Lurtheran
Accord:
JOINT DECLARATION ON
THE DOCTRINE OF JUSTIFICATION
by the Lutheran World Federation
and the Catholic Church
Preamble
1.The doctrine of justification was
of central importance for the Lutheran Reformation
of the sixteenth century. It was held to be the "first
and chief article"[1] and at the same time the
"ruler and judge over all other Christian doctrines."[2]
The doctrine of justification was particularly asserted
and defended in its Reformation shape and special
valuation over against the Roman Catholic Church and
theology of that time, which in turn asserted and
defended a doctrine of justification of a different
character. From the Reformation perspective, justification
was the crux of all the disputes. Doctrinal condemnations
were put forward both in the Lutheran Confessions[3]
and by the Roman Catholic Church's Council of Trent.
These condemnations are still valid today and thus
have a church-dividing effect.
2.For the Lutheran tradition, the
doctrine of justification has retained its special
status. Consequently it has also from the beginning
occupied an important place in the official Lutheran-Roman
Catholic dialogue.
3.Special attention should be drawn
to the following reports: "The Gospel and the
Church" (1972)[4] and "Church and Justification"
(1994)[5] by the Lutheran-Roman Catholic Joint Commission,
"Justification by Faith" (1983)[6] of the
Lutheran-Roman Catholic dialogue in the USA and "The
Condemnations of the Reformation Era - Do They Still
Divide?" (1986)[7] by the Ecumenical Working
Group of Protestant and Catholic theologians in Germany.
Some of these dialogue reports have been officially
received by the churches. An important example of
such reception is the binding response of the United
Evangelical-Lutheran Church of Germany to the "Condemnations"
study, made in 1994 at the highest possible level
of ecclesiastical recognition together with the other
churches of the Evangelical Church in Germany.[8]
4.In their discussion of the doctrine
of justification, all the dialogue reports as well
as the responses show a high degree of agreement in
their approaches and conclusions. The time has therefore
come to take stock and to summarize the results of
the dialogues on justification so that our churches
may be informed about the overall results of this
dialogue with the necessary accuracy and brevity,
and thereby be enabled to make binding decisions.
5.The present Joint Declaration has
this intention: namely, to show that on the basis
of their dialogue the subscribing Lutheran churches
and the Roman Catholic Church[9] are now able to articulate
a common understanding of our justification by God's
grace through faith in Christ. It does not cover all
that either church teaches about justification; it
does encompass a consensus on basic truths of the
doctrine of justification and shows that the remaining
differences in its explication are no longer the occasion
for doctrinal condemnations.
6.Our Declaration is not a new, independent
presentation alongside the dialogue reports and documents
to date, let alone a replacement of them. Rather,
as the appendix of sources shows, it makes repeated
reference to them and their arguments.
7.Like the dialogues themselves,
this Joint Declaration rests on the conviction that
in overcoming the earlier controversial questions
and doctrinal condemnations, the churches neither
take the condemnations lightly nor do they disavow
their own past. On the contrary, this Declaration
is shaped by the conviction that in their respective
histories our churches have come to new insights.
Developments have taken place which not only make
possible, but also require the churches to examine
the divisive questions and condemnations and see them
in a new light.
1. Biblical Message of Justification
8.Our common way of listening to
the word of God in Scripture has led to such new insights.
Together we hear the gospel that "God so loved
the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone
who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal
life" (Jn 3:16). This good news is set forth
in Holy Scripture in various ways. In the Old Testament
we listen to God's word about human sinfulness (Ps
51:1-5; Dan 9:5f; Eccl/Qo 8:9f; Ezra 9:6f) and human
disobedience (Gen 3:1-19; Neh 9:16f,26) as well as
of God's "righteousness" (Isa 46:13; 51:5-8;
56:1 [cf. 53:11]; Jer 9:24) and "judgment"
(Eccl/Qo 12:14; Ps 9:5f; 76:7-9).
