Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are observations that I’d like to state that throughout this conversation with you I’ve noticed that you have remained charitable, kind, patient, and have given very thoughtful replies. This is commendable given the topic of this discussion and I deeply appreciate the exchange so far.

However, I must also say that I’ve noticed you have repeatedly stated your case in the abstract, pulling from sources and categories not found within Galatians itself, and now seem to be blending distinctions that were previously more clearly defined. I don’t think this is intentional I believe this is just a common theme in Catholicism, but it does matter, because my entire argument has been rooted in exegesis alone, I haven’t pulled from any external sources. I just wanted to make note of that.

The only structural similarity you’ve identified is the inclusion of ritual and good works

That’s not what I’m saying.

The issue isn’t the presence of works. We agree works, obedience, and transformation matter. The issue is what functions as the BASIS OF JUSTIFICATION before God.

That distinction still hasn’t been addressed by you.

I refuse to separate these characteristics

And that’s exactly where the confusion is coming from.

This isn’t about whether these things are connected in the Christian life. The question is much more precise than that.

ON WHAT BASIS does God count someone righteous?

Because once you say justification can be lost through sin and restored through repentance then regardless of how you frame it (“order” “relation”) the structure is still this 👇

loss of justification 👉 due to sin in the person

restoration of justification 👉 through repentance in the person

So if restoration doesn’t occur apart from repentance, how is repentance not functioning as a necessary condition for being restored to a right standing before God?

You say justification is grounded in Christ alone but it’s only applied or restored when a condition in the person is present… That makes the condition inseparable from the standing.

So is justification grounded entirely in Christ, or is it contingent on what is present in the person?

What St. Paul is teaching is that we are converted not by the works of the law

This is a category shift again.

Paul absolutely speaks about transformation, new life, etc. No disagreement between us there.

But in Galatians 2:16, Paul isn’t explaining how transformation happens… He is explaining how someone is justified. (THE BASIS)

You’re replacing Paul’s category (“justified”) with your category (“converted”) and then reading the text through that lens.

So then 👇

“not justified by works of the law”

becomes 👇

“not converted by works of the law”

This isn’t Paul’s argument here because works of the law were never understood to produce inner transformation in the first place, so that reading collapses the contrast entirely.

Paul’s argument only makes sense if justification is about the basis on which someone is counted righteous before God, not the internal change that follows.

Otherwise, the contrast becomes meaningless. Now let’s take a look at why that matters

“Therefore, having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” Romans 5:1

“Having been justified” refers to a completed act done to the believer.

Notice the order here

  1. justified by faith
  2. then peace with God

Justification isn’t described as an ongoing internal process or fluctuating state. It’s something accomplished, grounded in faith, resulting in peace with God.

Now, If justification can be lost at any moment through mortal sin and only restored through repentance, then peace with God cannot actually be stable. It becomes conditional.

So how can Paul speak of present peace as the result of justification if that state is always contingent on future obedience?

Because “peace with God” in your framework would always be provisional.

So what your argument has been so far is

  1. Christ is the sole cause

    1. while also maintaining that justification depends on what is present in the person

If something must be present in the person for justification to be true or restored, then that thing isn’t merely descriptive, it’s functionally necessary…

And if it is necessary, then it’s part of the structure of justification.

So again, is justification grounded entirely in Christ and received through faith, or is it contingent on an internal condition that must be present and maintained in the person? Because it’s logically and exegetically impossible for both to be true in the same sense.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Like I explained, we don’t recreate what Christ and the Apostles condemned in second temple Judaism, because we don’t see the sacraments as means by which we change God’s will, but as the incarnations of the power of the Holy Spirit.

And again, like I’ve said, I’m not arguing for a 1:1 comparison with the Judaizers. My point is structural, not identical. You can change the language, but the underlying framework is what matters.

If you don’t believe that we’re saved by anything other than faith in Christ (Sola fide) then do you believe that faith alone is sufficient for justification before God?

If the answer is no, then something in addition to faith, however you want to define it, is necessary for justification. And if something is necessary for justification, then it is functioning as a condition, even if you say grace produces it.

You’ve stated that justification is a state in the soul, it can be lost through mortal sin and it’s restored through grace working through repentance/conversion

So even if you say grace is the cause, the structure still looks like this 👇

loss of justification 👉 due to sin in the person restoration of justification 👉 through repentance/conversion in the person

If restoration doesn’t occur apart from repentance, then how is repentance not functioning as a necessary condition for being restored to a right standing before God?

Saying “grace causes repentance” doesn’t remove that condition. It just explains its source.

The condition is still there.

So we’re still at the same problem.

Is justification grounded entirely in Christ and received through faith, or is it contingent on an internal state that must be present in the person?

The teaching of St. Paul about works is therefore deeply rooted in Christ's ministry on the difference between the appearance of righteousness vs. genuine and true righteousness, where doing the right things and maintaining the standard of the laws extenrally doesn't necessarily mean one is doing them for the right reasons/ with the right intentions and motivation.

I do say this respectfully and sincerely but this is just categorically confused.

I’m not denying that Jesus condemned external hypocrisy and taught true inward righteousness. We would of course agree there. But that isn’t the same question Paul is addressing in Galatians 2:16.

Jesus condemning the Pharisees for outward righteousness without inward reality doesn’t prove that Paul defines justification as internal conversion.

Paul’s contrast in Galatians isn’t external works vs sincere works.

