WHICH CHURCH SAVES?

This is the title of a leaflet. It says no Church saves, only Christ
saves, and then quotes Acts 4.12: "Neither is there salvation in any
other," and similar things and also: Acts 16.31: "Believe on the Lord
Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." plus Titus 3. 5: "Not by works of
righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us."

The whole thing rests on ignorance of Scripture.

Only Catholics have any right to quote Scripture at all. For in the early
centuries there were many works called Gospels of James, of Thomas, of
Peter etc. along with the Gospels we know. How can anyone know which are
part of the Bible? Luther said that if a book preaches justification by
faith strongly, it is inspired. That was folly, for he did not prove that
is the standard. And also, he could write such a book, and so could I, and
it would not be inspired. Calvin thought the Spirit tells each one
interiorly - much too subjective, room for mere imagination, and no proof
that is done anyway.

The only way to know is if you can prove that there is a group, a Church,
commissioned by Jesus Himself to teach, and promised His protection: "He
who hears you hears me." (Luke 10.16)

But the chief trouble with the leaflet is this: it does not know what the
word saves means. There are three meanings of that word in Scripture : 1)
rescue from temporal evils 2) enter the church 3) enter heaven. The sense
some sects use, such as the author of the leaflet take it to mean that if
once in a lifetime you take Jesus as your personal Savior, i.e, believe
He has died for you - then you are infallibly saved, no matter what sins
you have committed, are committing, will commit - that sense is not found
in the Bible at all. The standard reference work for Scripture scholars,
Kittel, "Theological Dictionary of the New Testament," has along article
on "save". It does not mention this erroneous sense at all. But Luther
thought: Do nothing but keep on believing it is all paid for. So Luther in
his Epistle 501 wrote to his great lieutenant Melanchthon: "Even if you
sin greatly, believe still more greatly." What a permission to keep on
sinning!

That mistake in turn rests on Luther's error on justification by faith.
Yes, there is justification by faith as St. Paul insists so many times.
But we must take the word faith the way St. Paul means it. Luther thought
it meant what we have just said: Conviction the merits of Christ apply to
me. Luther never did any work to find out what St. Paul really meant. He
should have read carefully every spot where Paul uses the word faith, kept
notes, and added them up. The standard Protestant reference work,
"Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible," in the Supplement volume, in the
article on faith , subsection on Paul (p. 333) says this: "Paul uses
'pistis/pisteuein' [Greek words for faith and believe] to mean, above all,
belief in the Christ kerygma [preaching about Him], knowledge, obedience,
trust in the Lord Jesus. It comes by hearing with faith the Gospel
message. . . by responding with a confession about Christ. . . and by the
'obedience of faith' (Rom 1:5. . . 'the obedience which faith is." This is
a lot different from the foolish mistake of Luther. We notice especially
obedience. Paul did not mean that obedience earns salvation, but he did
say many times that disobedience earns hell, e.g., 1 Cor 6.9-10, where he
gives a list of the big sins and sinners and adds they "will not inherit
the kingdom of God, ." Paul does not say with Luther: "Sin greatly and
just think it is all right". Similarly in Ephesians 5.5: "Be sure of
this, no immoral or impure man, or one who is covetous (that is an
idolater) has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God.  et no
one deceive you with empty words , for it is because of these things that
the wrath of God comes upon the sons of disobedience." Luther thought all
Paul's threats mean nothing if only one takes Christ as his personal
Savior. Paul never said that. He often said, as did Jesus, that we will
not inherit if we commit such sins . Now a child does not get inheritance
by earning it, but could earn to lose it by being bad, so as to be
disinherited (cf. Romans 6.23). Hence Jesus said: "Unless you become
like little children, you will not enter the kingdom of heaven." But the
children are not free to disobey right and left and still get away with
it!

No one should believe that a Church saves, in the sense of redeeming.
Jesus did that. But Jesus also said many things. For example: in Matt
18.17: "If he will not hear the church, let him be to you as a heathen and
a publican." And Matthew 16.19: "I will give you the keys of the kingdom
of heaven, and whatsoever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and
whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven." In the language of
the time, to bind and loose meant to give authoritative teaching. So in
Luke 10:16: "He who hears you hears me, and he who rejects you rejects
me, and he who rejects me rejects him who sent me." He also said in John
6.53: "Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you
have no life in you." To be able to eat and drink thus we need the Church.

To sum up: Only Catholics can know for sure which books are part of the
Bible. In it we find only Jesus earned redemption. But He also commanded
us to hear the Church and to receive His flesh and blood from it. To say
we can ignore all churches is folly. But there is only one that he founded
- that was not one started in the 16th century - too late, if the promises
of Christ had left the Church teaching a false way to salvation for so
many centuries, the promises of Christ would be no good.