9.In the New Testament diverse treatments
of "righteousness" and "justification"
are found in the writings of Matthew (5:10; 6:33;
21:32), John (16:8-11), Hebrews (5:3; 10:37f), and
James (2:14-26).[10] In Paul's letters also, the gift
of salvation is described in various ways, among others:
"for freedom Christ has set us free" (Gal
5:1-13; cf. Rom 6:7), "reconciled to God"
(2 Cor 5:18-21; cf. Rom 5:11), "peace with God"
(Rom 5:1), "new creation" (2 Cor 5:17),
"alive to God in Christ Jesus" (Rom 6:11,23),
or "sanctified in Christ Jesus" (cf. 1 Cor
1:2; 1:30; 2 Cor 1:1). Chief among these is the "justification"
of sinful human beings by God's grace through faith
(Rom 3:23-25), which came into particular prominence
in the Reformation period.
10.Paul sets forth the gospel as
the power of God for salvation of the person who has
fallen under the power of sin, as the message that
proclaims that "the righteousness of God is revealed
through faith for faith" (Rom 1:16f) and that
grants "justification" (Rom 3:21-31). He
proclaims Christ as "our righteousness"
(1 Cor 1:30), applying to the risen Lord what Jeremiah
proclaimed about God himself (Jer 23:6). In Christ's
death and resurrection all dimensions of his saving
work have their roots for he is "our Lord, who
was put to death for our trespasses and raised for
our justification" (Rom 4:25). All human beings
are in need of God's righteousness, "since all
have sinned and fall short of the glory of God"
(Rom 3:23; cf. Rom 1:18-3:20; 11:32; Gal 3:22). In
Galatians (3:6) and Romans (4:3-9), Paul understands
Abraham's faith (Gen 15:6) as faith in the God who
justifies the sinner (Rom 4:5) and calls upon the
testimony of the Old Testament to undergird his gospel
that this righteousness will be reckoned to all who,
like Abraham, trust in God's promise. "For the
righteous will live by faith (Hab 2:4; cf. Gal 3:11;
Rom 1:17). In Paul's letters, God's righteousness
is also God's power for those who have faith (Rom
1:16f; 2 Cor 5:21). In Christ he makes it our righteousness
(2 Cor 5:21). Justification becomes ours through Christ
Jesus "whom God put forward as a sacrifice of
atonement by his blood, effective through faith"
(Rom 3:25; see 3:21-28). "For by grace you have
been saved through faith, and this is not your own
doing; it is the gift of God - not the result of works"
(Eph 2:8f).
11.Justification is the forgiveness
of sins (cf. Rom 3:23-25; Acts 13:39; Lk 18:14), liberation
from the dominating power of sin and death (Rom 5:12-21)
and from the curse of the law (Gal 3:10-14). It is
acceptance into communion with God: already now, but
then fully in God's coming kingdom (Rom 5:1f). It
unites with Christ and with his death and resurrection
(Rom 6:5). It occurs in the reception of the Holy
Spirit in baptism and incorporation into the one body
(Rom 8:1f, 9f; I Cor 12:12f). All this is from God
alone, for Christ's sake, by grace, through faith
in "the gospel of God's Son" (Rom 1:1-3).
12.The justified live by faith that
comes from the Word of Christ (Rom 10:17) and is active
through love (Gal 5:6), the fruit of the Spirit (Gal
5:22f). But since the justified are assailed from
within and without by powers and desires (Rom 8:35-39;
Gal 5:16-21) and fall into sin (1 Jn 1:8,10), they
must constantly hear God's promises anew, confess
their sins (1 Jn 1:9), participate in Christ's body
and blood, and be exhorted to live righteously in
accord with the will of God. That is why the Apostle
says to the justified: "Work out your own salvation
with fear and trembling; for it is God who is at work
in you, enabling you both to will and to work for
his good pleasure" (Phil 2:12f). But the good
news remains: "there is now no condemnation for
those who are in Christ Jesus" (Rom 8:1), and
in whom Christ lives (Gal 2:20). Christ's "act
of righteousness leads to justification and life for
all" (Rom 5:18).
2. The Doctrine of Justification
as Ecumenical Problem
13.Opposing interpretations and applications
of the biblical message of justification were in the
sixteenth century a principal cause of the division
of the Western church and led as well to doctrinal
condemnations. A common understanding of justification
is therefore fundamental and indispensable to overcoming
that division. By appropriating insights of recent
biblical studies and drawing on modern investigations
of the history of theology and dogma, the post-Vatican
II ecumenical dialogue has led to a notable convergence
concerning justification, with the result that this
Joint Declaration is able to formulate a consensus
on basic truths concerning the doctrine of justification.