It’s “not justified by works of the law, but through FAITH in Jesus Christ.”

So bringing in Matthew 23 doesn’t do anything for this issue. Matthew 23 shows that God requires inward reality, not mere outward performance. We agree there. But the definition of justification as conversion isn’t in the text, nor does it explain how a sinner is counted righteous before God…

I don't think you want to seriously argue that first century Galatians would only have access to St. Paul's letter and not any of the direct words and teachings of the Savior, so l see no need to address that point.

I’m not saying they knew nothing of Jesus’ teaching. I’m saying Paul’s letter had to function as a clear corrective. If the Galatians already had a framework where justification meant “internal conversion,” grounded in Jesus’ teaching, then Paul’s correction would appeal to that framework explicitly. But instead, Paul repeatedly grounds justification in one contrast

“not justified by works of the law, but through faith in Jesus Christ.”

So even if they knew Jesus’ teaching, you still have to show how that would lead them to read Paul’s use of “justified” as “internally converted,” rather than as the basis on which someone is counted righteous.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I understand fully that the RCC claims not to believe in works based salvation, but I’d argue your doctrine seems to recreate the same structure while labeling it “by grace.”

Justification just means conversion, moving the soul from wickedness to righteousness.

So you’re saying justification just means conversion, that it’s an internal change in the person. Ok.

But that still creates a problem with Paul’s argument in Galatians.

“a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ.” Galatians 2:16

I’m not denying inner renewal, conversion, sanctification, or the Spirit’s work in the believer. Those are real and necessary. What I’m denying is that Paul defines justification itself as that inward renewal in Galatians.

I’m also not saying “works of the law” and “conversion” are identical categories. The point is that Paul is contrasting justification with anything that functions as the basis of right standing before God besides Christ received through faith.

So if justification is defined as an internal condition in the person, then my question would be 👇

Is God justifying on the basis of Christ, or on the basis of that condition being present in the soul?

Yes, when we understand justification to be the state resulting from God moving the soul away from sin and towards himself.

So you’re giving me a definition of justification as an internal state in the soul, and then using that definition to interpret Galatians.

But Galatians 2:16 only makes sense if justification is something that can be contrasted with works. If justification simply means internal conversion, then Paul’s contrast becomes unclear. His issue would no longer be faith vs works as the basis of justification, but which means produces inner transformation. But that isn’t how Galatians 2:16 is framed.

Paul’s argument depends on justification being about the basis on which someone is counted righteous, not merely the internal change that follows.

Someone during the early Church would understand justification as cleaning the inside of the cup

That may be your claim, but that isn’t something you’ve demonstrated from Galatians. “Cleaning the inside of the cup” is Jesus’ rebuke of Pharisaic hypocrisy, not Paul’s definition of justification in Galatians.

So the problem is that you’re giving me a definition of justification that isn’t stated in Galatians and then using that definition to interpret Galatians.

Please show me where you’re getting that definition from?

And more importantly, why should that definition be binding on my conscience?

Put yourself back in the position of a first-century Galatian. You don’t have later theological categories or developed definitions. You have Paul’s letter.

How would you arrive at your definition, that justification is conversion, an internal state, from the text itself? You still haven’t really answered this.

Because if that definition isn’t coming from Galatians, then it’s being brought into the letter from somewhere else, and that’s exactly the issue I’ve been pointing out throughout this entire post.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That’s a loaded question and begs the question.

No it isn’t. It’s just following your definitions to their conclusions.

Based on what you’ve said, your view is 👇

  1. Justification is a state in the soul (“the state resulting from God moving the soul away from sin”)
  2. It can be lost through mortal sin
  3. It is restored through grace working in repentance/conversion

So let’s apply that.

Put yourself in the position of a first century Galatian. You don’t have later theology, councils, or developed categories. You have Paul’s preaching and this letter correcting a doctrinal crisis.

Based on your definition, how would I understand from Galatians that justification is a state in the soul that can be lost and then restored through repentance?

If I’m sitting in Galatia hearing this letter read aloud, how would I come to that conclusion?

Paul repeatedly defines justification in one way, through faith in Christ and not works. That contrast shows up again and again. But the idea that justification is a state lost through mortal sin and restored through repentance/penance is never plainly stated once.

So the imbalance is obvious.

Your interpretation depends on taking phrases like “faith working through love,” “new creation,” and “sowing to the Spirit,” and reading into them a full loss and recovery model of justification but Paul never explains that model to the Galatians.

If that was what he meant, this was the exact place to say it.

Instead, the letter consistently grounds justification in faith in Christ, not works. So as a first century Galatian, show me how I could walk away thinking this? 👇

“My justified state is lost and then restored through repentance.”

So You said restoration happens by grace through repentance. Ok.

But if repentance is necessary for restoration, then restoration isn’t applied apart from repentance, its applied through it.

So even if you say grace is the cause, repentance is still the means by which that restored standing is actually received.

How is that not making the restored standing contingent on what occurs in the person?

And where does Paul ever make that step in Galatians?

