Excelent question, cubeus19. And since I'm Catholic, I'm going to try to answer as best I can.cubeus19 wrote:Hi all, I was wondering about a few things regarding Catholics and salvation.
From what I currently know Catholics either believe or at the very least, many Protestants think that Catholics believe that salvation is not fully based on grace through faith but on a ambigous combination of faith and works.
Now my first question to anyone here who is either Catholic or knows alot about Catholics is, is that true? Do Catholics really believe that salvation is earned or merited by faith plus works?
My second question regards assurance of salvation in the Catholic church. Do Catholics or can Catholics even have assurance of salvation like what most Protestants claim to have?
If so, then how does a Catholic know if he or she is doing enough good works or has the right ratio of faith and works to assure themselves that they are indeed saved?
I'm mostly just curious about these things, please let me know if you can help me out. Thanks.
Statements like "I'm saved by faith" or "I'm saved by works" all miss the point, since neither works nor faith in and of themselves can save us. To the contrary, we are saved by the redeeming actions of Christ on the cross. Our salvation, won for us on the cross, is an unmerited gift, which no amount of faith or works could rightly earn.
Christ has accepted us completely, becoming one of us, and dying for us. Christ wants to enter into a relationship with each one of us personally. However, he also created us with free will, and he does not force anyone to enter a relationship with him against their will. Thus to obtain salvation, we must believe in Christ (faith), and obey his commandments (works). Salvation is no onetime event, as throughout our lives we must continually choose to accept or reject God. As Paul stated, "Therefore I run in such a way, as not without aim; I box in such a way, as not beating the air; but I discipline my body and make it my slave, so that, after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified." (1 Cor 9:26-27) Notice the phrase "so that...I myself may not be disqualified." Paul clearly recognizes that salvation is no one time event, but that he must continue with faith and works until Christ would call him home. Also note how this totally debunks the once saved always saved proposition, since a great apostle such as Paul would certainly have locked up his salvation by the time he wrote this letter.
I think there is a misconception as to what Catholics mean by works. We do not mean works to mean only feeding the poor, housing the homeless etc. We mean works to simply mean actions that are in line with God's will. In our sense of the word, showing up at your job on time and putting in an honest effort would be a good work, unless God had a serious reason for you to be somewhere else. Going to church and feeding the hungry are good works too, but so is anything else done in line with God's will, no matter how mundane.
Since Catholics are saved by grace from the Cross, and respond to that unmerited gift with faith and works, we are not trying to work our way into heaven. That work has already been done for us on the Cross. Everything else is merely a response to Christ's outpouring of love. So there is no magic number of works Catholics need to do in a day to "keep up", we just need to follow when called.
As welcoming as an assurance of salvation would be, there is no such assurance that I am aware of in Catholic theology. Since we have free will and could reject God's love at any point, we never have any true assurance until we have actually won the race. What we have instead is hope, the sure belief that if we live life in accordance with God's will, and maintain a firm belief in all that Christ has revealed, we will be welcomed into eternal life. And hope does not disappoint.