In light of this consensus, the corresponding doctrinal
condemnations of the sixteenth century do not apply
to today's partner.
3. The Common Understanding of Justification
14.The Lutheran churches and the
Roman Catholic Church have together listened to the
good news proclaimed in Holy Scripture. This common
listening, together with the theological conversations
of recent years, has led to a shared understanding
of justification. This encompasses a consensus in
the basic truths; the differing explications in particular
statements are compatible with it.
15.In faith we together hold the
conviction that justification is the work of the triune
God. The Father sent his Son into the world to save
sinners. The foundation and presupposition of justification
is the incarnation, death, and resurrection of Christ.
Justification thus means that Christ himself is our
righteousness, in which we share through the Holy
Spirit in accord with the will of the Father. Together
we confess: By grace alone, in faith in Christ's saving
work and not because of any merit on our part, we
are accepted by God and receive the Holy Spirit, who
renews our hearts while equipping and calling us to
good works.[11]
16.All people are called by God to
salvation in Christ. Through Christ alone are we justified,
when we receive this salvation in faith. Faith is
itself God's gift through the Holy Spirit who works
through word and sacrament in the community of believers
and who, at the same time, leads believers into that
renewal of life which God will bring to completion
in eternal life.
17.We also share the conviction that
the message of justification directs us in a special
way towards the heart of the New Testament witness
to God's saving action in Christ: it tells us that
as sinners our new life is solely due to the forgiving
and renewing mercy that God imparts as a gift and
we receive in faith, and never can merit in any way.
18.Therefore the doctrine of justification,
which takes up this message and explicates it, is
more than just one part of Christian doctrine. It
stands in an essential relation to all truths of faith,
which are to be seen as internally related to each
other. It is an indispensable criterion which constantly
serves to orient all the teaching and practice of
our churches to Christ. When Lutherans emphasize the
unique significance of this criterion, they do not
deny the interrelation and significance of all truths
of faith. When Catholics see themselves as bound by
several criteria, they do not deny the special function
of the message of justification. Lutherans and Catholics
share the goal of confessing Christ in all things,
who alone is to be trusted above all things as the
one Mediator (1 Tim 2:5f) through whom God in the
Holy Spirit gives himself and pours out his renewing
gifts. [cf. Sources for section 3].
4. Explicating the Common Understanding
of Justification
4.1 Human Powerlessness and Sin in Relation
to Justification
19.We confess together that all persons
depend completely on the saving grace of God for their
salvation. The freedom they possess in relation to
persons and the things of this world is no freedom
in relation to salvation, for as sinners they stand
under God's judgment and are incapable of turning
by themselves to God to seek deliverance, of meriting
their justification before God, or of attaining salvation
by their own abilities. Justification takes place
solely by God's grace. Because Catholics and Lutherans
confess this together, it is true to say:
20.When Catholics say that persons
"cooperate" in preparing for and accepting
justification by consenting to God's justifying action,
they see such personal consent as itself an effect
of grace, not as an action arising from innate human
abilities.
21.According to Lutheran teaching,
human beings are incapable of cooperating in their
salvation, because as sinners they actively oppose
God and his saving action. Lutherans do not deny that
a person can reject the working of grace. When they
emphasize that a person can only receive (mere passive)
justification, they mean thereby to exclude any possibility
of contributing to one's own justification, but do
not deny that believers are fully involved personally
in their faith, which is effected by God's Word. [cf.
Sources for 4.1].
4.2 Justification as Forgiveness
of Sins and Making Righteous
22.We confess together that God forgives
sin by grace and at the same time frees human beings
from sin's enslaving power and imparts the gift of
new life in Christ. When persons come by faith to
share in Christ, God no longer imputes to them their
sin and through the Holy Spirit effects in them an
active love. These two aspects of God's gracious action
are not to be separated, for persons are by faith
united with Christ, who in his person is our righteousness
(1 Cor 1:30): both the forgiveness of sin and the
saving presence of God himself. Because Catholics
and Lutherans confess this together, it is true to
say that:
23.When Lutherans emphasize that
the righteousness of Christ is our righteousness,
their intention is above all to insist that the sinner
is granted righteousness before God in Christ through
the declaration of forgiveness and that only in union
with Christ is one's life renewed. When they stress
that God's grace is forgiving love ("the favor
of God"[12]), they do not thereby deny the renewal
of the Christian's life. They intend rather to express
that justification remains free from human cooperation
and is not dependent on the life-renewing effects
of grace in human beings.
