When did I ever say I wasn't talking about salvation? Are you referencing this:
"Neither did I, nice try. The question is, what does Paul mean by "works", not what actions "save" according to Paul."
Sure I am. Because (again), Paul says "
But to the one who does not work, but believes in Him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is credited as righteousness" Rom 4:5 NASB By "works" Paul splits it from "faith". And by "faith" Paul means not "works + faith", but "faith alone". That's where the phrase "sola fide" came from.
Now frankly, you're the one who came up with:
dadof10 said:
How can you possibly think that Paul IS teaching salvation by faith alone IN THESE VERSES, if there is even ONE EXCEPTION? By definition, the word can't possibly mean faith ALONE. This is what logically follows. No wonder you put off answering for so long, a total lack of logic.
It's pretty simple. In the 1500's the Roman Catholic Church asserted that salvation was through "faith + works". Protestants denied that: salvation is through "faith alone". That's where the phrase "sola fide" came from.
If so, just because I reject your attempts to go off on another tangent, doesn't mean I'm "not talking about salvation".
Once more: I'm pointing out when you haul up the Protestant "faith alone" as a theological position you're
inherently talking about a theology of salvation.
If you're not then you're not talking about the Protestant position of "faith alone".
Sorry you're trying to go off on another tangent. But that's clearly what the facts present.
1) You believe man is justified by faith alone (sola-fide).
Paul states in no uncertain terms that faith without works leads to God's justification. And technically the word is "through". Justification isn't caused "by" faith, it is caused by Christ Jesus.
2) You believe that Paul teaches this doctrine when he contrasts faith and "works".
Paul actually states this doctrine in Romans 4:5. I shall not change Paul's words from what they actually state, no.
3) You believe that by "works" Paul means "works for wages".
Yes.
4) For you to believe 1, 2 and 3 above, you must hold that by "works" Paul means every action but faith is a "work for wages".
Not so. As I pointed out:
[*]faith is not a work in the first place, as no one places a wage on faith.
[*]works demand a wage; which do not save.
[*]actions, even works which might be done for a wage, may be performed in other capacities, which Paul encourages at other points, but not in order to gain salvation thereby. The wages of work are never salvation: with or without faith.
5) You have said that the act of a person giving to the needy without expecting repayment is an EXCEPTION. It is an ACTION that does not fit under Paul's definition of "works".
No. Cite where I stated it's "an exception".
Works are just fine. But they do not save. Therefore they have no effect under Paul's definition of "works" with respect to salvation.
6) Therefore, Paul does not teach sola-fide in these verses, making #2 above false.
Paul does teach "sola fide" in these verses, as none of them states that the works of men receive a wage of salvation.
You have said you "disagree" with this. Who is being "inconsistent"? Maybe illogical is a better word.
Unless you have some real example of 5), that would be you.
The only way you can fit the faith vs. works verses into your sola-fide mold is to PROVE that by "works" Paul means everything done, which he doesn't.
That's not the case, as I have denied this assertion you demand yet again that I must "PROVE" many times. I don't agree. People have plenty of actions. Those actions don't save anyone, though. As Paul says no works
save, this attempt to leap to the opposite fails. Again.
You can (and do) have thousands of works. The aggregate, nor any subset, none saves. "
Faith alone saves. The faith that saves is not alone."
You have admitted as much by saying that giving without expecting repayment (an action) doesn't fit under Paul's definition.
Naaah. In point of fact again, giving isn't considered working for a wage either. At some point you'll get to an action that would draw a wage, sure. But by that point, certainly you realize, the wage will not be salvation. That's the point Paul makes. When someone works they expect a wage, but salvation isn't payment of a wage. Instead, salvation is a gift God grants to those with faith.
Now, what about the "thou shalt not"'s? If a person refrains from adultery, for example, is this a "work" to Paul? A "work for wages"?
It wouldn't matter. Jesus already states that adultery in the heart (not even a work) results in condemnation, loss of salvation. So declining to actually commit adultery -- if it were a work for wages -- doesn't save.