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The Five Solas - an interesting, and I believe helpful perspective.....

st_worm2

Simul Justus et Peccator
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Greetings everyone, there is much concerning the Reformed faith that seems confusing to people, and I believe that this is certainly true of the 5 Solas of the Reformation (actually, a little bit of confusion seems to be built into this doctrine, as the following, short article points out for us in both a helpful and somewhat humorous way).

Let's keep our discussions focused on the points that are made in the article below, or, at the very least, let's keep them on the specifics of the 5 Solas. Thanks :)

Here's the article. Thoughts?


The Sole Soul of the Solas

It puzzles me deeply that so few are puzzled deeply by the paradox. We are so used to the befuddling language that we miss its befuddling nature. It ought to stop us in our tracks, arrest our attention, like those signs I see for Fifth Third Bank. Fifth Bank I could understand. Third Bank I could understand. I could understand them merging to become Fourth Bank. But Fifth Third Bank? What does that even mean?
In like manner, how is that our spiritual ancestors, our theological heroes, when they set about to tell us the one thing, ended up telling us five things? If I had lived in a cave for the last five hundred years and someone wanted to get me up to speed on the Reformation, and what it is I should believe and they said, “There are five things. The first one is sola–“ I would have to say, “Stop right there. If there are five, how can even one be called sola?”
It does, of course, in the end make perfect sense. The alones are not alone because they are talking, in a manner of speaking, on different axes. An infinite line is really infinite, but it doesn’t cover everything. An infinite plane is, in a manner of speaking, even more infinite that an infinite line, but it doesn’t cover everything. What sola Scriptura is seeking to keep out isn’t grace, or faith, or Christ or God’s glory. It’s trying to keep out tradition. Grace alone doesn’t exclude the Bible, or faith, or Christ or the glory of God.
In a very real sense, though they operate on different axes, these five are one. The Bible alone is God’s full revelation of His glory, in manifesting His grace in Christ, which becomes ours through the gift of faith. God’s grace is uniquely revealed in His Word, which manifests the work of Christ which becomes our by faith, all redounding to His glory. The solas are precise and potent affirmations of this truth, that it’s all about God. They remind us not just how we might have peace with God, but that peace with God is not the full and final end of all things. They remind us that the story of the Bible isn’t simply how we who are in dire straits can make it to safety, and how nice God is to play such an important role in making that happen. Instead they remind us that He is the end, and we are the means. The story is about Him and His glory more than us and our comfort.
Jesus makes much the same point in the Sermon on the Mount. He recognizes our weaknesses. We are self-centered, concerned with ourselves, and what we perceive our needs to be. So we worry about what we will eat and what we will wear. We fret about our provision and our status. What Jesus doesn’t tell us however, is, “Now, look, you have no need to worry about these things because you have someone on your side. Other people might need to worry but you don’t, because my Father in heaven is for you. You can pursue these things with confidence, knowing that you have the supreme advantage of having the supreme being on your side.”
What He told us instead was surprising. He told us to set aside our petty concerns and to set our minds on, well, depending on how you look at it, one, or two things. He said, “Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness.” Do we now have seven solas? Ought we to add the kingdom and His righteousness to the alones? By no means. These are all still together the one thing. There is an organic unity not only between the kingdom and the righteousness, but among these two and the five of the Reformation. We are not failing to pursue the kingdom of God when we are seeking after His righteousness. We are not failing to pursue His righteousness when we are seeking after His kingdom. We are pursuing one thing, one way, to honor and serve our Maker and Redeemer by affirming our dependence on Him and His preeminence in all things.
The God we serve is one. As such He calls us to follow one path. His commands are never and can never be pitted against each other. His wisdom is never and can never be pitted against itself. His grace is never and can never be pitted against His character. When we find ourselves torn, confused, pulled in different directions it isn’t because we are faithfully following Him, but because we are not. It isn’t because we are faithfully heeding His voice, but because we are not.
The two, His kingdom and His righteousness are one, as the five, the solas of the Reformation are one, as the Three, Father, Son and Holy Spirit are One. And these three groups are one as well. For in the end, they are all about the beginning. From the beginning they have always been about the end. For our lives are and always will be bound up together in the Alpha and the Omega. ~https://rcsprouljr.com/the-sole-soul-of-the-solas/

God bless you!!

--David
p.s. - Dr. R. C. Sproul, Jr. (not his father) wrote the article above. Dr. Sproul, Jr. (as many of you many know) was placed under Christian discipline for the grievous sins that he committed a number of years ago (one involving children and a DUI, and the other, for visiting the Ashley Madison website). I don't condone his sinful actions (of course), nor the direction that his life seems to have taken (no matter the backstory), but I believe that much of what he wrote & taught falls well within the bounds of conservative/orthodox Christian thought, like the article of his that I posited for discussion above.
 
Just a reminder, that all those that participate in this fourm must be of the Reformed faith.
 
To get things started, what is the point (or perhaps better, what is main point) that the OP article is seeking to make to us? IOW, what is the "sole soul" of the 5 Solas according to the article, and do you agree with it?
 
Also, the Five Solas are not as controversial as the Doctrines of Grace (TULIP) are, at least they have not been in my experience anyway. Nevertheless, they have been misunderstood, misrepresented and/or maligned regularly, particularly by certain groups.

For instance (and as you are all probably well aware), our Roman Catholic friends love to say that two of the 5 Solas (Sola Scriptura and Sola Fide) are false, while claiming fidelity to/allegiance with the other three, but (knowing what we do about the Solas) how can this be?

Thanks again!

--David
 
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