24.When Catholics emphasize the renewal
of the interior person through the reception of grace
imparted as a gift to the believer,[13] they wish
to insist that God's forgiving grace always brings
with it a gift of new life, which in the Holy Spirit
becomes effective in active love. They do not thereby
deny that God's gift of grace in justification remains
independent of human cooperation. [cf. Sources for
section 4.2].
4.3 Justification by Faith
and through Grace
25.We confess together that sinners
are justified by faith in the saving action of God
in Christ. By the action of the Holy Spirit in baptism,
they are granted the gift of salvation, which lays
the basis for the whole Christian life. They place
their trust in God's gracious promise by justifying
faith, which includes hope in God and love for him.
Such a faith is active in love and thus the Christian
cannot and should not remain without works. But whatever
in the justified precedes or follows the free gift
of faith is neither the basis of justification nor
merits it.
26.According to Lutheran understanding,
God justifies sinners in faith alone (sola fide).
In faith they place their trust wholly in their Creator
and Redeemer and thus live in communion with him.
God himself effects faith as he brings forth such
trust by his creative word. Because God's act is a
new creation, it affects all dimensions of the person
and leads to a life in hope and love. In the doctrine
of "justification by faith alone," a distinction
but not a separation is made between justification
itself and the renewal of one's way of life that necessarily
follows from justification and without which faith
does not exist. Thereby the basis is indicated from
which the renewal of life proceeds, for it comes forth
from the love of God imparted to the person in justification.
Justification and renewal are joined in Christ, who
is present in faith.
27.The Catholic understanding also
sees faith as fundamental in justification. For without
faith, no justification can take place. Persons are
justified through baptism as hearers of the word and
believers in it. The justification of sinners is forgiveness
of sins and being made righteous by justifying grace,
which makes us children of God. In justification the
righteous receive from Christ faith, hope, and love
and are thereby taken into communion with him.[14]
This new personal relation to God is grounded totally
on God's graciousness and remains constantly dependent
on the salvific and creative working of this gracious
God, who remains true to himself, so that one can
rely upon him. Thus justifying grace never becomes
a human possession to which one could appeal over
against God. While Catholic teaching emphasizes the
renewal of life by justifying grace, this renewal
in faith, hope, and love is always dependent on God's
unfathomable grace and contributes nothing to justification
about which one could boast before God (Rom 3:27).
[See Sources for section 4.3].
4.4 The Justified as Sinner
28.We confess together that in baptism
the Holy Spirit unites one with Christ, justifies,
and truly renews the person. But the justified must
all through life constantly look to God's unconditional
justifying grace. They also are continuously exposed
to the power of sin still pressing its attacks (cf.
Rom 6:12-14) and are not exempt from a lifelong struggle
against the contradiction to God within the selfish
desires of the old Adam (cf. Gal 5:16; Rom 7:7-10).
The justified also must ask God daily for forgiveness
as in the Lord's Prayer (Mt. 6:12; 1 Jn 1:9), are
ever again called to conversion and penance, and are
ever again granted forgiveness.
29.Lutherans understand this condition
of the Christian as a being "at the same time
righteous and sinner." Believers are totally
righteous, in that God forgives their sins through
Word and Sacrament and grants the righteousness of
Christ which they appropriate in faith. In Christ,
they are made just before God. Looking at themselves
through the law, however, they recognize that they
remain also totally sinners. Sin still lives in them
(1 Jn 1:8; Rom 7:17,20), for they repeatedly turn
to false gods and do not love God with that undivided
love which God requires as their Creator (Deut 6:5;
Mt 22:36-40 pr.). This contradiction to God is as
such truly sin. Nevertheless, the enslaving power
of sin is broken on the basis of the merit of Christ.
It no longer is a sin that "rules" the Christian
for it is itself "ruled" by Christ with
whom the justified are bound in faith. In this life,
then, Christians can in part lead a just life. Despite
sin, the Christian is no longer separated from God,
because in the daily return to baptism, the person
who has been born anew by baptism and the Holy Spirit
has this sin forgiven. Thus this sin no longer brings
damnation and eternal death.[15] Thus, when Lutherans
say that justified persons are also sinners and that
their opposition to God is truly sin, they do not
deny that, despite this sin, they are not separated
from God and that this sin is a "ruled"
sin. In these affirmations, they are in agreement
with Roman Catholics, despite the difference in understanding
sin in the justified.