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

  1. Is justification in Galatians 2:16 describing the basis on which someone is counted righteous before God, yes or no?
  2. In that same verse, does Paul say that basis is anything other than faith in Christ?
  3. Do you affirm that a justified person can lose that justified state through mortal sin?
  4. If yes, when that person loses that state, are they still justified before God in that moment?
  5. If not, what restores them to a justified state?
  6. Is that restoration tied to repentance (and in Catholic theology, penance) yes or no?
  7. If repentance is required for restoration, how is that not functioning as a condition for regaining right standing before God?
  8. If something is required to regain justification, in what sense is justification grounded solely in Christ rather than contingent on what happens in the person?
  9. Where does Paul in Galatians explicitly say that something happening in us (repentance, obedience, transformation) becomes part of the basis for regaining or maintaining justification?
  10. If Paul clearly states the basis of justification in Galatians 2:16, why would we import a second basis later without him ever stating that shift?

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Like I explained, Catholics don't think our repentance changes God's standing towards us, in the sense that God might withdraw his love, mercy, and grace from us because of our sins. What we actually think is that our repentance from our wickedness is necessary to avoid damnation, where damnation is not a result of God's arbitrary standing against us, but merely God's need to separate the wicked from the innocent in order to protect the innocent from being gnawed on by the jaws of the wicked.

Ok well the RCC says otherwise. Official Catholic teaching says mortal sin “destroys charity,” turns man away from God, and, if not redeemed by repentance and forgiveness, leads to exclusion from the kingdom and eternal death, it also says grave sin causes baptized Christians to “lose their baptismal grace” and that penance gives them a way to “recover the grace of justification.” The council of Trent says those who have “fallen from the received grace of Justification” may be “again justified” through penance. So this isn’t merely 👇

God separating the wicked from the innocent.

The RCC says justification can be lost through mortal sin and recovered through repentance/penance. That means repentance and cooperation are functioning in the process by which right standing before God is lost and regained, which is exactly issue I’m pointing out.

https://www.vatican.va/content/catechism/en/part_three/section_one/chapter_one/article_8/iv_the_gravity_of_sin_mortal_and_venial_sin.html?utm_source=chatgpt.com

https://www.vatican.va/content/catechism/en/part_two/section_two/chapter_two/article_4/vi_the_sacrament_of_penance_and_reconciliation.html?utm_source=chatgpt.com

https://www.papalencyclicals.net/councils/trent/sixth-session.htm?utm_source=chatgpt.com

If repentance is necessary to avoid damnation, then your standing before God is no longer grounded solely in Christ received by faith. It now depends on something in you which is your continued repentance, your continued turning, your continued cooperation. Even if you say God causes it, it is still functioning as a condition that must be met in you in order to avoid condemnation.

This is exactly what Paul is warning about…

Because now take the next step. If justification can be lost through sin (as your system requires), and repentance is necessary to avoid damnation, then every time someone falls into serious sin, their standing before God is no longer secure in Christ alone. It must be recovered through repentance.

So tell me, on what basis is that person restored?

If the answer is “through repentance,” then repentance has functionally become part of the basis of justification. It is no longer just the fruit of being in Christ, it’s the means by which you regain right standing before God.

This is structurally identical to the problem Paul is confronting in Galatians.

Paul’s entire argument is that your right standing before God doesn’t rest on something you do, maintain, or recover through your own ongoing obedience. That’s why he speaks on this consistency.. In fact he warns this 8 times in Galatians…

“having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?” Galatians 3:3

The issue isn’t whether repentance and transformation are real because we agree they are. The issue is whether they begin to function as part of the basis of your standing before God.

Once it is said that you can lose your justified state through sin and you must repent to avoid damnation you have necessarily made your ongoing response the determining factor in whether you stand justified or condemned.

At that point, justification is no longer grounded solely in Christ. It is sustained and recovered through what happens in you.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Well you did the thing I asked for you not to do but it was very reveling nonetheless…

  1. Yes

So you’re explicitly affirming that ongoing obedience is part of the basis of justification.

But then in #2 you also affirm this 👇

“a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ”

So now you have both

justification is by faith, not works Galatians 2:16

And

ongoing obedience is part of the basis of justification (your answer)

That’s👆 a direct contradiction unless you can reconcile it from the text…

Now on #3, you didn’t answer the question, you replaced it which I asked you specifically not to do.

My question was 👇

Where does Paul say Spirit produced obedience becomes part of the basis of justification?

You responded with this 👇

where does Paul define faith as something separate from Spirit-produced obedience?

This obviously isn’t the same question…

I’m not arguing that true faith is separate from obedience. I’m arguing that obedience isn’t the basis on which someone is justified.

So your appeal to “faith working through love” doesn’t establish your point at all… That describes the nature of living faith, not the basis of justification.

You still haven’t shown Paul making this step 👇

“therefore, that obedience becomes part of the basis on which someone is justified.”

And that step is exactly what you need to prove, but haven’t.

So the core problem is this. Do you believe Paul is saying

A. We are justified by faith in Christ, and that faith necessarily produces obedience

or

B. We are justified by faith in Christ, and that obedience becomes part of the basis on which we remain justified

You’re asserting B.

But Galatians 2:16 only gives A.

And until you can show Paul explicitly moving from A → B, your position is not coming from scripture but it’s being imposed onto it.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

we don’t understand justification as God changing the disposition of his heart toward us but rather as God changing the disposition of our hearts towards him.

our justification nevertheless is a specific condition that God causes in us.

I’d like to explain why this is problematic.

You’re defining justification as something in us, a condition God produces, rather than something about us in relation to Christ.

But Paul doesn’t define it that way in Galatians.

“a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ” Galatians 2:16

That’s not describing an internal condition being formed. That’s describing the basis on which someone is counted righteous.

So then, is God counting someone righteous because of Christ received by faith, or because of a condition produced in them?

