
| 405 South Bowie Drive Weatherford, Texas 76086 Sunday Morning Prayer - 9:00 AM Holy Communion - 10:30 AM Followed by an Evangel & Healing Service
Wednesday "White Horse Inn" Discussion Group - 7:30 PM Meeting in Various Homes - call for location 817.374.3368 |

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For "snail mail" or voice, please contact: Clergy  The Rev'd Dr. Robert Himes, S.B.R. Pastor
 The Rev'd Paul Vandergriff, S.B.R. Pastor
 The Rev'd Mark Woolsey Deacon
(817) 594-1590 Church Office In light of recent events in the Episcopal Church USA (ECUSA), please read the REC's official statement concerning Christian Sexual Ethics and the latest ECUSA General Convention. | The Nature of Justifying Faith The claim that justification comes sola fide was central to the debates of the Reformation. When the matter of sola fide is raised, however, attention tends to focus on the first of these words: alone. We remember that the reformers taught that justification is by faith alone while Roman Catholics countered that justification is by faith and good works. Thus, it may seem, both sides affirmed the importance of faith, but disagreed simply on whether anything had to be added to faith in order to secure justification. This is true in a sense-both sides did speak of the necessity of faith-but it can also be misleading. It is potentially misleading because the reformers and Roman Catholics disagreed about more than whether justification was by faith alone. They also had different understandings of the nature and definition of faith. In other words, the Reformation diverged from Rome not only in affirming that faith alone justifies but also in defining the faith that justifies in the way that it did. This dispute is much more than an historical curiosity. Christians today who continue to affirm that faith alone justifies surely must take care to speak about this faith accurately. If we are to make such lofty claims for faith we ought to be sure to understand what it is. And disagreements about the character of justifying faith remain alive. Despite some development in Roman Catholic teaching on faith that may seem to bring it closer to the Reformation's understanding, fundamental differences still remain between them. In addition, in some contemporary controversies over the doctrine of justification in Protestant circles, certain writers have suggested an understanding of faith that also diverges from historic Reformation teaching. In this article, then, we will examine these different conceptions of faith and reflect upon the biblical teaching.... Click here for the rest of this article | Reformed Episcopal Church Mission Statement | |
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