30.Catholics hold that the grace
of Jesus Christ imparted in baptism takes away all
that is sin "in the proper sense" and that
is "worthy of damnation" (Rom 8:1).[16]
There does, however, remain in the person an inclination
(concupiscence) which comes from sin and presses toward
sin. Since, according to Catholic conviction, human
sins always involve a personal element and since this
element is lacking in this inclination, Catholics
do not see this inclination as sin in an authentic
sense. They do not thereby deny that this inclination
does not correspond to God's original design for humanity
and that it is objectively in contradiction to God
and remains one's enemy in lifelong struggle. Grateful
for deliverance by Christ, they underscore that this
inclination in contradiction to God does not merit
the punishment of eternal death[17] and does not separate
the justified person from God. But when individuals
voluntarily separate themselves from God, it is not
enough to return to observing the commandments, for
they must receive pardon and peace in the Sacrament
of Reconciliation through the word of forgiveness
imparted to them in virtue of God's reconciling work
in Christ. [See Sources for section 4.4].
4.5 Law and Gospel
31.We confess together that persons
are justified by faith in the gospel "apart from
works prescribed by the law" (Rom 3:28). Christ
has fulfilled the law and by his death and resurrection
has overcome it as a way to salvation. We also confess
that God's commandments retain their validity for
the justified and that Christ has by his teaching
and example expressed God's will which is a standard
for the conduct of the justified also.
32.Lutherans state that the distinction
and right ordering of law and gospel is essential
for the understanding of justification. In its theological
use, the law is demand and accusation. Throughout
their lives, all persons, Christians also, in that
they are sinners, stand under this accusation which
uncovers their sin so that, in faith in the gospel,
they will turn unreservedly to the mercy of God in
Christ, which alone justifies them.
33.Because the law as a way to salvation
has been fulfilled and overcome through the gospel,
Catholics can say that Christ is not a lawgiver in
the manner of Moses. When Catholics emphasize that
the righteous are bound to observe God's commandments,
they do not thereby deny that through Jesus Christ
God has mercifully promised to his children the grace
of eternal life.[18] [See Sources for section 4.5].
4.6 Assurance of Salvation
34.We confess together that the faithful
can rely on the mercy and promises of God. In spite
of their own weakness and the manifold threats to
their faith, on the strength of Christ's death and
resurrection they can build on the effective promise
of God's grace in Word and Sacrament and so be sure
of this grace.
35.This was emphasized in a particular
way by the Reformers: in the midst of temptation,
believers should not look to themselves but look solely
to Christ and trust only him. In trust in God's promise
they are assured of their salvation, but are never
secure looking at themselves.
36.Catholics can share the concern
of the Reformers to ground faith in the objective
reality of Christ's promise, to look away from one's
own experience, and to trust in Christ's forgiving
word alone (cf. Mt 16:19; 18:18). With the Second
Vatican Council, Catholics state: to have faith is
to entrust oneself totally to God,[19] who liberates
us from the darkness of sin and death and awakens
us to eternal life.[20] In this sense, one cannot
believe in God and at the same time consider the divine
promise untrustworthy. No one may doubt God's mercy
and Christ's merit. Every person, however, may be
concerned about his salvation when he looks upon his
own weaknesses and shortcomings. Recognizing his own
failures, however, the believer may yet be certain
that God intends his salvation. [See Sources for section
4.6].
4.7 The Good Works of the
Justified
37.We confess together that good
works - a Christian life lived in faith, hope and
love - follow justification and are its fruits. When
the justified live in Christ and act in the grace
they receive, they bring forth, in biblical terms,
good fruit. Since Christians struggle against sin
their entire lives, this consequence of justification
is also for them an obligation they must fulfill.
Thus both Jesus and the apostolic Scriptures admonish
Christians to bring forth the works of love.
38.According to Catholic understanding,
good works, made possible by grace and the working
of the Holy Spirit, contribute to growth in grace,
so that the righteousness that comes from God is preserved
and communion with Christ is deepened. When Catholics
affirm the "meritorious" character of good
works, they wish to say that, according to the biblical
witness, a reward in heaven is promised to these works.