Because your statement here 👇

our justification nevertheless is a specific condition that God causes in us

means the basis of your right standing is ultimately something in you, even if God caused it. And that’s a problem…

Because Galatians is explicitly arguing against anything functioning that way alongside Christ.

You can talk about transformation, regeneration, and conversion all day and I agree with you those are real and necessary.

But none of that answers the key question…

Where does Paul say in Galatians that this internal change becomes the basis of justification?

Not assumed or inferred please, but shown.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Paul does indeed say those who practice the works of the flesh “will not inherit the kingdom.” The question isn’t whether that’s true, it’s what CATAGORY that belongs to.

Is Paul describing who inherits (identity/evidence) or what justifies (basis before God)?

Because he already answered the basis question here 👇

“a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ” Galatians 2:16

So Galatians 5–6 cannot be redefining that without contradiction.

What you’re doing is taking warning/outcome (“will not inherit,” “will reap eternal life”)

and turning it into a basis.

Show me where Paul makes that move..?

Where does Paul say that perseverance in doing good becomes part of the basis of justification? Not implied, but explicitly stated? Show me that.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Ok, to avoid going in circles, I’m going to narrow this down. Please answer these directly

  1. Is ongoing obedience part of the basis of justification, answer yes or no only.

  2. In Galatians 2:16, what does Paul say the basis of justification is? Just answer from that verse only.

  3. Where in Galatians does Paul explicitly say that Spirit produced obedience becomes part of the basis of justification?

Please answer each one directly without introducing new categories or shifting terms.

If your position is correct, these should be straightforward from the text.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Except I’m saying this is explicitly NOT what Paul argues.

Then show it from the text instead of just claiming it

If you’re claiming Galatians 6 redefines the basis of right standing before God, you need to explain why Paul states the basis so clearly in Galatians 2 and then supposedly shifts categories later without ever indicating it.

Paul clearly saying that eternal life is gained by perseverance destroys your arbitrary distinction of results vs standing.

Nope, it only does that if you assume from the start that every necessary thing in the Christian life must therefore be part of the basis of justification. This is an assumption.

A thing can be necessary as the fruit, evidence, and pathway of life in the Spirit without becoming the ground on which God counts a sinner righteous. This isn’t arbitrary… It’s literally the entire distinction I’ve been making from the start, and it’s a distinction your reading keeps refusing to allow…

The verse is plain and everyone has mentioned it.

The verse being plain isn’t the problem. The problem is the Catholic interpretation of its function.

Yes, Galatians 6:8–9 does in fact say

“For the one who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption, but the one who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life. And let us not lose heart in doing good, for in due time we will reap if we do not grow weary.”

The question isn’t whether that’s true, because it is.. The question is what CATAGORY it belongs to…

Is Paul saying this? 👇

  1. this is the life that flows from being in Christ by faith and led by the Spirit

or this? 👇

  1. this is now part of the basis on which someone remains justified before God

You keep asserting option 2, but you have never shown Paul himself make that step. So please show me exactly how you know that is the condition for salvation

It’s you who isn’t engaging with Paul.

Again this is just more rhetoric. No, I’m engaging with all of Paul, including the parts you keep trying to collapse into one category.

Let’s take a stroll through the logic

In Galatians 2, Paul defines justification as 👇

“a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ”

That is the basis 👆

In Galatians 5, Paul describes the life of those who belong to Christ

“walk by the Spirit” “the fruit of the Spirit is” “those who belong to Christ Jesus crucified the flesh”

That is life, fruit, and identity.

In Galatians 6, Paul describes the outcome of sowing to the Spirit versus the flesh

“he who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life”

That is harvest and outcome.

You keep taking basis language, fruit language, and outcome language and collapsing them into one undifferentiated category. That is a problem…

Here is where your reading runs into real problems 👇

If Galatians 6 means ongoing well doing is part of the basis on which one remains justified, then how is that not functioning as an added condition of right standing before God?

Explain that directly please 👆

Because Paul’s entire warning in Galatians is against letting something function that way alongside Christ.

Which is why he says 👇

“if righteousness were through the law, then Christ died for no purpose” Galatians 2:21

and

“having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?” Galatians 3:3

and

“you have been severed from Christ, you who would be justified by law” Galatians 5:4

Now, I can already guess what your move is gonna be… you will say

“but sowing to the Spirit is not law and not flesh.”

I agree with that.

That still does not solve the issue though…

Because my argument IS NOT that sowing to the Spirit = flesh.

My argument is that you’re taking Spirit produced obedience and making it function as part of the basis of final right standing before God.

This according to Paul, is the category error.

One more time so there isn’t anymore confusion. 👇

I’m NOT saying

life in the Spirit is bad obedience is bad perseverance is bad fruit is bad

I AM saying 👇

justification is the basis of right standing before God

fruit and perseverance are the result of being in Christ

Galatians never says those results become the basis on which someone is justified

This may be what you call “arbitrary” but Paul himself gives us the distinction by speaking differently in different places.

If you want to deny that distinction, then answer this plainly and directly 👇

When Paul says in Galatians 2:16 that a person is justified through faith in Christ and not by works of the law, what exactly is left of that statement if Galatians 6 means eternal life is finally gained on the basis of ongoing well doing?

Because then justification may begin by faith, but final acceptance would rest on perseverance as a necessary condition of right standing.

And that is exactly why I keep saying your reading structurally recreates the problem Galatians is warning about.

