@@peterubbels2385here’s Martin Luther’s answer to your question: “If you are a preacher of mercy, do not preach an imaginary but the true mercy. If the mercy is true, you must therefore bear the true, not an imaginary sin. God does not save those who are only imaginary sinners. Be a sinner, and sin boldly, but let your trust in Christ be stronger, and rejoice in Christ who is the victor over sin, death, and the world. We will commit sins while we are here, for this life is not a place where justice resides. We, however, says Peter (2. Peter 3:13), are looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth where justice will reign. It suffices that through God’s glory we have recognized the Lamb who takes away the sin of the world. No sin can separate us from Him, even if we were to kill or commit adultery thousands of times each day. Do you think such an exalted Lamb paid merely a small price with a meager sacrifice for our sins? Pray hard for you are quite a sinner.”
Short catholic answer: Salvation is by faith alone, but works are the fruit of faith. Ergo: faith that doesn't produce works is dead. Just as a tree that doesn't produce fruit is dead.
Some trees that can't fruit can still pollinate. Someone who may not believe can rationalize the world in such a way that their atheistic pains turn people TO God. Works without the faith can be fixed almost instantly, if He so desires. Psychedelia and near death experiences are very good at remediating the faith part, for starters, and we can choose to embrace one entire half of those possibilities!
@@Kaleki935 not to be rude, but the whole analogy is that "being a tree" is someone who has faith, this is evidenced by someone not doing good works being equivocated to someone who doesnt produce fruits. so someone who does good works but does not have faith is more like a shrub, though this analogy is flawed because this implies you cant become a tree, or believer. You would have to find something that isn't a tree, but can become a tree and also produces fruit. Good luck.
I, as an evangelical, wory for all of the victims of the modern gospel. The one that says “you have a God shaped hole in your heart so just say these worlds and God will fix your life, fix your marriage, save you and change you” It’s lacking in the essence of the gospel and it centered on the worldly problems, not the problems of the heart and of eternal salvation.
@@tobiasbourne9073 I’m saying that those who believe that simply saying a prayer if accepting Jesus into your heart aren’t saved if they don’t repent. If no one tells them about the law then they won’t know what they did wrong and won’t know what to repent from.
But Christ also said 'by their fruits you shall know them. ' The fruits are the works that faith will lead you to. This is really important because Christ also said that 'not all who say to me 'Lord, Lord,' will enter heaven.' How will you know you are not one of them? By the fruits of your faith. One may come before the other, but both are very important.
@@thefunkslamdunk9224 But Jesus uses the word fruit for a reason. A good plant produces good fruit (a true Christian produces good fruit) and a bad plant produces bad fruit or no fruit at all (fake Christians or non-believers do not produce good works). The fruit is a product a good seed, the faith being the seed and the works being the fruit.
As my dad (a southern Baptist pastor) would say, “we don’t have a works based salvation we have a salvation that works.” Basically like someone else said here in the comments our works don’t save us however they are the evidence of our salvation. “You will know them by their fruits. Grapes are not gathered from thorn bushes nor figs from thistles, are they? So every good tree bears good fruit, but the bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot produce bad fruit, nor can a bad tree produce good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. So then, you will know them by their fruits.” Matthew 7:16-20
@@succathog5906 oh I agree 100% on that. In a spiritual context/sense we are called/commanded to be disciples who teach what Jesus & God have commanded so while some of us might not be called to be pastors or ministers we are called to disciples who make disciples so I do believe “knowing them by their fruits” does refer to non-pastors & ministers based of what the Great Commission says
@@herbertgray7080You are correct we don’t do good works to be saved we do it only to be an example of God’s love to others. Salvation is by faith alone
@@herbertgray7080To do the only perfect reparation for our sins. His Sacrifice merits our salvation and gives reparation for the dishonor we did to God by sinning, while also freeing (redeeming) us from sin. Also by taking our nature He builds a bridge between the human and the Divine so that we can partake on His Divinity. And by suffering the effects of our sins He makes it so that we can attain the glory of His perfection. This does not excuse us from the obligation of Loving God above all things and our neighbor as ourselves, but cleans us from the sin of not following these Commandents perfectly. Faith without good works is dead because good works are Love and Love makes all virtues to be alive. Without Love all virtues, including faith, are impotent to do anything at all.
Salvation is by grace through faith, not of works that anyone should boast! Good works is the fruit of being saved. P.s. Thanks for the correction @affe100 👍
He will repay everyone according to his works: eternal life to those who seek glory, honour, and immortality through perseverance in good works, but wrath … to those who … obey wickedness.” Paul Romans 2
what does work mean to you? if you have faith, it would show in your works, in the way you live.... as the fruits of your faith ..... If you have no fruits/no works.... you have false faith
@christsavesreadromans1096 God tells us to rightly divide scripture in 2Tim2:15. James 2:24 “Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only.” James is talking about Faith PLUS works are needed referring to the Jews in Tribulation in the last days and NOT referring to the "Church" James 1:1(Proves he is addressing the 12 Tribes of Israel) 1James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, to the twelve tribes which are scattered abroad, greeting. James5:3(timeline shows the last days tribulation) 3“Your gold and silver is cankered; and the rust of them shall be a witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire. Ye have heaped treasure together for the LAST DAYS.” keep the commandments PLUS faith in Jesus Christ in tribulation) 👇 Revelation 14:12 12“Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.” More Proof in Revelation 7:5-8(Listing all the 12 Tribes of Israel) 👇 5 Of the tribe of Juda were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Reuben were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Gad were sealed twelve thousand. 6 Of the tribe of Aser were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Nepthalim were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Manasses were sealed twelve thousand. 7 Of the tribe of Simeon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Levi were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Issachar were sealed twelve thousand. 8 Of the tribe of Zabulon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Joseph were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Benjamin were sealed twelve thousand. Your whole understanding of James are not referring to Church but the Jews. The Bride of Christ will not be going through Tribulation
@@p1nkfreud Those who have knowledge of the Gospel and choose to willfully sin constantly were not only never saved. They are not even Christian. True faith leads to Good works. Many people including yourself are championing Works over faith. Stop it bro. That is legit sending people to hell. There's a reason Christianity stands above all other religions and are completely different from all religions across the world. We are truly saved by the grace and Glory of God not of our works. Unlike every religion that enforces you to do certain things in order to attain Heaven, Nirvana, Genna etc. We can't live perfect lives or try to. It's all the grace of God Our faith leads to those Good works. The prime example of the thief on the cross whos lived a life of complete crime and murder yet was forgiven on the cross. bro you cannot make this up. *you're not only trusting in your works but yourself.* "i think believing in Jesus is not enough" cannot make that up man please repent and put you're entire faith in Jesus. That'll produce good works. Not because we have to but because we want to for the love of Jesus.
@@xHollow. My friend, we will all be judged by our own yardstick, no? Perhaps it is better then to say, that none who willfully sin are saved. After being baptized and accepting Christ as my savior, I admit I have willfully sinned. I am not alone in this, however. I like to think that because I repent regularly, and because I do TRY to stop sinning in earnest, I am still saved
Hey Zoomer, I am Catholic. I really like your videos. I would say that the things you said about baptism in this video is very similar to the Catholic Doctrines on Baptism. I did watch your previous video on baptism. I never really new any other tradition other than Catholicism and Baptist, because most of my friends are Baptist. It was nice to hear your views on this. I was wondering by your view on baptism becoming effective by faith would a baby who dies but is baptized be "saved". I could be misunderstanding you here.
Baptists and Catholics stand at opposite ends in terms of their traditions. 😄 If the Presbyterian/Reformed perspectives surprised you, delving into Lutheranism might pique your interest. Lutherans affirm the perpetual virginity of Mary, Baptismal regeneration, the concept of original sin, infant baptism, private confessions with a pastor, and the real physical presence of the Lord in the Eucharist. Moreover, Lutherans consider the history of the past 2000 years as their own, attributing the foundation of their church to Jesus in the first century rather than to Luther in the 16th century.
@@luke-i7yThat's heresy. Every human being enters the world in a state of original sin, which is a privation of sanctifying grace, the life of the soul that enables it to live and exist in the upper realms in the presence of God. If a baby dies without receiving baptism, they cannot enter heaven upon death. They go to a lower realm referred to in scripture as paradise or Abraham's Bossom. Why do you think the enemy is so eager to get women to murder their children in the womb? His aim is to drag human beings into eternal misery and ruin alongside him and the rest of his fallen angels, so why would he encourage abortion and human sacrifice if it meant those babies go straight to heaven?
I like ❤ how you present the truth of salvation by faith. Ephesians 2:8-9 NKJ For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast. Having been baptized as a baby and not getting great teaching thereafter till 33, I was relieved I was baptised again as I learned more about the Bible.
@christsavesreadromans1096 See James 2:19: 19 You say you have faith, for you believe that there is one God.[f] Good for you! Even the demons believe this, and they tremble in terror. 20 How foolish! Can’t you see that faith without good deeds is useless? 21 Don’t you remember that our ancestor Abraham was shown to be right with God by his actions when he offered his son Isaac on the altar? 22 You see, his faith and his actions worked together. His actions made his faith complete. 23 And so it happened just as the Scriptures say: “Abraham believed God, and God counted him as righteous because of his faith.”[g] He was even called the friend of God.[h] 2 Reading more of James, there are more examples of Works. It isn't works as in rituals or traditions but living out faith in our lives by Loving others and entrusting God with our lives entirely.
I have to watch a health and safety thing for college I just muted and sped up. your content is better for my health than the college telling me to explore my sexuality.
Thank you for your video! I’m Catholic so hold to a different understanding of faith and works, but it’s good to hear an alternative viewpoint from a different faith tradition, so I can better understand alternative views.
Im a baptist and love your videos ive learned so much about our brothers and sisters in the different denominations and I hope you keep doing what your doing! Personally ive always held the sacraments in a higher regard because my family actually went to a Lutheran church until I was around 8 years old and I will say in my church we think the sacraments are very important and especially baptism, so I just wanted to say that because there are some baptist churches that don't compromise on baptism and we don't just see it as a work but as an outward expression to God, and personally I believe God uses baptism to bring us into new life and that the only part up to us is to make the conscience decision to turn back to God. Again thats just my personal view on that but again love your videos man 🙏🏾 keep it up
A marriage analogy in regard to non-baptism and salvation could be... a man who claims to be married but he has never worn his wedding ring and refuses to do so.
@christsavesreadromans1096 Of course. The words of Scripture: "What use is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but he has no works? Can that faith save him?" True saving faith will bear the fruit of good works. That's why James wrote that the true believer is "justified" by works. We may be declared righteous before God by faith alone, but it is through works that we testify to the genuineness of that faith.
@christsavesreadromans1096 Because if they did not do good works they did not have faith in Christ (He said that the ones who believe in Him are the ones who follow is commandments). BUT good works are not was justify us to God and thus is not what SAVES us. It is very simple to understand and it is clearly what is in the Bible.
@christsavesreadromans1096 Yeah and there is nothing in the video that disagrees with that statement but salvation continues to be by faith alone because good works are a direct result of true faith.
@christsavesreadromans1096 If they have true faith they will choose to produce fruit that is what you are falling to understand. They will do that because the Holy Spirit would have regenerated their hearts and would have started the process of sanctification and only those touched by the Holy Ghost are the ones that have faith. So if you see someone claiming to be a Christian and they don't act like one it is a sign that they don't actually have faith. That what clarifies and integrates what Pauls said regarding "salvation by faith and not by works", what Jesus said regarding" that we would know them (the elect) by their fruits", and also what James said about "works being a sign of salvation". But the main point of "salvation by faith alone" is that is not our works that justify us to God (God does not owe us salvation and Isaiah is very clear that if we depend on our works we are lost) it is faith in His Son that does. We say that salvation is by faith alone because salvation is because of Jesus alone. That is the Gospel and that is the message of the Bible.
"""a living, creative, active and powerful thing, this faith. Faith cannot help doing good works constantly. It doesn't stop to ask if good works ought to be done, but before anyone asks, it already has done them and continues to do them without ceasing. Anyone who does not do good works in this manner is an unbeliever… Thus, it is just as impossible to separate faith and works as it is to separate heat and light from fire!""" Dr. Martin Luther (1522)
@@SomeGuy-rn9cg Oh well, I'm not sure of my specific denomination. I know im a Protestant and I believe in the 5 solas (just like the rest of my church) but im not sure what exact denomination I belong to, Presbyterianism is starting to resonate with me too.May God guide you in your search for a good church, brother!
