I quoted
Ephesians 2:8-9 [NIV] For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast.
Rather than waste time, perhaps we could begin by having you provide an exegesis of this verse. It seems to say that all of 'saved' is "not from yourselves, it is the gift of God" placing 'faith' as a gift from God 'through' which we gain access to 'grace' which actually saves us.
I do not wish to misread into your statement "through faith is a response" and the apparent contrast you set up between a gift of God (grace) and a response (of man?) called faith.
From other posts on monergism, I suspect that was not your point, so I am simply requesting clarification of what your point was so I can respond to what you MEAN rather than what I MISHEARD.
The problem is that Catholics define words differently
Every Catholic I know would passionately agree and defend that verse, insisting that Catholicism teaches that! In my Catholic days, I was taught that Catholicism teaches that.
Here's the deal: In the context of justification (narrow),
Protestants define the word "grace" as God's unconditional, unmerited, unearned love, favor, blessings and gifts.
Catholics define it as God's enabling. The exact definition our Catholic teachers taught us is (this is verbatim): "Grace is like spiritual 'gas' that God puts into your 'tank' so that you can get yourself where you need to get." Now, I realize some Catholic can search and probably find 100 different definitions of the word in Catholicism (Catholicism is like that) but that IS the definition we were taught an the one Catholics very consistently work with. Now, to be fair, I've recently learned that well informed Catholic teachers may teach that INITIALLY, at the very, very start, God may give a tiny bit of "grace" (in the Protestant understanding) just to "prime the pump" as a Catholic theologian stated, just so that more can be requested, earned and used - but this is just a tiny bit to get the thing going, not in any sense to justify.
SOMETIMES Catholics are ignorant that they are using the word in the exact opposite way in this context, and so they don't MEAN to deceive when they say, "We agree with Protestants that we are saved by grace." But many ARE aware that Catholics are using the word in the opposite way that Protestants do and thus their motives for stating or implying that Catholics agree with Protestants is, well.... you know. But often, I think there's just much "talking past each other."
Protestants need to beware of how some use the same words that Protestants do..... and mean something entirely, completely different (sometimes even the opposite).
Back to the issue of this thread.....
Soli Deo Gloria
- Josiah