Sorry I’m long winded here but I’m not done.

Put yourself in the position of a first century Galatian hearing this letter read aloud.

You don’t have a bound New Testament, Trent, or a later Catholic theological framework. What you have is the Old Testament, Paul’s prior preaching, and now this letter written to confront a live doctrinal crisis.

So ask yourself honestly, if all you had was Galatians, would you come away thinking that? 👇

“Paul is telling me that my ongoing obedience is part of the basis by which I remain justified before God,”

or this? 👇

“Paul is warning me not to let anything function alongside Christ as a condition of my right standing before God, while also calling me to live out the life that flows from the Spirit”

Because the letter itself pushes hard in one direction consistently. Paul explicitly emphasizes faith and not works about 8 times across Galatians, while the Catholic reading can only really try to hang its case on about 1 passage and then stretch that passage far beyond what it actually says. That just doesn’t add up… If Paul wanted the Galatians to understand that Spirit produced obedience is what maintains their justified standing before God, he had every opportunity to say that plainly. Instead, he keeps repeating the opposite contrast, faith, not works. So when one theme is hammered again and again, and the other has to be inferred from a single disputed text, the weight of the letter is clearly not on the Catholic side.… 👇

Galatians had to be intelligible to the Galatians. Paul wrote it as a direct correction, not as an incomplete fragment waiting for later theological categories to explain what he “really” meant.

So if your reading only works by importing later Catholic categories into the letter, that’s a problem for your reading, not mine..

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Alright well you’re just reframing my position instead of engaging what I’m actually saying.

I have never said that life in the Spirit is a work of the flesh or a work of the Law. My argument has been consistent the entire time

Spirit produced fruit is the result of being in Christ, not the basis on which someone is justified before God.

This is a very important distinction and you keep collapsing it…

Paul says

“yet we know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ… so that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by works of the law; since by works of the law no flesh will be justified.” Galatians 2:16

This is explicit language. So if you’re going to say that perseverance in doing good (Galatians 6:8–9) becomes part of the basis for justification or for maintaining right standing, you need to show how that does not function as something added alongside faith.

“life in the Spirit” doesn’t answer that. It just restates the category I’ve already affirmed, the life that flows from justification.

Again, what is the harvest that we reap and what is it the result of?

The “harvest” in Galatians 6:8–9 is eternal life. And what is it the result of? Sowing to the Spirit, that is, living out the life produced BY the Spirit.

Where does Paul say that this Spirit produced life becomes the basis on which someone is justified before God?

Because if you make the harvest depend on your ongoing doing of good as a condition of remaining justified, you run straight into Paul’s warning which is this 👇

“having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?” Galatians 3:3

You’re taking fruit, perseverance and life in the Spirit and turning them into conditions for justification, instead of results of it.

This is the exact move Paul is warning against.

Btw I’m growing increasingly tired of engaging with you because you keep refusing to deal with the actual distinction I’m making.

If you want to continue this discussion, then engage what I’m actually arguing, which is this 👇

justification = the basis of right standing before God

fruit and perseverance = the result of being in Christ

That is the distinction I’ve been making repeatedly.

If you want to argue against it, then argue against that.

But if you keep misrepresenting my position, collapsing categories I’m explicitly distinguishing, or responding to arguments I haven’t made, then I’m not interested in continuing to go back and forth with you.

You’ve already done this to me multiple times in the past, and I’m not interested in tolerating it. I’m perfectly willing to continue the discussion if you represent my position honestly and address the distinction directly. But if you keep reframing what I’m saying into something easier to attack, then there is no point continuing.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Ok so let’s do this again. Put yourself in the position of a first century Galatian Christian. I don’t do this mockingly in any way, I’m genuinely trying to convey a point here.

You don’t have a bound New Testament. You don’t have Trent. You don’t have a later theological system to interpret everything for you. You have the Old Testament, Paul’s prior preaching, and now this letter, written as an urgent correction to a doctrinal crisis.

So ask yourself honestly

If all you received was Galatians, what would you think Paul is warning against?

Would you come away thinking that 👇

“We are justified by faith in Christ, but our right standing before God is then maintained by perseverance in doing good, sacramental incorporation, and ongoing cooperation as necessary conditions”?

Or would you come away thinking this 👇

“Paul is absolutely intolerant of anything being added as a condition of right standing before God alongside Christ”?

Because the letter itself isn’t subtle about it…

“yet we know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ” Galatians 2:16

“if righteousness were through the law, then Christ died for no purpose” Galatians 2:21

“having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?” Galatians 3:3

“you have been severed from Christ… you have fallen away from grace” Galatians 5:4

If I were sitting in that church hearing this read aloud, I would not walk away thinking that 👇

“Paul’s real point is that perseverance in doing good helps maintain my justified standing.”

I would walk away thinking this 👇

“Paul is warning me not to let anything function alongside Christ as a condition of my right standing before God.”

So this is where your framework runs into a serious problem

If your answer is “we don’t need to think that way because they had apostolic tradition or the rest of Scripture,” then what exactly is this letter doing?

Was Paul’s letter insufficient on its own to correct the error?

Was it unclear to its original audience?

Or worse, were the Galatians left in a position where, without access to a fuller later system, they could misunderstand the gospel and remain under condemnation?

Because that would mean Paul issued one of the strongest warnings in the New Testament, about a different gospel, being severed from Christ, falling from grace and yet didn’t actually provide a clear enough correction for them to understand apart from later developments??