On baptism. The tradition of water baptism, dunking someone in water, is a work and it doesn't save. It is simply a symbolic act to publicly declare our faith and to represent both Jesus's resurrection and us being baptized by the Holy Spirit. Baptism of the Holy Spirit is God washing away the guilt of our sin by using the blood of Christ. That is not the same thing as water baptism. Water baptism is to baptism of the Holy Spirit what a wedding is to a marriage. Weddings are a tradition to symbolically represent the binding of a man and woman, but the wedding isn't the marriage itself. Similarly, water baptism seeks to symbolically represent baptism of the Holy Spirit, but it isn't baptism by the Holy Spirit itself.
True, but Christ commanded that both must occur for anyone to enter the kingdom. I think it can lead people astray to contemplate separating them in this matter, as both are necessary for salvation.
@@andreichira7518 When Jesus said that in order to enter the Kingdom of Heaven we have to be born of water and spirit, there are two main competing views of what this means and neither of them think this refers to the tradition of water baptism. The first is that "born of water" refers to physical birth while "born of spirit" refers to being spiritually born again, IE being saved. The second is that "born of water" refers to spiritual cleansing (which is one of the things water baptism symbolically represents) while "born of spirit" means essentially the very same thing just stated a different way.
@@LawlessNate Well you're neglecting the third view, which is the view that being born of water is by immersion, the same way St. John the Forerunner baptized in the Jordan and the method by which he baptized Jesus. The first view could not possibly be correct because Jesus tells Nicodemus that one must be born of water and the Holy Spirit in response to Nicodemus asking how a man could possibly be born again.
@@andreichira7518 Typically even those who believe that the tradition of water baptism is required for salvation often don't use this verse to try and support that view, not that there aren't those who try to do so. Also, I just stated two major views; I never said that both were legitimate. I myself hold to the second view. Keep in mind that if you're defining going out and performing a specific tradition as not being a work then you're opening the door to introduce works based theology because all of those physical actions are then somehow not works. The Bible quite often will take a word or concept and use it to mean different things in different contexts. Sometimes death means biological death whereas other times it manes spiritual death IE separation from God. Similarly, the Bible uses Baptism to refer both to the tradition of water dunking and also to the Holy Spirit working in us for our salvation. Context is necessary to determine what the Bible means when the Bible refers to baptism.
@@andreichira7518 Let me put it this way. Baptism of the Holy Spirit is salvation itself; those are two different ways to describe the very same thing. It's not that baptism (of the Holy Spirit) is necessary for salvation or comes after salvation, that IS salvation. By conflating water baptism with baptism of the Holy Spirit you'd be essentially suggesting that we participate and even cause our own salvation be performing this tradition.
RC and Protestants forgot the context in witch Sola Fide was formulated, Sola Fide is NOT a rejection of works, but it is the affirmation that good works proceed from a true believer as a evidence of his faith in the Lord Jesus - But without good works Faith is dead, thus, salvation is lost - Some RC than say "so this is just a semantic issue, you do believe in the necessity of Good works" yes, but here is the catch, what kind of works? the doctrine of Sola Fide is a rejection of what RC told us what those good works are, not a spontaneous works of faith, but a prescription, like pilgrimage, peanance, some RC sacraments, the rosary, indulgences and etc. If you do not adhere to this prescription of works, you are entirely lost Conclusion: Sola Fide is a rejection of RC dogmas and prescriptions of works, not the necessity of works in the Christian life.
The problem is the interpretation of Works that represent accretions, rituals and traditions that are empty and meaningless. James is full of explanation and examples of what works are. It's not contradicting Paul when one reads to understand than to quote mine. James 2:19: 19 You say you have faith, for you believe that there is one God.[f] Good for you! Even the demons believe this, and they tremble in terror. 20 How foolish! Can’t you see that faith without good deeds is useless? 21 Don’t you remember that our ancestor Abraham was shown to be right with God by his actions when he offered his son Isaac on the altar? 22 You see, his faith and his actions worked together. His actions made his faith complete. 23 And so it happened just as the Scriptures say: “Abraham believed God, and God counted him as righteous because of his faith.”[g] He was even called the friend of God.[h] Abraham didn't have the law, the only thing he had was sacrifice on an Altar. But God didn't call him friend because he conducted Altar sacrifices, he called him a friend for his Faith which was demonstrated by offering his Son. His sole heir whom God had promised to multiple his descendants through after decades of waiting.
Which would be fine if not for the fact that Sola fide has been twisted beyond comprehension in the ensuing centuries. It's no longer a rejection of the specific prescriptions of the Roman Catholics. It's has been twisted to mean nothing at all (or in the Calvinist heresy, that there is nothing you _could_ do because your salvation was predestined).
@@andreichira7518 Actually, although i am not a calvinist, you are strawmanning Calvinism, i sense you are a Shamounite that hate calvinists by a misunderstand of what they really believe in, just as protestants do with RC. Calvinists agree with the necessity of good works just like i said, but they believe that only the elect will actually perform those works and persevere in the Faith to the end. (yeah, i don't buy it, but it is not a rejection of works) Just to clarify, i do believe that what save is faith alone, works can't save you nor can earn you merity, but, if you do not have works you are just deceiving yourself, you are a church goer and not a Christian.
Find it interesting how Protestants separate salvation and sanctification. If I’m already saved then I don’t need to be sanctified. If I’m not sanctified then I can’t enter heaven. We have to respond to his grace, so what we Catholics believe is ultimately our works are actually God’s because he doesn’t just want to be part of our lives, he wants to be our lives.
The question is what you mean by works; James 2:19: 19 You say you have faith, for you believe that there is one God.[f] Good for you! Even the demons believe this, and they tremble in terror. 20 How foolish! Can’t you see that faith without good deeds is useless? 21 Don’t you remember that our ancestor Abraham was shown to be right with God by his actions when he offered his son Isaac on the altar? 22 You see, his faith and his actions worked together. His actions made his faith complete. 23 And so it happened just as the Scriptures say: “Abraham believed God, and God counted him as righteous because of his faith.”[g] He was even called the friend of God.[h] 2 The Epistle of James describes works and they are not ritual or tradition, but living out the Lord's commands to Love the Lord God with all of your heart, spirit, mind and body and to love your neighbor as you love yourself. Many see "works" and insert their own idea rather than read and understand God's definition from scripture itself.
The word Salvation is often used to just describe the grounds on which God lets us into heaven (justification) but it can also very well refer to sanctification and glorification, both of which are the inevitable results of justification. This is why people like to say "I have been saved, I'm being saved, and I will be saved"--that is, I have been saved from condemnation through faith, I am being saved from the sinful desires of my flesh through the Spirit, and I one day I will be saved from the pains of this age through the victory of the Lord and the resurrection of my body.
My advise to you is if it is your first reading the Bible you should start with the Gospel and then read the New Testament first or at least Paul letters. You also don't need to read all four gospels, i would probably read Mark (since is shorter) and John (since it is the "deepest and the most different one). Then you can read the Old Testament and then the rest of the New Testament. The books of wisdom (Salms, Proverbs etc) can be read whenever your want.
My personal advice you didn't ask for? If you get "bored" and start missing lines, just bookmark it and come back! Either switch to a separate book, or take a break but burnout will happen so it's best to have a plan for it.
We are SAVED by Faith alone, but as Christians, we need to get baptized, turn from sin, do good works, and preach the Gospel. None of those things alone will allow you salvation, but if you have Faith, you will do these things, as Jesus Christ our Lord commands us.
Great explanation. I recently had a bit of an existential crisis studying what the scripture and church history really taught about justification. I ultimately came to the conclusion that the Catholics were wrong about this. They had alternative explanations for Paul's letters, but I found rest in the gospels. Jesus clearly demonstrated that He offers salvation freely to anyone who approaches God through Him in faith.
You should do a video explaining why Baptism has become something other than what it is depicted as being in Scripture. In Scripture we see only credobaptism given to adults, and although some verses say it is necessary for salvation, other verses indicate that it is a work more akin to "professing Jesus Christ" or joining the body of believers. How did it become something given to infants? How did it become something more than an expression of faith? How is it considered "not a work" when it is an act of individual will? These are questions that ought to be answered.
But they have been answered and refuted centuries ago. Maybe if people weren't so caught up in their false man-made traditions and clingig to and repping their little denominational gang/tribe there wouldn't be so many divisions and rampant doctrinal chaos among so-called Christians.
@@lukebrasting5108 pedobaptism is apparently a man-made tradition. Is that what you're saying? The Bible does not give an example of pedobaptism to follow, which means it comes from a tradition rather than from Scripture. This is the sort of thing that could use explaining - and not smug disregard.
Fr Mike’s video was so good. Very clear as it can be a confusing subject. I recommend any Sola Fide Protestants to watch it because you will learn what we Catholics actually believe.
It depends entirely on who you believe is doing the work. If you believe God is the one doing the work, then salvation is ABSOLUTELY by works; and if you believe God is the one baptizing you into his body the church, then Baptism saves you. You are saved not by your faith in God alone; but by your faith in him and his work he is actively doing in you. Belief in God alone is not enough for salvation; by that logic even Satan would be saved. I'm not fond of pointing fingers at different groups and saying who is and isn't saved, but this has raised a valid question in my mind about whether some Baptist groups can be considered christians. If the best litmus test we have for christian legitimacy is the Nicene Creed, then they're jumping through some serious hoops when they say they believe in "One Baptism FOR THE REMISSION OF SINS". At the minimum you have to believe it to mean something totally different from what the people who wrote the creed believed.
For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also. ~ James 2:26 Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven. Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness! ~ Matthew 7:21-24
The problem is people have their own idea what "Works" are. Reading the context in James we get examples such as; James 2:19: 19 You say you have faith, for you believe that there is one God.[f] Good for you! Even the demons believe this, and they tremble in terror. 20 How foolish! Can’t you see that faith without good deeds is useless? 21 Don’t you remember that our ancestor Abraham was shown to be right with God by his actions when he offered his son Isaac on the altar? 22 You see, his faith and his actions worked together. His actions made his faith complete. 23 And so it happened just as the Scriptures say: “Abraham believed God, and God counted him as righteous because of his faith.”[g] He was even called the friend of God.[h] 2
@@kriegjaeger we’re saved by grace through faith and our actions, good or bad, will be revealed to determine whether or not we have genuine saving faith.
@@LilBaws My understanding; Our intentions will be known (and judged) and our works will be judged to see if they stood the test of time. Some are of straw, some are of gold. I cannot presume to know what work is of what quality and feel it could be dangerous to opine as no examples are given.
@@kriegjaeger There is no work that you do to gain salvation. Genuine-saving faith produces good works naturally. This is why the sacraments of the Catholic Church are all useless.. they think they can just do the sacraments and be saved that way.
@@LilBaws I agree! Our works is effectively behaving as we aught to. Doing what we know is right now that the spirit resides in and guides us. We are to represent Christ in the world.
I agree. Good works are not only to show that we are Christians (as the city on the hill/lamp passage, which btw isn't an evangelical verse as many believe it is) but also to further the kingdom of God, to glorify God, and to make the image of Christ beautiful, also the acts and good works may decide whether we are a good Christian or not. (P.S. yes I am a Baptist and believe it is a public testament of our salvation rather than being a factor in saving us, however I do believe it is crucial that a Christian is Baptized. I believe rejecting to be Baptized is a form of being ashamed of Christ, which as Christ says He will be ashamed of us in front of our Father. I'm glad there are at least a few things we can agree on. Also did you make this in response to my last comment, because this was a point I explicitly made)
@christsavesreadromans1096 maybe you should watch it, you don’t know for sure. But even if you are not a person who completely disregards the other side of the argument while saying it is wrong even without knowing their point, I still have a refutation of the passage in James. James the brother of Jesus says that you are justified by faith and works. But what does “justify” even mean? Justification has a range of meanings. One definition means to be declared righteous in front of God, while another means to be declared righteous in front of men. James is talking about this second definition: one who has faith but doesn’t have works is seen by man as a hypocrite, while one who has faith and works shows men that they truly have faith.
