Making Sure of the
Language and Defining the Terms!
In a recent issue
of The Texas Baptist, Peter J. Riga, a self-proclaimed
"evangelical Catholic" has written an article
wherein he makes certain affirmations for the Roman
Catholic religion and endorses the recently published
document: Evangelicals and Catholics Together. [1]
We applaud Mr. Riga
in his earnest desire to take a stand on the social
ills of our culture which he correctly lists as, "massive
abortion, anti-Semitism, racism, euthanasia, sexual
excesses, adultery-fornication, practicing homosexuality
everywhere encouraged as a normal sexual behavior."
We are, however,
shocked by Mr. Riga's apparent failure to grasp basic
Christianity. In the first place, there is no such
thing as an evangelical Catholic. This may be a popular
term, but it is utter nonsense. The Evangelical belief
system and the Roman Catholic belief system are in
open and perpetual conflict. It is a destruction of
language and word meanings to thrust them together
with the hope of creating anything other than a monstrous
oxymoron. Mr. Riga might as well have said that he
believes in square circles!
Furthermore, we
question Mr. Riga's understanding of Roman Catholicism.
He begins his article with these bold words:
-
"Catholic doctrine from
Scripture and from the Council of Trent and Vatican
II teach the following as an absolute: We are
saved only in and by the grace of God through
Jesus Christ, our resurrected Lord..."
-
"That faith in Jesus Christ
is an utterly gratuitous and free gift from God
which can in no way be merited by man but is freely,
lovingly and abundantly given by God through Jesus
Christ."
-
"Let
that be clearly understood by my evangelical brothers
and sisters: No works, no liturgy, no human endeavor
whatsoever can 'merit' this grace of faith. Nothing.
Sola Fide is as much a Catholic doctrine as it
is a Protestant one."
What Mr. Riga fails
to inform the reader is that Roman Catholicism teaches
that grace is a supernatural substance infused by
God through the Catholic Sacramental system. Grace
can be won or lost in the Catholic system. Also, Catholics
believe that grace is first infused into a child by
the Catholic Sacrament of infant baptism. So, it is
with tongue-in-cheek when Mr. Riga asserts Catholicism
teaches a salvation by grace and faith. It is a grace
infused and a faith that believes the Catholic system
will give more of it to which Mr. Riga has given his
trust.
What does the Catholic
religion teach her adherents about Justification?
Let us take a look. We find these sobering words taken
verbatim from the 6th Session of the Council of Trent
on Justification: [2]
-
"Hence,
to those who work well unto the end and trust
in God, eternal life is to be offered, both as
a grace mercifully promised to the sons of God
through Christ Jesus, and as a reward promised
by God Himself, to be faithfully given to their
good works and merits." (italics ours)
-
"...we
must believe that nothing further is wanting to
those justified to prevent them from being considered
to have, by those very good works which have
been done in God, fully satisfied the divine law
according to the state of this life and to
have truly merited eternal life, to be obtained
in its due time, provided they depart this
life in grace." (italics ours)
-
"If
anyone says that justifying faith is nothing else
than confidence in divine mercy, which remits
sin for Christ's sake, or that it is this confidence
alone that justifies us, let him be accursed."
-
"For
God does not forsake those who have once been
justified by His grace, unless He be first
forsaken by them. Wherefore, no one ought
to flatter himself with faith alone, thinking
that by faith alone he is made an heir and
will obtain the inheritance even though he suffer
not with Christ, that he may be glorified with
him." (italics ours)
We are at a loss.
How can anyone, remotely familiar with the Council
of Trent, miss the point? Trent teaches the opposite
of Sola Fide (faith alone) for justification!
The Roman Catholic
religion teaches that works are part and parcel as
the cause of being forgiven by God. Roman Catholics
are to earn their forgiveness through works of penance
in the Catholic system. Both the sacrament of penance
and the doctrine of purgatory make works indispensable
as the ground of their acceptance before God.
Furthermore, unlike
Christianity, works are not the guaranteed effects
of a saved man in the Romish system. They are rather
the standard upon which Catholics are judged. They
are not necessarily produced by the Spirit of God
in the Roman Catholic religion. Man must first obey
the program. Works of religion must be performed by
man or man loses out on salvation! Listen to Trent:
"It (the
council) teaches furthermore that the liberality
of the divine munificence is so great that we are
able through Jesus Christ to make satisfaction
to God the Father not only by punishments voluntarily
undertaken by ourselves to atone for sins,
or those imposed by the judgment of the priest according
to the measure of our offense, but also, and this
is the greatest proof of love, by temporal afflictions
imposed by God and borne patiently by us."
(italics ours)
In Roman Catholicism,
God can be appeased by our sufferings, by penalties
imposed by a priest and by afflictions imposed by
God. These are said to atone for sins. This is the
antithesis of Christianity.
Also, Mr. Riga does
not mention forgiveness of sins through the Catholic
sacrament of the Mass. This is the un-bloody altar
of the Catholic religion upon which Christ's sacrifice
is re-presented for the remission of sin. He does
not mention papal authority, Catholic tradition, Maryolatry,
Baptismal regeneration, (although he alludes to it
in his proclamation: "That glorious gift of faith
professed in the waters of Holy Baptism." This
is the Catholic sacrament of infant baptism for the
remission of sin), Priestly caste system, the Eucharist
and Romish ecumenism. All these things are omitted.
Instead, the article closes with the challenge that
"The church must announce the Gospel clearly
and forthrightly." But, Mr. Riga has not done
so! We question if he can. He says what binds us (Evangelicals)
to them (Catholics) "is confession of the resurrected
Lord, our witness of Christ boldly in the
Spirit of this truly good news, the good works for
each other and the world as testimony of faith..."
He says these are "infinitely more profound than
our differences."
We ask the reader
to contemplate what exactly Mr. Riga means by "our
witness for Christ." If it is the Roman Catholic
system of merits and sacramental salvation then we
have nothing in common. For it is a false hope and
a false gospel. If he means justification by faith
alone apart from works of any system and law, the
sole authority of the Bible and the security of eternal
life based on the imputation of the righteousness
of Christ alone, then let him say so. If, indeed,
this is what he means then he is not a Roman Catholic
in any true sense of the term. If this is not what
Mr. Riga means by "our witness for Christ,"
he is not a Christian.
[1] We have prepared
a critical analysis of ECT. It is available upon request
and is an appendix in Zins' book, Romanism.
[2] All quotations
are taken from The Canons and Decrees of the Council
of Trent by H.J. Schroeder, l978 by Tan Books and
Publishers, Rockford, Illinois. |