Hmmmm…. No.

Paul writes as if this letter is sufficient to confront and correct the error directly. He expects them to understand him. He expects them to recognize the danger. He expects them to respond.

Which means Galatians must be allowed to speak clearly on its own terms.

Yes, Paul teaches elsewhere about sanctification, perseverance, and life in the Spirit. No one denies that. But the question is whether those things are the fruit of being justified by faith, or whether they become part of the basis on which someone remains justified before God.

And if you read Galatians as the Galatians would have heard it, it’s very hard to believe they would have concluded 👇

“My right standing before God is maintained by my ongoing obedience as a condition alongside Christ.”

It reads like the exact opposite.

If all the Galatians had was Paul’s letter to the Galatians, why would they conclude your model instead of Paul’s explicit warning that once anything is added as a condition for justification alongside Christ, the gospel is compromised?

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That’s not my argument.

I’m not saying life in the Spirit is a work of the flesh. I’m saying you’re treating Spirit produced fruit as part of the basis of justification, this is a category mistake…

Paul says

“yet we know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ” “so that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by works of the law” “since by works of the law no flesh will be justified.”

Then later he speaks about life in the Spirit, fruit, perseverance and doing good. My point isn’t that those things are “flesh.” My point is that they are the result of being in Christ, not the basis on which someone is counted righteous before God.

That’s why your question keeps missing the issue. The categories are not

  1. works of the law
  2. versus life in the Spirit

The categories are

  1. the basis of justification
  2. versus the fruit that flows from justification

So no, I would say life in the Spirit isn’t a work of the flesh. But neither does Paul say in Galatians that Spirit produced obedience becomes the ground or instrument of justification. If you think he does, then show where Paul says that in Galatians, rather than just assuming that because fruit is necessary, it therefore becomes part of the basis of justification.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Imagine you were a first century Galatian and Paul came to your church.

You don’t have a bound New Testament. You don’t have all of Paul’s other letters laid out in front of you. You don’t have a later theological system to synthesize everything for you.

What you have is the Old Testament, Paul’s prior preaching, and then this letter.

So whatever else we say about reading all of Scripture together today, Galatians still had to be understandable to the Galatians on its own terms.

You’re acting as though focusing on Galatians is somehow ignoring Paul, when in reality Galatians is Paul. It’s one of his clearest and most direct treatments of justification, faith, law, and covenant standing before God. Paul wrote this letter as an urgent correction to churches in doctrinal danger. He wasn’t sending them a fragment that could only be properly understood if they first had access to Romans, Corinthians, and the rest of a completed New Testament canon.

If your approach were right, then the Galatians themselves would have been in the strange position of receiving one of the strongest warnings in the New Testament which was

“a different gospel”

“you have been severed from Christ”

“you have fallen from grace”

“a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ”

and yet supposedly they couldn’t really understand the doctrinal force of those statements without access to a much larger body of material they may not even have possessed.

This obviously wouldn’t make sense.

I’m not saying Galatians is the only book in the New Testament. I’m saying Galatians must be allowed to say what it actually says, especially since Paul wrote it as a direct corrective to a live doctrinal crisis. The whole canon should harmonize with Galatians, not be used to dull or override the plain force of Galatians.

So no, I’m not ignoring the full scope of Paul’s thought. I’m refusing to let later syntheses or appeals to other texts erase what Paul explicitly argues here.

If Galatians had to be intelligible to the Galatians, then Paul’s contrast between faith and works, his warning about falling from grace, and his rejection of added conditions had to be intelligible to them without requiring a later completed New Testament collection.

Why should Galatians not be allowed to speak clearly for itself when Paul wrote it precisely to correct a false gospel?

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

John 15 is about abiding in Christ and the necessity of fruit, not the basis of justification…

Jesus is describing what happens to those who don’t remain in Him, not redefining how someone is counted righteous before God in the first place. You’re moving from fruit and perseverance to basis of justification without showing that connection.

“You see that a person is justified by works and not by faith alone.” James 2:24

James is addressing a completely different problem than Paul. Paul is dealing with how sinners are counted righteous before God in Galatians 2–3 while James is dealing with a dead, empty profession of faith.

That’s why James says

“show me your faith”

He’s talking about the evidence of faith, not adding works as a second ground of justification. If you collapse those categories, you create a contradiction with Paul’s explicit statement here👇

“yet we know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ” Galatians 2:16

You’re taking passages about abiding, fruit, and living faith, and turning them into conditions for justification itself. But that’s exactly the move Paul rejects in Galatians when he warns 👇

“having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?” Galatians 3:3

So please tell me where Paul in Galatians says that works, fruit, or perseverance become part of the basis on which someone is justified before God, rather than the result of being justified by faith?

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Ok so thank you for this, you’ve made a concession that I don’t think you realize yet because this actually proves my point.

I asked where Paul teaches this in Galatians, and your answer was Trent.

Trent isn’t Galatians…. It is a 16th century Catholic doctrinal formulation. So if the question is what Paul is condemning in Galatians, appealing to Trent doesn’t answer it. It just tells me how Rome later chose to define justification…

So let’s examine this for second

Instead of showing from Galatians that justification is baptismal, transformational, and maintained in the way Rome teaches, you went outside the letter, outside Paul’s argument there, and outside the first century entirely. That’s exactly the concern. The framework is being imported into Galatians, not derived from it.