In my life I done good works, but wasn’t saved. I grew up in the church but never trusted Christ back then. That’s why I personally believe sola fide. Now my life has changed however. Sins I thought I would never stop, I stopped. Even my friends noticed.
ive been researching this topic for whole day and suddenly this popped up in my subscriptions, thanks! currently halfway and this has cleared a lot of things, thanks again
Faith is trust. It’s not having works to prove to God your worthy. It’s time to place your faith alone in Jesus Christ and not complicated theology that backloads works into the gospel.
I struggle to believe that the church is required to be saved. I have met a man who found the lord then went and lived alone in the woods for 3 years and grew his relationship with the lord. Indoctrination is thick in the world today and is present everywhere including church I thought the church was a place of communion and a place to exchange vows, praise the lord, find strength and support to try and be someone who bears fruit worth presenting to the world I am still going to try out some if not all of my local churches and see how it goes, it is nice to be around like minded people sometimes
The church is not strictly a building but fellowshipping in the family of Christ. There is a saying that wherever Christians plant a knee in prayer together, there is a church. If your local institutional congregations are comprised by the world, start a home church. Just a study and fellowship group.
Fellowship is important but not necessary. I don’t attend church but I am a devout believer. My political opinions vary drastically from most “church people” who I view as bigots and people Christ would be ashamed to represent, so I don’t seek to commune with “church folks”
@@p1nkfreud Brother, fellowship absolutely is necessary in that it is a vital part of the Christian life. God doesn't just redeem individuals, he redeems a "chosen family, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession." Don't allow your political opinions to separate you from the body of Christ. If you have truly repented and believed in Jesus, being baptized in his name, then you are part of God's kingdom, and the kingdom of heaven is a kingdom at war. Don't neglect your fellow soldiers in the battle for the sake of political opinions. Please find a local church gathering of people who love the Lord and their neighbor, with ministers who preach the word of the gospel faithfully. It is God's good will for you to be united with your brothers and sisters in Christ.
@@p1nkfreud Hebrews 10:24 Let us think of ways to motivate one another to acts of love and good works. 25 And let us not neglect our meeting together, as some people do, but encourage one another, especially now that the day of his return is drawing near. 26 Dear friends, if we deliberately continue sinning after we have received knowledge of the truth, there is no longer any sacrifice that will cover these sins. Also do not carry hate in your heart for your brothers in Christ or you will have murdered them in your heart. James 4:11 11 Don’t speak evil against each other, dear brothers and sisters.[d] If you criticize and judge each other, then you are criticizing and judging God’s law. But your job is to obey the law, not to judge whether it applies to you. 12 God alone, who gave the law, is the Judge. He alone has the power to save or to destroy. So what right do you have to judge your neighbor? James 5:9 Don’t grumble about each other, brothers and sisters, or you will be judged. For look-the Judge is standing at the door! I'll pray they are accepting and patient for you as I pray you are of them.
I'm loving your channel and it's helped me loads in learning about different theologys in Christianity. I'm a pretty new Christian, baptised baptist, leaning towards Catholisism. It seems to me that the chief thing that saves is love for God, which requires faith and is evidenced in works. But loving God is something you do, ergo, a 'work'. Maybe I'm missing something, but a work to me is something you do, or is done. If so, it seems that you must have more than faith alone, faith with nothing else, not even love. If you're justifying the phrase by changing the meaning of the word work, then I think most people would actually agree with how you're saved. At the very least, is it something to hate one another for and cause so much discord in what is supposed to be one unified body in Christ? I pray that everyone can come together with one mind and spirit to give glory to God. I know this world needs it.
Yea I believe the big difference between Protestants and Catholics on this is a difference in how we view justification. Protestants and Catholics are on the same page when it comes to initial justification. Where we differ is Protestants view it as a one time event and then you cannot loose that salvation. Catholics on the other hand view justification as a process. Similar to his marriage analogy, once you are married you need to grow together in love. If you cheat on your spouse, abuse or stop loving then you have abandoned them (committed mortal sin) and must be reconciled before continuing the marriage. Non of the works after in themselves save you, but they increase your justification and without them you will die like the plant.
@@GhostVII Amen, (GRACE means UNMERITED FREE GIFT. NO human effort or works can be involved in receiving or keeping salvation; there is Nothing a person can do to qualify for or earn any part of salvation.) Romans 11:6 (KJV), “And if by grace, then is it no more of works: otherwise grace is no more grace....” (Trusting on ANY human effort or works means that person is not under grace, but is attempting to qualify for salvation by the law/commandment keeping/human effort, and is therefore NOT saved)Ephesians 2:8-9 (KJV) - “For by GRACE are ye saved through faith; and that NOT of Water Baptism cannot be part of HOW a person is saved / born-again. 1 Corinthians 1:17 (KJV) - “For Christ sent me NOT to BAPTIZE, but to preach the gospel; not with wisdom of words, lest the cross of Christ should be made of NO EFFECT.” God Bless
@christsavesreadromans1096 God tells us to rightly divide scripture in 2Tim2:15. James 2:24 “Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only.” James is talking about Faith PLUS works are needed referring to the Jews in Tribulation in the last days and NOT referring to the "Church" James 1:1(Proves he is addressing the 12 Tribes of Israel) 1James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, to the twelve tribes which are scattered abroad, greeting. James5:3(timeline shows the last days tribulation) 3“Your gold and silver is cankered; and the rust of them shall be a witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire. Ye have heaped treasure together for the LAST DAYS.” keep the commandments PLUS faith in Jesus Christ in tribulation) 👇 Revelation 14:12 12“Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.” More Proof in Revelation 7:5-8(Listing all the 12 Tribes of Israel) 👇 5 Of the tribe of Juda were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Reuben were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Gad were sealed twelve thousand. 6 Of the tribe of Aser were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Nepthalim were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Manasses were sealed twelve thousand. 7 Of the tribe of Simeon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Levi were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Issachar were sealed twelve thousand. 8 Of the tribe of Zabulon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Joseph were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Benjamin were sealed twelve thousand. Your whole understanding of James are not referring to Church but the Jews. The Bride of Christ will not be going through Tribulation
@@Melanie_44 Ephesians 2:8-9 and Romans 3:27-28 says faith = salvation. Ephesians 4:17-24, Colossians 3:7-10, John 15:1-6 and 2 Corinthians 3:17-18 says that a saved person WILL produce works
Key factor works.😂 You need works to be saved according to this video. The truth is salvation is a free gift of God you did not earn. (YOU DID NOT EARN)
Something just occurred to me. When I hear Catholic priests discussing common problems they encounter in the confessional (without going into specifics for obvious reasons), one of the problems they report is scrupulosity, or the obsessive over-confessing of things that may not even be that serious, which usually happens because the penitent isn't certain that their confession and penance is truly sufficient. The deeper underlying problem here is a nagging doubt in the mercy of God. Martin Luther rather famously suffered this, and it led him to his reformation breakthrough. Catholic priests usually chalk it up to a personal flaw, but I wonder if it might not be an outflow from a more systemic flaw. Maybe not with the Church or the Sacrament as the Church absolutely teaches divine mercy and forgiveness of sins, but with catechesis about these things.
"Every tree that does not bear good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire." - Matthew 7, 19 "Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father in heaven." - Matthew 7,21
Interesting, because ive always gone to non-denominational churches and babtist but it never sat right with me that "once saved always saved". So i dont believe in that because it would seem odd to just be complacent. So what would i be considered if i don't believe in once saved always saved but i am more in line with non-denominational churches?
It's a theological difference but not detrimental to the faith. When people say once saved always saved they mean that if someone has faith they will continue to have faith always and never fall away. The people that call themselves Christian at one point and then fall away were never Christian's at all. That's my view as of now but I'm exploring the concept because maybe it's wrong and you can fall away. Keep striving to learn more!
@@wyattc4644 What you just described is the perseverance of the saints. "Once saved, always saved" is the idea that you can fall away from the faith and die apart from Christ and yet still get into heaven on the grounds that you used to have faith.
I am Catholic so: In order for us to have a saving faith it must have works. If we don’t have works then we’ll be cut off ( and we’ll be like the goats on the left of Jesus. No works = no faith. Good works + no faith = Heresy of Pelagianism. The equation must be: I have faith and have been saved by baptism + because of this I must work = Final Salvation (I have lived out a life like that of Christ’s) If I’m missing works then my faith is empty and dead. Faith is a double sided coin. Because I have been saved I should not sin, and I should work and live out my faith.
13:56 Hm, so are you saying someone who is a professing muslim may, under a certain circumstance, go to heaven? Or, if someone who never bothered with religion, or someone who is agnostic may go to heaven? Pretty sure the answer is a definite 'no'?
VIDEO SUGGESTION I would love to see a video of how you interpret genesis 1, I know u believe on evolution but how do you reconcile that with the genesis creation account
7:15 Idolatry isn't the only sin that jeopardizes our relationship with God. Some sins lead to death and others don't (1 Jonh 5:17), and grave sins like murder and hatred, sexual sins, etc do destroy our relationship with God, for they are direct violations of the Ten Commandents. Some sins are explicitly said to destroy any relationship with God (1 Corinthians 6:9). So there are sins that destroy our friendship with God and there are sins that do not destroy this relationship. 8:30 Precisely, baptism is something God does to us, not something we do for God 9:43 We catholics have the idea of baptism of desire, in which those who truly wanted to be baptized and had a commitement to that are treated by God as if in fact they had been baptized in case they die before baptism. A clear example of that would be catechumens being martyred, they had a commitment to be baptized, so God won't deny his grace to them over a technicallity. Sidenote: It's funny how the name baptists is used by those who have a lower view of baptism lmao 14:06 We catholics have the idea of invincible ignorance. It means that those who, not by their own fault, don't have faith, are saved. The most clear example would be aboriginal australians before we even knew Australia was a thing. But the thing is we can’t assume all of them are saved, since if the path to salvation is narrow and the gates to damnation are wide, so preaching the Gospel is always necessary. 19:12 You seem to believe in a conditional perseverance of the saints
God is unlimited, so is His Grace. If you believe in the Death, burial and resurrection of Christ, and that act is the only remission of sins, you are SAVED. FAITH is a gift from God Eph. 2:8
John the Baptizer even told us that he only baptized with water while Christ would baptize in the spirit. The water baptism is only a symbol of that spiritual baptism. Has no power in itself but someone who DOES trust in the lord will want to be baptized. On Faith and Works so many people are getting hung up on "works" without even knowing what "works" means. James describes works at length, I challenge anyone to come back after reading and describe a tradition or ritual James stated was required to be saved. The entire epistle is teaching how our ACTIONS demonstrate our faith. Anyone can claim to have faith, even Demons know God exists, the question is; Do you LIVE in a way that demonstrates you believe?
My question to those who don't believe in faith alone is simply if someone accepts Jesus on their death bed are they still sent to hell? I've had some people try to justify it by saying that faith is the work but that just sounds like goofy semantics to me and still boils down to faith being all that is needed.
Take it from the perspective of a psychedelic lover; when your mind is outright CONVINCED it is dying, you will make realizations and admissions nobody in their sober mind would conjure. It almost always reflects 1:1 with the teachings of christianity, self gratifications become meaningless and generational blessings become the main focus. So if someone is ACTUALLY dying, and they make some of these realizations, are we supposed to relish in their suffering and poke fun at them? Or is if best to generally acknowledge that people do change, especially nearing the end of this journey, and let the big guy do all the finer sifting?
Yes, people who accept Jesus on their death bed are saved. The bible gives us an example of this, being that one of the men who was being crucified next to Jesus accepted Christ, and the bible says he was saved.
I just want to tell you zoomer what you said about baptism how it’s not a work is 100% accurate; as a Catholic that’s what we believe, it’s a gift from God that he gave us for us to use something Baptist and evangelicals can’t get through their heads. I pray that the Lord will help them understand these things.
@@Austin-kt7ky naw, baptism of the water saves. is required for salvation. But that theology asserts the Catholic stance that the fate of those outside the church is known to God alone.
