that grace by various good
works. The means by which justification is initially obtained is not
faith, but the sacrament of baptism. Furthermore, justification is
forfeited whenever the believer commits a mortal sin, such as hatred or
adultery. In the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church, then, works are
necessary both to begin and to continue the process of justification.
The
error in the Catholic Church’s position on justification may be summed
up in four biblical arguments. First, Scripture presents justification
as instantaneous, not gradual. Contrasting the proud Pharisee
with the broken, repentant taxgatherer who smote his breast and prayed
humbly for divine mercy, Jesus said that the taxgatherer “went down to
his house justified” (Luke 18:14). His justification was instantaneous,
complete before he performed any work, based solely on his repentant
faith. Jesus also said, “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My
word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come
into judgment, but has passed out of death into life” (John 5:24).
Eternal life is the present possession of all who believe—and by
definition eternal life cannot be lost. The one who believes
immediately passes from spiritual death to eternal life, because that
person is instantaneously justified (see Rom. 5:1, 9; 8:1).
Second, justification means the sinner is declared righteous, not
actually made righteous. This goes hand in hand with the fact that
justification is instantaneous. There is no process to be
performed—justification is purely a forensic reality, a declaration God
makes about the sinner. Justification takes place in the court of God,
not in the soul of the sinner. It is an objective fact, not a
subjective phenomenon, and it changes the sinner’s status, not his
nature. Justification is an immediate decree, a divine “not guilty”
verdict on behalf of the believing sinner in which God declares him to
be righteous in His sight.
Third, the Bible teaches that justification means righteousness is
imputed, not infused. Righteousness is “reckoned,” or credited to
the account of those who believe (Rom. 4:3–25). They stand justified
before God not because of their own righteousness (Rom. 3:10), but
because of a perfect righteousness outside themselves that is reckoned
to them by faith (Phil. 3:9). Where does that perfect righteousness come
from? It is God’s own righteousness (Rom 10:3), and it is the believer’s
in the person of Jesus Christ (1 Cor. 1:30). Christ’s own perfect
righteousness is credited to the believer’s personal account (Rom.
5:17,19), just as the full guilt of the believer’s sin was imputed to
Christ (2 Cor. 5:21). The only merit God accepts for salvation is that
of Jesus Christ; nothing man can ever do could earn God’s favor or add
anything to the merit of Christ.
Fourth and finally, Scripture clearly teaches that man is justified
by faith alone, not by faith plus works. According to the Apostle
Paul, “If it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works,
otherwise grace is no longer grace” (Rom. 11:6). Elsewhere Paul
testifies, “By grace you have been saved through faith; and that
not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works,
that no one should boast” (Eph. 2:8–9, emphasis added; see Acts
16:31 and Rom. 4:3–6). In fact, it is clearly taught throughout
Scripture that “a man is justified by faith apart from works of the Law”
(Rom. 3:28; see Gal. 2:16; Rom. 9:31–32; 10:3).
In
contrast, Roman Catholicism places an undue stress on human works.
Catholic doctrine denies that God “justifies the ungodly” (Rom. 4:5)
without first making them godly. Good works therefore become the
ground of justification. As thousands of former Catholics will testify,
Roman Catholic doctrine and liturgy obscure the essential truth that the
believer is saved by grace through faith and not by his own works (Eph.
2:8-9). In a simple sense, Catholics genuinely believe they are saved by
doing good, confessing sin, and observing ceremonies.
Adding works to faith as the grounds of justification is precisely the
teaching that Paul condemned as “a different gospel” (see 2 Cor. 11:4;
Gal. 1:6). It nullifies the grace of God, for if meritorious
righteousness can be earned through the sacraments, “then Christ died
needlessly” (Gal. 2:21). Any system that mingles works with grace, then,
is “a different gospel” (Gal. 1:6), a distorted message that is
anathematized (Gal. 1:9), not by a council of medieval bishops, but by
the very Word of God that cannot be broken. In fact, it does not
overstate the case to say that the Roman Catholic view on justification
sets it apart as a wholly different religion than the true Christian
faith, for it is antithetical to the simple gospel of grace.
As
long as the Roman Catholic Church continuesto assert its own authority
and bind its people to “another gospel,” it is the spiritual duty of all
true Christians to oppose Roman Catholic doctrine with biblical
truth and to call all Catholics to true salvation. Meanwhile,
evangelicals must not capitulate to the pressures for artificial unity.
They cannot allow the gospel to be obscured, and they cannot make
friends with false religion, lest they become partakers in their evil
deeds (2 John 11).
Adapted from
Reckless Faith: When the Church Loses Its Will to Discern (Wheaton:
Crossway Books, 1994). For a fuller treatment of Roman Catholicism,
consult this resource.© 2002 Grace Community Church. All rights
reserved. |