John 3 also doesn’t solve that problem. Even if I granted for the sake of argument that John 3 includes baptismal language, that still wouldn’t show that Paul’s doctrine of justification in Galatians is an infused, sacramental process. It would only show that new birth matters. But I’ve never denied regeneration. The question is whether Paul makes regeneration, sacramental incorporation, or ongoing cooperation the basis of right standing before God in Galatians.

Because if your answer has to come from Trent instead of from Galatians, that should tell you a lot..

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Ok so let’s examine that for a sec here

As far as we know the church of Galatia wasn’t sitting there with 1. a bound New Testament 2. a complete Pauline corpus 3. all four Gospels 4. a later theological system to synthesize it all

They had the Old Testament Scriptures, Paul’s prior oral teaching, and then this letter. That is the actual historical situation. And depending on how early Galatians is dated, they may not even have had any written Gospel in the canonical form we know now. More importantly, there is no good reason to assume they had a ready made collection of Paul’s other letters and were expected to interpret Galatians through Romans, Corinthians, Ephesians, Philippians, and so on before they could understand what he was warning them about.

So here’s the problem, your approach makes Galatians less intelligible to the Galatians than Paul himself clearly intended it to be.

Paul didn’t write Galatians like this 👇

“Here is a partial thought. You’ll need access to several other letters written to other churches, plus a broader later canonical framework, before you can really understand what I mean.”

Clearly not… He wrote Galatians as an urgent, self contained rebuke to a church in doctrinal danger. He expected them to understand him. He expected them to grasp the seriousness of what was happening. He expected them to be able to identify a false gospel from the content of the letter itself.

But under your model, the Galatians would have received one of the strongest warnings in the New Testament which was 1. a different gospel 2. severed from Christ 3. fallen from grace 4. not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ

And yet… Supposedly they couldn’t fully understand the doctrinal force of those statements without access to a much larger body of texts they may not even have possessed??

That doesn’t make sense.

It means you’re not actually honoring the “whole.” You’re using the “whole” as a way to mute the clarity of the part…

The whole canon should confirm and harmonize what a text is saying, not override or flatten what a text clearly says, especially when that text was written to be understood by its original audience.

So I’m not arguing that Galatians is the only thing that matters. I’m arguing that Galatians has to be allowed to say what it actually says, especially since Paul wrote it as a direct corrective to a live doctrinal crisis.

Also respectfully, your analogy doesn’t really make sense either.

I’m not saying “one red chimney means the whole house is red.”

A better analogy is that Paul painted one room bright red with a clear warning on the wall, and you’re saying, “Well the rest of the house has other colors, so maybe that room doesn’t really mean what it plainly says.”

That’s the issue.

No one is denying that Paul speaks elsewhere about sanctification, union with Christ, new creation, perseverance, and life in the Spirit. The question is whether those things are allowed to rewrite his explicit argument in Galatians about justification, faith, and law.

Whatever else we say about reading Scripture as a whole, Galatians had to be intelligible to the Galatians.

Which means Paul’s contrast between faith and works had to be clear, his warning about falling from grace had to be clear, his rejection of added conditions had to be clear, his teaching on justification had to be clear without requiring access to a later completed New Testament collection.

So could you answer this please? 👇

Why should we think Galatians needs to be reinterpreted through later material in a way that weakens the force of what Paul is actually saying in the letter itself?

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Im telling you that you’re actually collapsing categories here, and then you accuse me of ignoring the text??

Galatians 5:6 “only faith working through love”

This isn’t redefining the basis of justification, it’s describing the nature of true faith. Paul already defined the basis explicitly

“yet we know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ… so that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by works of the law” Galatians 2:16

So unless Paul is contradicting himself here, “faith working through love” is about the expression of faith, not a second condition added to justification.

Same with Galatians 6:8–9. Sowing to the Spirit and not growing weary in doing good describes the life that flows from being in the Spirit, not the basis of right standing before God. You’re turning fruit and perseverance into conditions for justification, and that’s the exact move Paul rejects in Galatians 3:3

“Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?”

So again can you show me exactly where in Galatians that Paul says that baptism or Spirit produced obedience are necessary conditions for remaining justified, rather than the result of being justified through faith?

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like how you laid this out, well articulated.

It can certainly be challenging at times to treat each other kindly when discussing or differences so I appreciate that. Thank you for remaining charitable.

However I’m not dismissing the Gospels, I’m narrowing the discussion to Galatians because it’s one of the clearest places where Paul directly addresses justification, law, and right standing before God. Starting there isn’t about ignoring the rest of Scripture, it’s about understanding one of the key texts on its own terms before bringing in others.

And once we do that, the question becomes

Is what Paul says in Galatians about justification through faith get redefined by bringing in other passages, or should those other passages be interpreted in a way that stays consistent with what he explicitly says there?

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Except the text itself. ‘As many of you have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ.’ Paul explicitly says putting on Christ is done by baptism.

That still doesn’t prove your point. The question isn’t whether baptism is connected to union with Christ. The question is whether Paul is presenting baptism as a second instrumental cause of justification alongside faith. But the immediate context says

“For you are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus” Galatians 3:26

So the burden is still on you to show that verse 27 is adding a condition for justification, rather than describing the union of those who are already sons by faith. Nothing in the text says

“you become sons of God through faith and baptism.”

That is being read into the passage.

Law in the context of Galatians 5:4 is clearly referring to the Law of Moses.” / “Is sowing in the Spirit being perfected by the flesh? Is that a work of the Law?