@@eltonsstuff My point of contention with the idea that baptism is required for salvation is that it seems to determine eternal damnation for those who didn't have physical proximity to physical matter, regardless of their confession of faith or repentance of sin. I'm not advocating for neglecting the practice of baptism, far from it, but what I'm getting at is that being rescued from damnation is fundamentally a gift from God and not a result of our actions. (Ephesians 2:8, For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God) Anybody can claim to be a follower of Christ, get baptized, and fall away. In that case, the fate of one inside the church is also known to God alone, even if they were baptized. A truly repentant man will be compelled with urgency to be baptized, but one would not feel compelled to do so out of genuine faithfulness unless they had already been justified by God, renewed by the Holy Spirit, and cleansed by the blood of Christ. That's how I understand it, but God teaches me new things when I pray for clarity. I only hope to read his word correctly and submit to it in truth.
If baptism is a promise from God, and if we should accept it rather than reject it, and if God can save someone without baptism, that doesn't explain why infant baptism is necessary. Rather, it seems to bolster the Baptist belief that baptism should be a personal decision. I don't believe infants are not mentally capable of acceptance or rejection of God. In fact, it seems to me that predestination negates the need for infant baptism as well. My understanding of the rationale behind infant baptism is that it's necessary to wash away original sin and keep the baby from going to Hell. @Non-Baptists pls explain
Water baptism is not like 'taking your socks off' to Baptists. True baptism is baptism in the Holy Spirit and this can happen before, at, or after water baptism per Acts.
In Manichaeism, good deeds allow one to reach the afterlife. Even the worst godless blasphemer can enter paradise if his good deeds far exceeds his foul deeds. There are three destinations for the deceased. In the Manichean scriptures, the fate of the soul leaving the body is compared to a ship entering a port. The first possible destination is Heaven. Just like a ship full of cargo, the soul that is burdened by it’s good deeds is allowed entry. The second possible destination is reincarnation. Just like a ship half-full, it may or may not be allowed to dock. He is sent back, he is given another chance. The third one is Hell. Those whose foul deeds far exceed their good deeds are repulsed, just like how pirate ships are refused to dock.
You misunderstand the idea of "once saved, always saved" in this video. It's not that a confession of faith means full assurance of salvation even if one walks away, but rather that if one "walks away" from the faith then they never truly had it to begin with.
I have a question unrelated to this subject. What is your opinion on the Carlist from Spain and the Cristeros from Mexico or just people who fought and died for the Faith?
Easy. Faith alone saves, and when someone is saved, they get the Holy Spirit and the Holy Spirit will make them more into his image which makes the saved person love God and do good works. (Ephesians 4:17-24, Colossians 3:7-10, 2 Corinthians 3:17-18). Now, if a person does not change his lifestyle and does not produce good works, then that means they were never saved because they never had the Holy Spirit which would make them do good works, but since their lifestyle didn't change, they were never saved, so only people who are made more holy by the Holy Spirit will make it to heaven.
@@d.rey5743I don't understand. If someone is baptised, but they don't change their lifestyle, you're saying the baptism they received was of no effect?
this is a hard one, but not for salvation itself, rather if it is the symbols or the acts that carries relevance. Now, lets postulate that salvation is within your actions, and is not given. It is a hard axiom, but the only one that permits discussion. In Brazil, we have stories about people, especially indians, being baptized as they are dying, through they own free will, for their newfound faith within the boundaries of death. Now, if they are saved or not is a hard question and I don`t think it belongs to us to decide, but rather, if you were the priest, would you done otherwise? It is a hard question that can be argued either way. Despite the heavy handed argument, baptism itself is no guarantee of salvation. Within some of those of orthodox faith, baptism and confirmation are bunched up as the same ritual at an early age, just enough so you can know somewhat what this thing means. So baptism, for most christian (that follow this rule, in general) is a confirmation rather than a salvation guarantee. But then, faith or acts? I`m inclined to think acts first and foremost. An actless faith is within the realm of imagination, and as such, is nothing more than fantasy. Faith is not fantasy, it is a statement and as such, should be transcribed within your actions. It is not necessary to sacrifice all one believes in the name of faith, but it is paramount that one doesn`t betray it trough one`s actions. Consider that God has the knowledge of everything that happens in your heart. He would not judge you for the despair or helplessness, but rather for the actions you take within your capacity. And He knows exactly what your conditions are. There is no such thing as a free salvation pass. It is a judgement of what could you do and didn't. If a baptism is given within a few moments before death, if it is sincere, it saves. Rather, if you were just baptized as a child, it is your acts within this compromise that matter. But salvation is not an artificial thing, it is organic as it gets, and no ritual guarantee it, but God will does it.
So many problems by simply not defining terms ... when you speak of "works", you seem to mean something different than I mean. I use that term work for the investment of energy, thus like in physics. And faith is to hold to Christ, hold that he is true and his teachings are true. Thus the question can be translated so everyone understands what it is about. Which of these two options is correct? a: One is saved by trusting (in) Christ. b: One is saved by trusting (in) Christ and acting on it. Now, some say action is the fruit of faith/the trust (in) Christ. Now, they say those fruits come automatically and this part the Catholic Church disagrees with to my knowledge. Now again: What do people mean by automatically? Do they mean without the investment of energy? For that seems to go contra all observation. Do they mean without a need to decide for an action before doing it? For a tree gets its fruits with energy investment but without a concious or emotional decision for it. But here too: A christian has to still make decisions for good and against evil on an everyday-basis. In the end the solution as I see it and where I see the simplest unification of all relevant verses is that in the first step you have Christ as Lord ... and it is not that acts will be formed "automatically" from that but the will to do good and to refrain from evil. This will is what can be observed in Christians, for it to bear fruit one needs to invest energy: first mentally or emotional so one makes a decision for good or against evil and then physically so one acts on it. As long as one has the will to serve God, a will that let's one hate evil (sin) and love good, one has saving faith. One needs to invest energy so one does not lose this faith, because then one would betray ones will/the holy spirit. Whether one loses salvation by losing the faith one once had (in quality and not quantity, that means all faith in Christ and all will to honor and love him) may be another question...
I have a question that is not exactly in line with your video but I think it is important nonetheless: There are sayings that events in the Bible have come from other events from other books/legends/people in history BEFORE the Bible was even written/recorded/passed down (you get my drift). I'll list one example for each, not to prove my point, but for you to see what I am getting at and need help understanding. For example, Noah's ark and the flood could be seen in the epic of Gilgamesh, which was written before the Bible. A guy in the epic constructed a boat because one of the god's of his told him to, and there was a huge flood that wiped out all living things. There are other events in the Bible that people, scholars, historians claim have happened in other works from before the bible. They claim the Bible blatantly copied them. Also, they claim that there is no CONCRETE evidence supporting Jesus was a real person. They say that his doings in the Bible stem from the doings of other heroes/legends/people that have just been compiled into one person, Jesus. What do you have to say about this? I am not trying to argue with you. I am an Orthodox Christian who is struggling with his faith, and struggling to believe. The lies, deception, politics in the Church and it's history, and the mystery of the actual events and truth of the Bible are confusing me. I am stuck at a crossroad. I want to be closer to God, I want to be saved, to feel His love, but as I said, I am struggling just like a deer staring into a pair of headlights. If you can, Redeemed Zoomer, or anyone really, please help me.
Ok I went through a period like you where I doubted my faith cuz I heard things like that. However, luckily those "facts" you mention are COMPLETE made-up reddit myths that even any respectable atheist scholar knows isn't true. The ENTIRE historical scholarly community knows Jesus existed. The "Jesus mythicism" which says Jesus was a myth based on other myths is popular on the atheist internet but has been debunked so many time. There are resources for literally ALL those things you mentioned on the youtube channel InspiringPhilosophy, I could not recommend it more highly. God bless you!
“But now apart from the Law the righteousness of God has been manifested, being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets, even the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all those who believe; for there is no distinction; for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, being justified as a gift by His grace through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus; whom God displayed publicly as a propitiation in His blood through faith. This was to demonstrate His righteousness, because in the forbearance of God He passed over the sins previously committed; for the demonstration, I say, of His righteousness at the present time, so that He would be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus. Where then is boasting? It is excluded. By what kind of law? Of works? No, but by a law of faith. For we maintain that a man is justified by faith apart from works of the Law.” Romans 3:21-28 NASB1995
Faith is trusting in Jesus Christ. That His work and righteousness is enough to cover your sins and that you accept Him as your Lord and Savior. Run to Christ and cling to Him. Plead for His blood, His presence, and His Spirit in your life. Don't ever look away from Him again. You are desperately in need for a Savior, as I am, and we all are. Jesus Christ is our Savior.
It's simple. Salvation is by faith, but works are the fruits of our faith. The work doesn't contribute to being saved, but it is evidence.
Amen, ours works are rewards. It has nothing to do with Salvation which is only through Jesus Christ.
God Bless Jack
So how many sins can one commit and still be saved?
@@peterubbels2385 Not something you can quantify. It's a condition of the heart
@@peterubbels2385here’s Martin Luther’s answer to your question:
“If you are a preacher of mercy, do not preach an imaginary but the true mercy. If the mercy is true, you must therefore bear the true, not an imaginary sin. God does not save those who are only imaginary sinners. Be a sinner, and sin boldly, but let your trust in Christ be stronger, and rejoice in Christ who is the victor over sin, death, and the world. We will commit sins while we are here, for this life is not a place where justice resides. We, however, says Peter (2. Peter 3:13), are looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth where justice will reign. It suffices that through God’s glory we have recognized the Lamb who takes away the sin of the world. No sin can separate us from Him, even if we were to kill or commit adultery thousands of times each day. Do you think such an exalted Lamb paid merely a small price with a meager sacrifice for our sins? Pray hard for you are quite a sinner.”
I often hear this, what verses say this?
Short catholic answer: Salvation is by faith alone, but works are the fruit of faith. Ergo: faith that doesn't produce works is dead. Just as a tree that doesn't produce fruit is dead.
Some trees that can't fruit can still pollinate.
Someone who may not believe can rationalize the world in such a way that their atheistic pains turn people TO God. Works without the faith can be fixed almost instantly, if He so desires. Psychedelia and near death experiences are very good at remediating the faith part, for starters, and we can choose to embrace one entire half of those possibilities!
WORKS SALVATION! 💀
I wish this was Roman Catholic.
@@ethanstrunk7698 Real.
@@Kaleki935 not to be rude, but the whole analogy is that "being a tree" is someone who has faith, this is evidenced by someone not doing good works being equivocated to someone who doesnt produce fruits. so someone who does good works but does not have faith is more like a shrub, though this analogy is flawed because this implies you cant become a tree, or believer. You would have to find something that isn't a tree, but can become a tree and also produces fruit. Good luck.
Faith is dead without works. Faith without works is like a flower that never gets watered. It might survive for a time but it’ll eventually wilt away.
What's the works? Salvation isn't by works. No amount of works will take you to heaven
Faith without works is dead but salvation is not through works. True faith produces good works, works does not produce faith.
@@raphaelfeneje486the water
Faith is dead without works because works are the proof of faith.
We are saved by Grace, by our Faith in the Blood of Jesus.
I, as an evangelical, wory for all of the victims of the modern gospel. The one that says “you have a God shaped hole in your heart so just say these worlds and God will fix your life, fix your marriage, save you and change you”
It’s lacking in the essence of the gospel and it centered on the worldly problems, not the problems of the heart and of eternal salvation.
Are you saying those who say salvation is through faith and works are victims of the modern Gospel? Is that actually what you're trying to say?
@@tobiasbourne9073 I’m saying that those who believe that simply saying a prayer if accepting Jesus into your heart aren’t saved if they don’t repent. If no one tells them about the law then they won’t know what they did wrong and won’t know what to repent from.
@@ChunCat How do you make your faith manifest? By praying, and what is prayer? A work
@@tobiasbourne9073Prayer is a manifestation of faith
@@sebastiansantander384 So it becomes a work
Faith, and as CHRIST said, "Go, and sin no more..."
Amen 🙏🏼
And it’s by the Holy Spirit’s mercy that we are able to go and sin no more.
@@chillmemes5865 Amen
But Christ also said 'by their fruits you shall know them. ' The fruits are the works that faith will lead you to.
This is really important because Christ also said that 'not all who say to me 'Lord, Lord,' will enter heaven.' How will you know you are not one of them? By the fruits of your faith.
One may come before the other, but both are very important.
@@thefunkslamdunk9224 But Jesus uses the word fruit for a reason. A good plant produces good fruit (a true Christian produces good fruit) and a bad plant produces bad fruit or no fruit at all (fake Christians or non-believers do not produce good works). The fruit is a product a good seed, the faith being the seed and the works being the fruit.
As my dad (a southern Baptist pastor) would say, “we don’t have a works based salvation we have a salvation that works.” Basically like someone else said here in the comments our works don’t save us however they are the evidence of our salvation.
“You will know them by their fruits. Grapes are not gathered from thorn bushes nor figs from thistles, are they? So every good tree bears good fruit, but the bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot produce bad fruit, nor can a bad tree produce good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. So then, you will know them by their fruits.”
Matthew 7:16-20
Good point but we can’t lose our salvation which rlly means we don’t know if someone is saved or not
know them by their fruits is referring to false teachers
@@succathog5906 oh I agree 100% on that. In a spiritual context/sense we are called/commanded to be disciples who teach what Jesus & God have commanded so while some of us might not be called to be pastors or ministers we are called to disciples who make disciples so I do believe “knowing them by their fruits” does refer to non-pastors & ministers based of what the Great Commission says
@@alexdriskell amen
@@ongoing-disguise6953we can't lose it but we can renounce it (called apostasy).
So, no one can take it from us but we can give it up
“Faith without works is like a screen door on a submarine.”
-James, probably
and an xbox 360 controller
Oh no
Then why did Jesus die and shed His blood for you?
@@herbertgray7080You are correct we don’t do good works to be saved we do it only to be an example of God’s love to others. Salvation is by faith alone
@@herbertgray7080To do the only perfect reparation for our sins. His Sacrifice merits our salvation and gives reparation for the dishonor we did to God by sinning, while also freeing (redeeming) us from sin. Also by taking our nature He builds a bridge between the human and the Divine so that we can partake on His Divinity. And by suffering the effects of our sins He makes it so that we can attain the glory of His perfection.
This does not excuse us from the obligation of Loving God above all things and our neighbor as ourselves, but cleans us from the sin of not following these Commandents perfectly. Faith without good works is dead because good works are Love and Love makes all virtues to be alive. Without Love all virtues, including faith, are impotent to do anything at all.
Thank you for this video. You have a new subscriber. You present the issue of faith and works with great clarity.
Salvation is by grace through faith, not of works that anyone should boast! Good works is the fruit of being saved.
P.s. Thanks for the correction @affe100 👍
Amen
He will repay everyone according to his works: eternal life to those who seek glory, honour, and immortality through perseverance in good works, but wrath … to those who … obey wickedness.” Paul Romans 2
what does work mean to you? if you have faith, it would show in your works, in the way you live.... as the fruits of your faith ..... If you have no fruits/no works.... you have false faith
@christsavesreadromans1096 @1:50 - you need to watch the video at least, instead of parrot the same old refuted argument just to be a Judaizer
@christsavesreadromans1096
God tells us to rightly divide scripture in 2Tim2:15.
James 2:24
“Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only.”
James is talking about Faith PLUS works are needed referring to the Jews in Tribulation in the last days and NOT referring to the "Church"
James 1:1(Proves he is addressing the 12 Tribes of Israel)
1James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, to the twelve tribes which are scattered abroad, greeting.
James5:3(timeline shows the last days tribulation)
3“Your gold and silver is cankered; and the rust of them shall be a witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire. Ye have heaped treasure together for the LAST DAYS.”
keep the commandments PLUS faith in Jesus Christ in tribulation)
👇
Revelation 14:12
12“Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.”
More Proof in Revelation 7:5-8(Listing all the 12 Tribes of Israel)
👇
5 Of the tribe of Juda were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Reuben were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Gad were sealed twelve thousand.
6 Of the tribe of Aser were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Nepthalim were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Manasses were sealed twelve thousand.
7 Of the tribe of Simeon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Levi were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Issachar were sealed twelve thousand.
8 Of the tribe of Zabulon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Joseph were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Benjamin were sealed twelve thousand.
Your whole understanding of James are not referring to Church but the Jews. The Bride of Christ will not be going through Tribulation
Faith without works is dead.
“Not all who say ‘Lord, Lord’ shall be saved”
That is completely consist with the message of the video if you watched it and still salvation is by faith alone.
@@pedroguimaraes6094he didn’t watch it
@@pedroguimaraes6094Good works != works of the Law
@@p1nkfreud Those who have knowledge of the Gospel and choose to willfully sin constantly were not only never saved. They are not even Christian.
True faith leads to Good works. Many people including yourself are championing Works over faith. Stop it bro. That is legit sending people to hell.
There's a reason Christianity stands above all other religions and are completely different from all religions across the world. We are truly saved by the grace and Glory of God not of our works. Unlike every religion that enforces you to do certain things in order to attain Heaven, Nirvana, Genna etc. We can't live perfect lives or try to. It's all the grace of God
Our faith leads to those Good works. The prime example of the thief on the cross whos lived a life of complete crime and murder yet was forgiven on the cross. bro you cannot make this up. *you're not only trusting in your works but yourself.* "i think believing in Jesus is not enough" cannot make that up man please repent and put you're entire faith in Jesus. That'll produce good works. Not because we have to but because we want to for the love of Jesus.
@@xHollow. My friend, we will all be judged by our own yardstick, no? Perhaps it is better then to say, that none who willfully sin are saved. After being baptized and accepting Christ as my savior, I admit I have willfully sinned. I am not alone in this, however. I like to think that because I repent regularly, and because I do TRY to stop sinning in earnest, I am still saved
Hey Zoomer, I am Catholic. I really like your videos. I would say that the things you said about baptism in this video is very similar to the Catholic Doctrines on Baptism. I did watch your previous video on baptism. I never really new any other tradition other than Catholicism and Baptist, because most of my friends are Baptist. It was nice to hear your views on this. I was wondering by your view on baptism becoming effective by faith would a baby who dies but is baptized be "saved". I could be misunderstanding you here.
Baptists and Catholics stand at opposite ends in terms of their traditions. 😄
If the Presbyterian/Reformed perspectives surprised you, delving into Lutheranism might pique your interest. Lutherans affirm the perpetual virginity of Mary, Baptismal regeneration, the concept of original sin, infant baptism, private confessions with a pastor, and the real physical presence of the Lord in the Eucharist. Moreover, Lutherans consider the history of the past 2000 years as their own, attributing the foundation of their church to Jesus in the first century rather than to Luther in the 16th century.
A baby cannot sin so they wouldn’t even need to be saved as they have no need to be punished. Thus all babies go to Heaven, baptized or otherwise
@@luke-i7yThat's heresy. Every human being enters the world in a state of original sin, which is a privation of sanctifying grace, the life of the soul that enables it to live and exist in the upper realms in the presence of God. If a baby dies without receiving baptism, they cannot enter heaven upon death. They go to a lower realm referred to in scripture as paradise or Abraham's Bossom. Why do you think the enemy is so eager to get women to murder their children in the womb? His aim is to drag human beings into eternal misery and ruin alongside him and the rest of his fallen angels, so why would he encourage abortion and human sacrifice if it meant those babies go straight to heaven?
@@lukebrasting5108 Yes but if the baby did not have a any knowledge of sin, there is no reason to think God would send him to hell. Our God is just.
@@lukebrasting5108 it still causing those people to sin
Why wouldn't the devil encourage sin
I like ❤ how you present the truth of salvation by faith.
Ephesians 2:8-9 NKJ
For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast.
Having been baptized as a baby and not getting great teaching thereafter till 33, I was relieved I was baptised again as I learned more about the Bible.
Keep going to Ephesians 2:10
@christsavesreadromans1096
See James 2:19:
19 You say you have faith, for you believe that there is one God.[f] Good for you! Even the demons believe this, and they tremble in terror. 20 How foolish! Can’t you see that faith without good deeds is useless?
21 Don’t you remember that our ancestor Abraham was shown to be right with God by his actions when he offered his son Isaac on the altar? 22 You see, his faith and his actions worked together. His actions made his faith complete. 23 And so it happened just as the Scriptures say: “Abraham believed God, and God counted him as righteous because of his faith.”[g] He was even called the friend of God.[h] 2
Reading more of James, there are more examples of Works. It isn't works as in rituals or traditions but living out faith in our lives by Loving others and entrusting God with our lives entirely.
What works is he addressing,
Paul addresses the same situation in Roman’s 3:27 it explains what works, and them boasting.
As a fellow presbyterian from Brazil, is very interesting to watch your videos and to hear more about my congregation in another language
I have to watch a health and safety thing for college I just muted and sped up. your content is better for my health than the college telling me to explore my sexuality.
I'll pray for your and everyone else stuck in the institutions.
@@kriegjaeger just trying to get my engineering degree join some Christians college groups and get out
Thank you for your video! I’m Catholic so hold to a different understanding of faith and works, but it’s good to hear an alternative viewpoint from a different faith tradition, so I can better understand alternative views.
Im a baptist and love your videos ive learned so much about our brothers and sisters in the different denominations and I hope you keep doing what your doing! Personally ive always held the sacraments in a higher regard because my family actually went to a Lutheran church until I was around 8 years old and I will say in my church we think the sacraments are very important and especially baptism, so I just wanted to say that because there are some baptist churches that don't compromise on baptism and we don't just see it as a work but as an outward expression to God, and personally I believe God uses baptism to bring us into new life and that the only part up to us is to make the conscience decision to turn back to God. Again thats just my personal view on that but again love your videos man 🙏🏾 keep it up
A marriage analogy in regard to non-baptism and salvation could be... a man who claims to be married but he has never worn his wedding ring and refuses to do so.
Salvation does not proceed from good works, but good works do proceed from Salvation
@christsavesreadromans1096 Of course. The words of Scripture: "What use is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but he has no works? Can that faith save him?" True saving faith will bear the fruit of good works. That's why James wrote that the true believer is "justified" by works. We may be declared righteous before God by faith alone, but it is through works that we testify to the genuineness of that faith.
@christsavesreadromans1096 if you don't care you don't have faith
@christsavesreadromans1096 Because if they did not do good works they did not have faith in Christ (He said that the ones who believe in Him are the ones who follow is commandments). BUT good works are not was justify us to God and thus is not what SAVES us. It is very simple to understand and it is clearly what is in the Bible.
@christsavesreadromans1096 Yeah and there is nothing in the video that disagrees with that statement but salvation continues to be by faith alone because good works are a direct result of true faith.
@christsavesreadromans1096 If they have true faith they will choose to produce fruit that is what you are falling to understand. They will do that because the Holy Spirit would have regenerated their hearts and would have started the process of sanctification and only those touched by the Holy Ghost are the ones that have faith. So if you see someone claiming to be a Christian and they don't act like one it is a sign that they don't actually have faith. That what clarifies and integrates what Pauls said regarding "salvation by faith and not by works", what Jesus said regarding" that we would know them (the elect) by their fruits", and also what James said about "works being a sign of salvation". But the main point of "salvation by faith alone" is that is not our works that justify us to God (God does not owe us salvation and Isaiah is very clear that if we depend on our works we are lost) it is faith in His Son that does. We say that salvation is by faith alone because salvation is because of Jesus alone. That is the Gospel and that is the message of the Bible.
"""a living, creative, active and powerful thing, this faith. Faith cannot help doing good works constantly. It doesn't stop to ask if good works ought to be done, but before anyone asks, it already has done them and continues to do them without ceasing. Anyone who does not do good works in this manner is an unbeliever… Thus, it is just as impossible to separate faith and works as it is to separate heat and light from fire!"""
Dr. Martin Luther (1522)
I am not a presbyterian but these views are very interesting and uplifting. Thanks for the videos, God bless you.
@@SomeGuy-rn9cg Oh well, I'm not sure of my specific denomination. I know im a Protestant and I believe in the 5 solas (just like the rest of my church) but im not sure what exact denomination I belong to, Presbyterianism is starting to resonate with me too.May God guide you in your search for a good church, brother!
@@SomeGuy-rn9cg go to a baptist church
On baptism. The tradition of water baptism, dunking someone in water, is a work and it doesn't save. It is simply a symbolic act to publicly declare our faith and to represent both Jesus's resurrection and us being baptized by the Holy Spirit. Baptism of the Holy Spirit is God washing away the guilt of our sin by using the blood of Christ. That is not the same thing as water baptism. Water baptism is to baptism of the Holy Spirit what a wedding is to a marriage. Weddings are a tradition to symbolically represent the binding of a man and woman, but the wedding isn't the marriage itself. Similarly, water baptism seeks to symbolically represent baptism of the Holy Spirit, but it isn't baptism by the Holy Spirit itself.