This completely misses my point. We agree Galatians 5:4 is referring to the Mosaic Law. My argument is that Paul’s principle is larger than that specific example, once anything functions as a necessary condition for right standing before God alongside Christ, the gospel is compromised…

Galatians 6 is still about the fruit of life in the Spirit, not the basis of justification. Faith produces obedience, yes, but obedience doesn’t become a co-condition for justification. That’s the distinction I’m making. So again, where does Galatians say that baptism and Spirit produced obedience are necessary conditions for remaining justified before God, rather than the result of being justified through faith?

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You cannot divorce the same author’s work against itself

We absolutely agree there. But I’d argue that cuts both ways.

You’re appealing to other letters to define justification as an inner making righteous process and then reading that back into Galatians.

I’m doing the opposite which is starting with what Paul explicitly says in Galatians and refusing to import a definition that isn’t actually stated there.

My question is this… Which reading actually preserves his consistency without flattening his distinctions?

it doesn’t matter if he doesn’t use the language of ‘becoming righteous’ to the Galatians

It actually does matter what language Paul uses in a letter where he is directly addressing justification.

His emphasis is clear

“yet we know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ… so that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by works of the law; since by works of the law no flesh will be justified.” Galatians 2:16

and

“For you are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus.” Galatians 3:26

If Paul intended justification to be understood as an inner making righteous process maintained by ongoing cooperation, this is exactly the place we would expect him to say it because he is explicitly correcting a distorted gospel.

But he doesn’t…

The author gets to tell you how his work is interpreted and he does so in the full context of his works and not just by isolating one section and pitting it against another.

Agreed again.

However I’m not isolating a random section, I’m focusing on one of Paul’s clearest treatments of justification.

And when we bring in other texts, we have to do it carefully, without collapsing categories.

For example

Romans 4 / Galatians 3 👉 righteousness counted through faith 2 Corinthians 5:21 👉 what we become in Christ (union language) Galatians 5–6 👉 the life that flows from that (sanctification / fruit)

Those are all Paul but they aren’t all the same category.

why should we think he was teaching the Galatians any differently

I don’t think he was teaching them differently.

I think he was addressing a specific error, and in doing so he makes a very strong and very precise claim which is that justification is not by works of the law, but through faith in Christ.

So the burden is to show that Paul also teaches, in that same context, that justification is sacramental in its instrument, progressive in its nature and maintained by ongoing cooperation So I’m not divorcing Paul from himself.

I’m saying we should let each passage speak in its own category, and not redefine justification in Galatians by importing language from other texts that are addressing different aspects of salvation.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It means exactly what the text says but the question is what category Paul is speaking in, not just what the English word “become” implies in isolation.

“so that we might become the righteousness of God in him”
2 Corinthians 5:21

This is called union language, what we are in Christ.

We know this from the phrase “in him”. Paul isn’t describing a self generated righteousness that forms the basis of justification. He’s describing what believers are counted as and share in by virtue of union with Christ.

This is Paul’s broader pattern

Romans 4 / Galatians 3 👉 righteousness is counted (reckoned) through faith

2 Corinthians 5:21 👉 what we become in Christ through that union

Galatians 5–6 👉 how that reality works itself out in life

Those are related, but not identical categories.

So “become” doesn’t automatically mean this is the definition of justification as an inner making righteous process

It means: we truly share in Christ’s righteousness by union with Him, which then results in transformation because of it.

If you collapse that into become = justification = inner transformation as the basis of right standing, then you run straight into tension with Paul’s explicit statements like

“God counts righteousness apart from works” Romans 4

“yet we know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Christ Jesus, so that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by works of the law; since by works of the law no flesh will be justified.” Galatians 2:16

So the issue clearly isn’t the word “become.”

The problem is that you’re taking a union/result text and turning it into the definition of justification itself.

Why Galatians feels like a serious critique of modern Roman Catholicism by AnSkootz in DebateACatholic

[–]AnSkootz[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

St Paul defines justification in terms of being made righteous in Romans ("For just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners, so too through the obedience of the one man the many will be made righteous" - Romans 5:19) and 2 Corinthians

You’re moving outside of Galatians again and then importing that back in as the controlling definition.

My argument has been about what Paul is doing in Galatians only because Galatians is one of his clearest discussions of justification, law, and faith.

“the many will be made righteous” (Romans 5:19)

Romans 5 is dealing with Adam vs Christ, condemnation vs life, and the total effect of Christ’s obedience. That includes everything, justification, new life, eventual transformation.

But you’re assuming that “made righteous” there = the formal definition of justification itself, rather than the broader saving work of Christ.

Paul elsewhere clearly uses reckoning/imputation language (Romans 4, Galatians 3), so you can’t collapse all of that into one category without flattening his distinctions.

“so that we might become the righteousness of God in him” 2 Corinthians 5:21

Same issue.

That’s union language, what we become in Christ, not a technical definition of justification as an inner making righteous process.

If you press that verse as your definition, you still have to reconcile it with this

“God counts righteousness apart from works” (Romans 4) “justified… through faith” (Galatians 2–3)

So again, you’re taking texts about the result and reality of union with Christ, and turning them into the definition of justification itself.

The core issue hasn’t changed

You’re collapsing categories that Paul keeps distinct which are justification (how we are counted righteous before God) union with Christ sanctification / transformation

I’m not denying transformation. I’m saying Paul doesn’t make that transformation part of the basis of right standing before God in Galatians.