True, but Christ commanded that both must occur for anyone to enter the kingdom. I think it can lead people astray to contemplate separating them in this matter, as both are necessary for salvation.
@@andreichira7518 When Jesus said that in order to enter the Kingdom of Heaven we have to be born of water and spirit, there are two main competing views of what this means and neither of them think this refers to the tradition of water baptism.
The first is that "born of water" refers to physical birth while "born of spirit" refers to being spiritually born again, IE being saved. The second is that "born of water" refers to spiritual cleansing (which is one of the things water baptism symbolically represents) while "born of spirit" means essentially the very same thing just stated a different way.
@@LawlessNate Well you're neglecting the third view, which is the view that being born of water is by immersion, the same way St. John the Forerunner baptized in the Jordan and the method by which he baptized Jesus. The first view could not possibly be correct because Jesus tells Nicodemus that one must be born of water and the Holy Spirit in response to Nicodemus asking how a man could possibly be born again.
@@andreichira7518 Typically even those who believe that the tradition of water baptism is required for salvation often don't use this verse to try and support that view, not that there aren't those who try to do so. Also, I just stated two major views; I never said that both were legitimate. I myself hold to the second view.
Keep in mind that if you're defining going out and performing a specific tradition as not being a work then you're opening the door to introduce works based theology because all of those physical actions are then somehow not works. The Bible quite often will take a word or concept and use it to mean different things in different contexts. Sometimes death means biological death whereas other times it manes spiritual death IE separation from God. Similarly, the Bible uses Baptism to refer both to the tradition of water dunking and also to the Holy Spirit working in us for our salvation. Context is necessary to determine what the Bible means when the Bible refers to baptism.
@@andreichira7518 Let me put it this way. Baptism of the Holy Spirit is salvation itself; those are two different ways to describe the very same thing. It's not that baptism (of the Holy Spirit) is necessary for salvation or comes after salvation, that IS salvation. By conflating water baptism with baptism of the Holy Spirit you'd be essentially suggesting that we participate and even cause our own salvation be performing this tradition.
RC and Protestants forgot the context in witch Sola Fide was formulated, Sola Fide is NOT a rejection of works, but it is the affirmation that good works proceed from a true believer as a evidence of his faith in the Lord Jesus - But without good works Faith is dead, thus, salvation is lost - Some RC than say "so this is just a semantic issue, you do believe in the necessity of Good works" yes, but here is the catch, what kind of works? the doctrine of Sola Fide is a rejection of what RC told us what those good works are, not a spontaneous works of faith, but a prescription, like pilgrimage, peanance, some RC sacraments, the rosary, indulgences and etc. If you do not adhere to this prescription of works, you are entirely lost
Conclusion: Sola Fide is a rejection of RC dogmas and prescriptions of works, not the necessity of works in the Christian life.
The problem is the interpretation of Works that represent accretions, rituals and traditions that are empty and meaningless. James is full of explanation and examples of what works are. It's not contradicting Paul when one reads to understand than to quote mine.
James 2:19:
19 You say you have faith, for you believe that there is one God.[f] Good for you! Even the demons believe this, and they tremble in terror. 20 How foolish! Can’t you see that faith without good deeds is useless?
21 Don’t you remember that our ancestor Abraham was shown to be right with God by his actions when he offered his son Isaac on the altar? 22 You see, his faith and his actions worked together. His actions made his faith complete. 23 And so it happened just as the Scriptures say: “Abraham believed God, and God counted him as righteous because of his faith.”[g] He was even called the friend of God.[h]
Abraham didn't have the law, the only thing he had was sacrifice on an Altar. But God didn't call him friend because he conducted Altar sacrifices, he called him a friend for his Faith which was demonstrated by offering his Son. His sole heir whom God had promised to multiple his descendants through after decades of waiting.
Which would be fine if not for the fact that Sola fide has been twisted beyond comprehension in the ensuing centuries. It's no longer a rejection of the specific prescriptions of the Roman Catholics. It's has been twisted to mean nothing at all (or in the Calvinist heresy, that there is nothing you _could_ do because your salvation was predestined).
@@andreichira7518 Actually, although i am not a calvinist, you are strawmanning Calvinism, i sense you are a Shamounite that hate calvinists by a misunderstand of what they really believe in, just as protestants do with RC.
Calvinists agree with the necessity of good works just like i said, but they believe that only the elect will actually perform those works and persevere in the Faith to the end. (yeah, i don't buy it, but it is not a rejection of works)
Just to clarify, i do believe that what save is faith alone, works can't save you nor can earn you merity, but, if you do not have works you are just deceiving yourself, you are a church goer and not a Christian.
Find it interesting how Protestants separate salvation and sanctification. If I’m already saved then I don’t need to be sanctified. If I’m not sanctified then I can’t enter heaven. We have to respond to his grace, so what we Catholics believe is ultimately our works are actually God’s because he doesn’t just want to be part of our lives, he wants to be our lives.
The question is what you mean by works;
James 2:19:
19 You say you have faith, for you believe that there is one God.[f] Good for you! Even the demons believe this, and they tremble in terror. 20 How foolish! Can’t you see that faith without good deeds is useless?
21 Don’t you remember that our ancestor Abraham was shown to be right with God by his actions when he offered his son Isaac on the altar? 22 You see, his faith and his actions worked together. His actions made his faith complete. 23 And so it happened just as the Scriptures say: “Abraham believed God, and God counted him as righteous because of his faith.”[g] He was even called the friend of God.[h] 2
The Epistle of James describes works and they are not ritual or tradition, but living out the Lord's commands to Love the Lord God with all of your heart, spirit, mind and body and to love your neighbor as you love yourself.
Many see "works" and insert their own idea rather than read and understand God's definition from scripture itself.
The word Salvation is often used to just describe the grounds on which God lets us into heaven (justification) but it can also very well refer to sanctification and glorification, both of which are the inevitable results of justification. This is why people like to say "I have been saved, I'm being saved, and I will be saved"--that is, I have been saved from condemnation through faith, I am being saved from the sinful desires of my flesh through the Spirit, and I one day I will be saved from the pains of this age through the victory of the Lord and the resurrection of my body.
I just bought a Bible and I'm planning to read it front to back. I'm about to start Genesis 33.
My advise to you is if it is your first reading the Bible you should start with the Gospel and then read the New Testament first or at least Paul letters. You also don't need to read all four gospels, i would probably read Mark (since is shorter) and John (since it is the "deepest and the most different one). Then you can read the Old Testament and then the rest of the New Testament. The books of wisdom (Salms, Proverbs etc) can be read whenever your want.
If you dont want to do that i would at least alternate between one chapter of the OT and one of the NT. Rs
My personal advice you didn't ask for?
If you get "bored" and start missing lines, just bookmark it and come back! Either switch to a separate book, or take a break but burnout will happen so it's best to have a plan for it.
We are SAVED by Faith alone, but as Christians, we need to get baptized, turn from sin, do good works, and preach the Gospel. None of those things alone will allow you salvation, but if you have Faith, you will do these things, as Jesus Christ our Lord commands us.
Great explanation. I recently had a bit of an existential crisis studying what the scripture and church history really taught about justification. I ultimately came to the conclusion that the Catholics were wrong about this. They had alternative explanations for Paul's letters, but I found rest in the gospels. Jesus clearly demonstrated that He offers salvation freely to anyone who approaches God through Him in faith.
You should do a video explaining why Baptism has become something other than what it is depicted as being in Scripture.
In Scripture we see only credobaptism given to adults, and although some verses say it is necessary for salvation, other verses indicate that it is a work more akin to "professing Jesus Christ" or joining the body of believers.
How did it become something given to infants?
How did it become something more than an expression of faith?
How is it considered "not a work" when it is an act of individual will?
These are questions that ought to be answered.
But they have been answered and refuted centuries ago. Maybe if people weren't so caught up in their false man-made traditions and clingig to and repping their little denominational gang/tribe there wouldn't be so many divisions and rampant doctrinal chaos among so-called Christians.
@@lukebrasting5108 pedobaptism is apparently a man-made tradition. Is that what you're saying?
The Bible does not give an example of pedobaptism to follow, which means it comes from a tradition rather than from Scripture. This is the sort of thing that could use explaining - and not smug disregard.
I love what you're doing man. Soli deo gloria
Thank you for presenting the gospel so nicely.
Bro Fr. Mike uploaded about this like 2 days ago, it's certainly very interisting to hear on the subject from another perspective
Fr Mike’s video was so good. Very clear as it can be a confusing subject. I recommend any Sola Fide Protestants to watch it because you will learn what we Catholics actually believe.
It depends entirely on who you believe is doing the work. If you believe God is the one doing the work, then salvation is ABSOLUTELY by works; and if you believe God is the one baptizing you into his body the church, then Baptism saves you. You are saved not by your faith in God alone; but by your faith in him and his work he is actively doing in you. Belief in God alone is not enough for salvation; by that logic even Satan would be saved.
I'm not fond of pointing fingers at different groups and saying who is and isn't saved, but this has raised a valid question in my mind about whether some Baptist groups can be considered christians. If the best litmus test we have for christian legitimacy is the Nicene Creed, then they're jumping through some serious hoops when they say they believe in "One Baptism FOR THE REMISSION OF SINS". At the minimum you have to believe it to mean something totally different from what the people who wrote the creed believed.
For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.
~ James 2:26
Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven. Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!
~ Matthew 7:21-24
The problem is people have their own idea what "Works" are. Reading the context in James we get examples such as;
James 2:19:
19 You say you have faith, for you believe that there is one God.[f] Good for you! Even the demons believe this, and they tremble in terror. 20 How foolish! Can’t you see that faith without good deeds is useless?
21 Don’t you remember that our ancestor Abraham was shown to be right with God by his actions when he offered his son Isaac on the altar? 22 You see, his faith and his actions worked together. His actions made his faith complete. 23 And so it happened just as the Scriptures say: “Abraham believed God, and God counted him as righteous because of his faith.”[g] He was even called the friend of God.[h] 2
@@kriegjaeger we’re saved by grace through faith and our actions, good or bad, will be revealed to determine whether or not we have genuine saving faith.
@@LilBaws
My understanding;
Our intentions will be known (and judged) and our works will be judged to see if they stood the test of time. Some are of straw, some are of gold.
I cannot presume to know what work is of what quality and feel it could be dangerous to opine as no examples are given.
@@kriegjaeger There is no work that you do to gain salvation. Genuine-saving faith produces good works naturally. This is why the sacraments of the Catholic Church are all useless.. they think they can just do the sacraments and be saved that way.
@@LilBaws
I agree!
Our works is effectively behaving as we aught to. Doing what we know is right now that the spirit resides in and guides us.
We are to represent Christ in the world.
I agree. Good works are not only to show that we are Christians (as the city on the hill/lamp passage, which btw isn't an evangelical verse as many believe it is) but also to further the kingdom of God, to glorify God, and to make the image of Christ beautiful, also the acts and good works may decide whether we are a good Christian or not. (P.S. yes I am a Baptist and believe it is a public testament of our salvation rather than being a factor in saving us, however I do believe it is crucial that a Christian is Baptized. I believe rejecting to be Baptized is a form of being ashamed of Christ, which as Christ says He will be ashamed of us in front of our Father. I'm glad there are at least a few things we can agree on. Also did you make this in response to my last comment, because this was a point I explicitly made)
Amen❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉😊😊😊
Me debating a Catholic: SOLA FIDE SOLA FIDE SOLA FIDE
Sadly, only one word is needed these days: "Francis"
@@perilousrange lol
@christsavesreadromans1096 did Ou even watch the video
@@Nguyenzander It's not even intended as a troll. Francis is a major problem for a lot of based believers.
@christsavesreadromans1096 maybe you should watch it, you don’t know for sure. But even if you are not a person who completely disregards the other side of the argument while saying it is wrong even without knowing their point, I still have a refutation of the passage in James. James the brother of Jesus says that you are justified by faith and works. But what does “justify” even mean? Justification has a range of meanings. One definition means to be declared righteous in front of God, while another means to be declared righteous in front of men. James is talking about this second definition: one who has faith but doesn’t have works is seen by man as a hypocrite, while one who has faith and works shows men that they truly have faith.
In my life I done good works, but wasn’t saved. I grew up in the church but never trusted Christ back then. That’s why I personally believe sola fide. Now my life has changed however. Sins I thought I would never stop, I stopped. Even my friends noticed.
S tier video, very glad you uploaded it. Praise be to God
ive been researching this topic for whole day and suddenly this popped up in my subscriptions, thanks! currently halfway and this has cleared a lot of things, thanks again
Faith is trust. It’s not having works to prove to God your worthy. It’s time to place your faith alone in Jesus Christ and not complicated theology that backloads works into the gospel.
@@professora1213 Amen!
I struggle to believe that the church is required to be saved. I have met a man who found the lord then went and lived alone in the woods for 3 years and grew his relationship with the lord.
Indoctrination is thick in the world today and is present everywhere including church
I thought the church was a place of communion and a place to exchange vows, praise the lord, find strength and support to try and be someone who bears fruit worth presenting to the world
I am still going to try out some if not all of my local churches and see how it goes, it is nice to be around like minded people sometimes
The church is not strictly a building but fellowshipping in the family of Christ. There is a saying that wherever Christians plant a knee in prayer together, there is a church.
If your local institutional congregations are comprised by the world, start a home church. Just a study and fellowship group.
Fellowship is important but not necessary. I don’t attend church but I am a devout believer. My political opinions vary drastically from most “church people” who I view as bigots and people Christ would be ashamed to represent, so I don’t seek to commune with “church folks”
@@p1nkfreud Brother, fellowship absolutely is necessary in that it is a vital part of the Christian life. God doesn't just redeem individuals, he redeems a "chosen family, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession." Don't allow your political opinions to separate you from the body of Christ. If you have truly repented and believed in Jesus, being baptized in his name, then you are part of God's kingdom, and the kingdom of heaven is a kingdom at war. Don't neglect your fellow soldiers in the battle for the sake of political opinions. Please find a local church gathering of people who love the Lord and their neighbor, with ministers who preach the word of the gospel faithfully. It is God's good will for you to be united with your brothers and sisters in Christ.
@@p1nkfreudwhat do you mean by that? Bigots in the sensr of viewing certain sexual ethics as immoral?
@@p1nkfreud
Hebrews 10:24 Let us think of ways to motivate one another to acts of love and good works. 25 And let us not neglect our meeting together, as some people do, but encourage one another, especially now that the day of his return is drawing near.
26 Dear friends, if we deliberately continue sinning after we have received knowledge of the truth, there is no longer any sacrifice that will cover these sins.
Also do not carry hate in your heart for your brothers in Christ or you will have murdered them in your heart.
James 4:11
11 Don’t speak evil against each other, dear brothers and sisters.[d] If you criticize and judge each other, then you are criticizing and judging God’s law. But your job is to obey the law, not to judge whether it applies to you. 12 God alone, who gave the law, is the Judge. He alone has the power to save or to destroy. So what right do you have to judge your neighbor?
James 5:9
Don’t grumble about each other, brothers and sisters, or you will be judged. For look-the Judge is standing at the door!
I'll pray they are accepting and patient for you as I pray you are of them.
Got a quarter of the way through this, and had to go listen to shufu no michi for the 5th day in a row.
I'm loving your channel and it's helped me loads in learning about different theologys in Christianity. I'm a pretty new Christian, baptised baptist, leaning towards Catholisism. It seems to me that the chief thing that saves is love for God, which requires faith and is evidenced in works. But loving God is something you do, ergo, a 'work'. Maybe I'm missing something, but a work to me is something you do, or is done. If so, it seems that you must have more than faith alone, faith with nothing else, not even love. If you're justifying the phrase by changing the meaning of the word work, then I think most people would actually agree with how you're saved. At the very least, is it something to hate one another for and cause so much discord in what is supposed to be one unified body in Christ? I pray that everyone can come together with one mind and spirit to give glory to God. I know this world needs it.
14:15 that begs the question: is the church visible or not? are we our own church in spirit or is the church a physical location?
Yea I believe the big difference between Protestants and Catholics on this is a difference in how we view justification. Protestants and Catholics are on the same page when it comes to initial justification. Where we differ is Protestants view it as a one time event and then you cannot loose that salvation. Catholics on the other hand view justification as a process. Similar to his marriage analogy, once you are married you need to grow together in love. If you cheat on your spouse, abuse or stop loving then you have abandoned them (committed mortal sin) and must be reconciled before continuing the marriage. Non of the works after in themselves save you, but they increase your justification and without them you will die like the plant.
faith = salvation + good work
EXACTLY
Amen
If someone is saved they will do good works, so you can't separete them as you did.
@@GhostVII Amen,
(GRACE means UNMERITED FREE GIFT. NO human effort or works can be involved in receiving or keeping salvation; there is Nothing a person can do to qualify for or earn any part of salvation.) Romans 11:6 (KJV), “And if by grace, then is it no more of works: otherwise grace is no more grace....” (Trusting on ANY human effort or works means that person is not under grace, but is attempting to qualify for salvation by the law/commandment keeping/human effort, and is therefore NOT saved)Ephesians 2:8-9 (KJV) - “For by GRACE are ye saved through faith; and that NOT of
Water Baptism cannot be part of HOW a person is saved / born-again.
1 Corinthians 1:17 (KJV) - “For Christ sent me NOT to BAPTIZE, but to preach the gospel; not with wisdom of words, lest the cross of Christ should be made of NO EFFECT.”
God Bless
@christsavesreadromans1096
God tells us to rightly divide scripture in 2Tim2:15.
James 2:24
“Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only.”
James is talking about Faith PLUS works are needed referring to the Jews in Tribulation in the last days and NOT referring to the "Church"
James 1:1(Proves he is addressing the 12 Tribes of Israel)
1James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, to the twelve tribes which are scattered abroad, greeting.
James5:3(timeline shows the last days tribulation)
3“Your gold and silver is cankered; and the rust of them shall be a witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire. Ye have heaped treasure together for the LAST DAYS.”
keep the commandments PLUS faith in Jesus Christ in tribulation)
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Revelation 14:12
12“Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.”
More Proof in Revelation 7:5-8(Listing all the 12 Tribes of Israel)
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5 Of the tribe of Juda were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Reuben were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Gad were sealed twelve thousand.
6 Of the tribe of Aser were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Nepthalim were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Manasses were sealed twelve thousand.
7 Of the tribe of Simeon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Levi were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Issachar were sealed twelve thousand.
8 Of the tribe of Zabulon were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Joseph were sealed twelve thousand. Of the tribe of Benjamin were sealed twelve thousand.
Your whole understanding of James are not referring to Church but the Jews. The Bride of Christ will not be going through Tribulation
@@Melanie_44 Ephesians 2:8-9 and Romans 3:27-28 says faith = salvation. Ephesians 4:17-24, Colossians 3:7-10, John 15:1-6 and 2 Corinthians 3:17-18 says that a saved person WILL produce works
If you have the choice to either do good or evil your salvation is dependent on works.
Zoomer can you please make a video about the modern Shabbat and Sunday worship?
Thank you for providing good Protestant apologetic. I am tired of hearing terrible apologetics by TH-cam Catholics.
It’s wild that you’re so close on so many things
✔ Faith = Works + Salvation.
(❌ Faith + Works = Salvation)
Key factor works.😂 You need works to be saved according to this video. The truth is salvation is a free gift of God you did not earn. (YOU DID NOT EARN)
@@professora1213 You are correct. Did you listen to the entire video? He concludes that salvation is a free gift from God, that you can NOT earn!
What is the music that plays in the opening of your KingdomCraft videos?
stuff I wrote
That perseverance of the saints view is having your cake and eating it too 😂 all love though
Something just occurred to me. When I hear Catholic priests discussing common problems they encounter in the confessional (without going into specifics for obvious reasons), one of the problems they report is scrupulosity, or the obsessive over-confessing of things that may not even be that serious, which usually happens because the penitent isn't certain that their confession and penance is truly sufficient. The deeper underlying problem here is a nagging doubt in the mercy of God. Martin Luther rather famously suffered this, and it led him to his reformation breakthrough. Catholic priests usually chalk it up to a personal flaw, but I wonder if it might not be an outflow from a more systemic flaw. Maybe not with the Church or the Sacrament as the Church absolutely teaches divine mercy and forgiveness of sins, but with catechesis about these things.
Love your videos
"Every tree that does not bear good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire." - Matthew 7, 19
"Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father in heaven." - Matthew 7,21
Interesting, because ive always gone to non-denominational churches and babtist but it never sat right with me that "once saved always saved". So i dont believe in that because it would seem odd to just be complacent. So what would i be considered if i don't believe in once saved always saved but i am more in line with non-denominational churches?
It's a theological difference but not detrimental to the faith. When people say once saved always saved they mean that if someone has faith they will continue to have faith always and never fall away. The people that call themselves Christian at one point and then fall away were never Christian's at all. That's my view as of now but I'm exploring the concept because maybe it's wrong and you can fall away. Keep striving to learn more!
@@wyattc4644 What you just described is the perseverance of the saints. "Once saved, always saved" is the idea that you can fall away from the faith and die apart from Christ and yet still get into heaven on the grounds that you used to have faith.
To put it simply:
Faith without works ≠ salvation
Faith + works ≠ salvation
Faith = salvation + works
I like the marriage analogy.
Where do you get your music from?
13:58 punchappy4 asking the hard hitting questions 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Thank you so much 🤣 I choose to believe he asked because genuinely thinks Zoomer is in charge of it
I am Catholic so:
In order for us to have a saving faith it must have works. If we don’t have works then we’ll be cut off ( and we’ll be like the goats on the left of Jesus.
No works = no faith. Good works + no faith = Heresy of Pelagianism.
The equation must be: I have faith and have been saved by baptism + because of this I must work = Final Salvation (I have lived out a life like that of Christ’s)
If I’m missing works then my faith is empty and dead. Faith is a double sided coin.
Because I have been saved I should not sin, and I should work and live out my faith.
No shot for the finished product?
7:19 so how would this apply to Sodom and Gomorrah? Would god be mad because of a betrayal to his servants (angels)
13:56 Hm, so are you saying someone who is a professing muslim may, under a certain circumstance, go to heaven? Or, if someone who never bothered with religion, or someone who is agnostic may go to heaven? Pretty sure the answer is a definite 'no'?
VIDEO SUGGESTION
I would love to see a video of how you interpret genesis 1, I know u believe on evolution but how do you reconcile that with the genesis creation account
7:15
Idolatry isn't the only sin that jeopardizes our relationship with God. Some sins lead to death and others don't (1 Jonh 5:17), and grave sins like murder and hatred, sexual sins, etc do destroy our relationship with God, for they are direct violations of the Ten Commandents. Some sins are explicitly said to destroy any relationship with God (1 Corinthians 6:9). So there are sins that destroy our friendship with God and there are sins that do not destroy this relationship.
8:30
Precisely, baptism is something God does to us, not something we do for God
9:43
We catholics have the idea of baptism of desire, in which those who truly wanted to be baptized and had a commitement to that are treated by God as if in fact they had been baptized in case they die before baptism. A clear example of that would be catechumens being martyred, they had a commitment to be baptized, so God won't deny his grace to them over a technicallity. Sidenote: It's funny how the name baptists is used by those who have a lower view of baptism lmao
14:06
We catholics have the idea of invincible ignorance. It means that those who, not by their own fault, don't have faith, are saved. The most clear example would be aboriginal australians before we even knew Australia was a thing. But the thing is we can’t assume all of them are saved, since if the path to salvation is narrow and the gates to damnation are wide, so preaching the Gospel is always necessary.
19:12
You seem to believe in a conditional perseverance of the saints
God is unlimited, so is His Grace. If you believe in the Death, burial and resurrection of Christ, and that act is the only remission of sins, you are SAVED. FAITH is a gift from God Eph. 2:8
Jesus opened the gate of Heaven, but we still need to walk to it, and the path is narrow!
John the Baptizer even told us that he only baptized with water while Christ would baptize in the spirit. The water baptism is only a symbol of that spiritual baptism. Has no power in itself but someone who DOES trust in the lord will want to be baptized.
On Faith and Works so many people are getting hung up on "works" without even knowing what "works" means. James describes works at length, I challenge anyone to come back after reading and describe a tradition or ritual James stated was required to be saved.
The entire epistle is teaching how our ACTIONS demonstrate our faith. Anyone can claim to have faith, even Demons know God exists, the question is; Do you LIVE in a way that demonstrates you believe?
Can you make a video of 66 versus 73 books in the Catholic Church
My question to those who don't believe in faith alone is simply if someone accepts Jesus on their death bed are they still sent to hell? I've had some people try to justify it by saying that faith is the work but that just sounds like goofy semantics to me and still boils down to faith being all that is needed.
Take it from the perspective of a psychedelic lover; when your mind is outright CONVINCED it is dying, you will make realizations and admissions nobody in their sober mind would conjure. It almost always reflects 1:1 with the teachings of christianity, self gratifications become meaningless and generational blessings become the main focus.
So if someone is ACTUALLY dying, and they make some of these realizations, are we supposed to relish in their suffering and poke fun at them? Or is if best to generally acknowledge that people do change, especially nearing the end of this journey, and let the big guy do all the finer sifting?
@@Kaleki935 i don't think that answers the question but thank you for your comment.
Yes, people who accept Jesus on their death bed are saved. The bible gives us an example of this, being that one of the men who was being crucified next to Jesus accepted Christ, and the bible says he was saved.
I just want to tell you zoomer what you said about baptism how it’s not a work is 100% accurate; as a Catholic that’s what we believe, it’s a gift from God that he gave us for us to use something Baptist and evangelicals can’t get through their heads. I pray that the Lord will help them understand these things.
Thief on the cross
@@wyattc4644 iirc in catholic theology that's called baptism of desire or baptism of the will
@@eltonsstuff That sounds like a roundabout and convoluted way of saying that baptism by water does not save, but faith does.
@@Austin-kt7ky naw, baptism of the water saves. is required for salvation. But that theology asserts the Catholic stance that the fate of those outside the church is known to God alone.
@@eltonsstuff My point of contention with the idea that baptism is required for salvation is that it seems to determine eternal damnation for those who didn't have physical proximity to physical matter, regardless of their confession of faith or repentance of sin.
I'm not advocating for neglecting the practice of baptism, far from it, but what I'm getting at is that being rescued from damnation is fundamentally a gift from God and not a result of our actions. (Ephesians 2:8, For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God) Anybody can claim to be a follower of Christ, get baptized, and fall away. In that case, the fate of one inside the church is also known to God alone, even if they were baptized.
A truly repentant man will be compelled with urgency to be baptized, but one would not feel compelled to do so out of genuine faithfulness unless they had already been justified by God, renewed by the Holy Spirit, and cleansed by the blood of Christ.
That's how I understand it, but God teaches me new things when I pray for clarity. I only hope to read his word correctly and submit to it in truth.
God bless
this is gonna be a banger
I was baptized as a baby do i have to get baptized again?
nope. Cuz baptism isn't a work of man, it's a work of God. It's not you showing your dedication to God, it's God showing His dedication to you
@redeemedzoomer6053 now what if I came to faith and now know the meaning of being baptized do I have to get baptized again?
Good video, could you do a video on purgatory? That would be interesting, thanks
Protestants don't believe in purgatory.
@@gahrzahk more like a video refuting the idea of purgatory
FINALLY SOMEONE WHO DOESN'T TAKE JAMES 2 OUT OF CONTEXT
If baptism is a promise from God, and if we should accept it rather than reject it, and if God can save someone without baptism, that doesn't explain why infant baptism is necessary. Rather, it seems to bolster the Baptist belief that baptism should be a personal decision. I don't believe infants are not mentally capable of acceptance or rejection of God. In fact, it seems to me that predestination negates the need for infant baptism as well.
My understanding of the rationale behind infant baptism is that it's necessary to wash away original sin and keep the baby from going to Hell. @Non-Baptists pls explain
Totally agree that vermigli is slept on
@Redeemed Zoomer
how do I join this server.
Please make a video about, what priesthood of all believers means?
Water baptism is not like 'taking your socks off' to Baptists. True baptism is baptism in the Holy Spirit and this can happen before, at, or after water baptism per Acts.
I love The non-denominational church that was a Pizza Hut. I have seen many churches that are in strip malls.
Good work
I see I see… and are the baptists who say that rejecting baptism is like not picking up your socks in the room with us right now?
In Manichaeism, good deeds allow one to reach the afterlife. Even the worst godless blasphemer can enter paradise if his good deeds far exceeds his foul deeds. There are three destinations for the deceased. In the Manichean scriptures, the fate of the soul leaving the body is compared to a ship entering a port.
The first possible destination is Heaven. Just like a ship full of cargo, the soul that is burdened by it’s good deeds is allowed entry.
The second possible destination is reincarnation. Just like a ship half-full, it may or may not be allowed to dock. He is sent back, he is given another chance.
The third one is Hell. Those whose foul deeds far exceed their good deeds are repulsed, just like how pirate ships are refused to dock.
You misunderstand the idea of "once saved, always saved" in this video. It's not that a confession of faith means full assurance of salvation even if one walks away, but rather that if one "walks away" from the faith then they never truly had it to begin with.
Also yeah the "revival" movements definitely deserve to be scrutinized
I have a question unrelated to this subject. What is your opinion on the Carlist from Spain and the Cristeros from Mexico or just people who fought and died for the Faith?
So how do you interpret Hebrews 12:14 " Follow peace with all men, AND HOLINESS, WITHOUT WHICH NO MAN SHALL SEE THE LORD"?
Easy. Faith alone saves, and when someone is saved, they get the Holy Spirit and the Holy Spirit will make them more into his image which makes the saved person love God and do good works. (Ephesians 4:17-24, Colossians 3:7-10, 2 Corinthians 3:17-18). Now, if a person does not change his lifestyle and does not produce good works, then that means they were never saved because they never had the Holy Spirit which would make them do good works, but since their lifestyle didn't change, they were never saved, so only people who are made more holy by the Holy Spirit will make it to heaven.
@@d.rey5743I don't understand. If someone is baptised, but they don't change their lifestyle, you're saying the baptism they received was of no effect?
@@andreichira7518 Im not Presbyterian but im sure thats what they believe about baptism yes
Also, is their a way to ask you questions directly? Like a patreon or something
You know… Minecraft Bedrock deserves to be enlightened by the truth too.
this is a hard one, but not for salvation itself, rather if it is the symbols or the acts that carries relevance.
Now, lets postulate that salvation is within your actions, and is not given. It is a hard axiom, but the only one that permits discussion. In Brazil, we have stories about people, especially indians, being baptized as they are dying, through they own free will, for their newfound faith within the boundaries of death. Now, if they are saved or not is a hard question and I don`t think it belongs to us to decide, but rather, if you were the priest, would you done otherwise? It is a hard question that can be argued either way.
Despite the heavy handed argument, baptism itself is no guarantee of salvation. Within some of those of orthodox faith, baptism and confirmation are bunched up as the same ritual at an early age, just enough so you can know somewhat what this thing means. So baptism, for most christian (that follow this rule, in general) is a confirmation rather than a salvation guarantee.
But then, faith or acts? I`m inclined to think acts first and foremost. An actless faith is within the realm of imagination, and as such, is nothing more than fantasy. Faith is not fantasy, it is a statement and as such, should be transcribed within your actions. It is not necessary to sacrifice all one believes in the name of faith, but it is paramount that one doesn`t betray it trough one`s actions.
Consider that God has the knowledge of everything that happens in your heart. He would not judge you for the despair or helplessness, but rather for the actions you take within your capacity. And He knows exactly what your conditions are. There is no such thing as a free salvation pass. It is a judgement of what could you do and didn't. If a baptism is given within a few moments before death, if it is sincere, it saves. Rather, if you were just baptized as a child, it is your acts within this compromise that matter.
But salvation is not an artificial thing, it is organic as it gets, and no ritual guarantee it, but God will does it.
So many problems by simply not defining terms ... when you speak of "works", you seem to mean something different than I mean. I use that term work for the investment of energy, thus like in physics. And faith is to hold to Christ, hold that he is true and his teachings are true. Thus the question can be translated so everyone understands what it is about. Which of these two options is correct?
a: One is saved by trusting (in) Christ.
b: One is saved by trusting (in) Christ and acting on it.
Now, some say action is the fruit of faith/the trust (in) Christ. Now, they say those fruits come automatically and this part the Catholic Church disagrees with to my knowledge. Now again: What do people mean by automatically? Do they mean without the investment of energy? For that seems to go contra all observation. Do they mean without a need to decide for an action before doing it? For a tree gets its fruits with energy investment but without a concious or emotional decision for it. But here too: A christian has to still make decisions for good and against evil on an everyday-basis.
In the end the solution as I see it and where I see the simplest unification of all relevant verses is that in the first step you have Christ as Lord ... and it is not that acts will be formed "automatically" from that but the will to do good and to refrain from evil. This will is what can be observed in Christians, for it to bear fruit one needs to invest energy: first mentally or emotional so one makes a decision for good or against evil and then physically so one acts on it.
As long as one has the will to serve God, a will that let's one hate evil (sin) and love good, one has saving faith. One needs to invest energy so one does not lose this faith, because then one would betray ones will/the holy spirit. Whether one loses salvation by losing the faith one once had (in quality and not quantity, that means all faith in Christ and all will to honor and love him) may be another question...
Wholesome!
If someone wants to start reading Peter Martyr Vermigli, where should they begin?
How do I enter kingdom craft?
I have a question that is not exactly in line with your video but I think it is important nonetheless: There are sayings that events in the Bible have come from other events from other books/legends/people in history BEFORE the Bible was even written/recorded/passed down (you get my drift). I'll list one example for each, not to prove my point, but for you to see what I am getting at and need help understanding.
For example, Noah's ark and the flood could be seen in the epic of Gilgamesh, which was written before the Bible. A guy in the epic constructed a boat because one of the god's of his told him to, and there was a huge flood that wiped out all living things. There are other events in the Bible that people, scholars, historians claim have happened in other works from before the bible. They claim the Bible blatantly copied them.
Also, they claim that there is no CONCRETE evidence supporting Jesus was a real person. They say that his doings in the Bible stem from the doings of other heroes/legends/people that have just been compiled into one person, Jesus. What do you have to say about this?
I am not trying to argue with you. I am an Orthodox Christian who is struggling with his faith, and struggling to believe. The lies, deception, politics in the Church and it's history, and the mystery of the actual events and truth of the Bible are confusing me. I am stuck at a crossroad. I want to be closer to God, I want to be saved, to feel His love, but as I said, I am struggling just like a deer staring into a pair of headlights.
If you can, Redeemed Zoomer, or anyone really, please help me.
Ok I went through a period like you where I doubted my faith cuz I heard things like that. However, luckily those "facts" you mention are COMPLETE made-up reddit myths that even any respectable atheist scholar knows isn't true. The ENTIRE historical scholarly community knows Jesus existed. The "Jesus mythicism" which says Jesus was a myth based on other myths is popular on the atheist internet but has been debunked so many time.
There are resources for literally ALL those things you mentioned on the youtube channel InspiringPhilosophy, I could not recommend it more highly.
God bless you!
The way we perceive Christ is through His Word not the Church...
Where is the city in the thumbnail of the video?
“But now apart from the Law the righteousness of God has been manifested, being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets, even the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all those who believe; for there is no distinction; for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, being justified as a gift by His grace through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus; whom God displayed publicly as a propitiation in His blood through faith. This was to demonstrate His righteousness, because in the forbearance of God He passed over the sins previously committed; for the demonstration, I say, of His righteousness at the present time, so that He would be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus. Where then is boasting? It is excluded. By what kind of law? Of works? No, but by a law of faith. For we maintain that a man is justified by faith apart from works of the Law.”
Romans 3:21-28 NASB1995
but how do i acquire faith in the first place?
Faith is trusting in Jesus Christ. That His work and righteousness is enough to cover your sins and that you accept Him as your Lord and Savior. Run to Christ and cling to Him. Plead for His blood, His presence, and His Spirit in your life. Don't ever look away from Him again. You are desperately in need for a Savior, as I am, and we all are. Jesus Christ is our Savior.