Their intention is to emphasize the responsibility
of persons for their actions, not to contest the character
of those works as gifts, or far less to deny that
justification always remains the unmerited gift of
grace.
39.The concept of a preservation
of grace and a growth in grace and faith is also held
by Lutherans. They do emphasize that righteousness
as acceptance by God and sharing in the righteousness
of Christ is always complete. At the same time, they
state that there can be growth in its effects in Christian
living. When they view the good works of Christians
as the fruits and signs of justification and not as
one's own "merits", they nevertheless also
understand eternal life in accord with the New Testament
as unmerited "reward" in the sense of the
fulfillment of God's promise to the believer. [See
Sources for section 4.7].
5. The Significance and Scope of the Consensus Reached
40.The understanding of the doctrine
of justification set forth in this Declaration shows
that a consensus in basic truths of the doctrine of
justification exists between Lutherans and Catholics.
In light of this consensus the remaining differences
of language, theological elaboration, and emphasis
in the understanding of justification described in
paras. 18 to 39 are acceptable. Therefore the Lutheran
and the Catholic explications of justification are
in their difference open to one another and do not
destroy the consensus regarding the basic truths.
41.Thus the doctrinal condemnations
of the 16th century, in so far as they relate to the
doctrine of justification, appear in a new light:
The teaching of the Lutheran churches presented in
this Declaration does not fall under the condemnations
from the Council of Trent. The condemnations in the
Lutheran Confessions do not apply to the teaching
of the Roman Catholic Church presented in this Declaration.
42.Nothing is thereby taken away
from the seriousness of the condemnations related
to the doctrine of justification. Some were not simply
pointless. They remain for us "salutary warnings"
to which we must attend in our teaching and practice.[21]
43.Our consensus in basic truths
of the doctrine of justification must come to influence
the life and teachings of our churches. Here it must
prove itself. In this respect, there are still questions
of varying importance which need further clarification.
These include, among other topics, the relationship
between the Word of God and church doctrine, as well
as ecclesiology, ecclesial authority, church unity,
ministry, the sacraments, and the relation between
justification and social ethics. We are convinced
that the consensus we have reached offers a solid
basis for this clarification. The Lutheran churches
and the Roman Catholic Church will continue to strive
together to deepen this common understanding of justification
and to make it bear fruit in the life and teaching
of the churches.
44.We give thanks to the Lord for
this decisive step forward on the way to overcoming
the division of the church. We ask the Holy Spirit
to lead us further toward that visible unity which
is Christ's will.
APPENDIX
Resources for the Joint Declaration
on the Doctrine of Justification
In parts 3 and 4 of the "Joint
Declaration" formulations from different Lutheran-Catholic
dialogues are referred to. They are the following
documents:
"All Under One Christ,"
Statement on the Augsburg Confession by the Roman
Catholic/Lutheran Joint Commission, 1980, in: Growth
in Agreement, edited by Harding Meyer and Lukas Vischer,
New York/Ramsey, Geneva, 1984, 241-247.
Denzinger-Schönmetzer, Enchiridion
symbolorum ...32nd to 36th edition (hereafter: DS).
Denzinger-Hünermann, Enchiridion
symbolorum ...since the 37th edition (hereafter: DH).
Evaluation of the Pontifical Council
for Promoting Christian Unity of the Study Lehrverurteilungen
- kirchentrennend?, Vatican, 1992, unpublished document
(hereafter: PCPCU).
Justification by Faith, Lutherans
and Catholics in Dialogue VII, Minneapolis, 1985 (hereafter:
USA).
Position Paper of the Joint Committee
of the United Evangelical Lutheran Church of Germany
and the LWF German National Committee regarding the
document "The Condemnations of the Reformation
Era.Do They Still Divide?" in: Lehrverurteilungen
im Gespräch, Göttingen, 1993 (hereafter:
VELKD).
The Condemnations of the Reformation
Era. Do they Still Divide? Edited by Karl Lehmann
and Wolfhart Pannenberg, Minneapolis, 1990 (hereafter:
LV:E)
For 3:The Common Understanding of
Justification (paras 17 and 18) (LV:E 68f; VELKD 95)
- "... a faith centered and
forensically conceived picture of justification is
of major importance for Paul and, in a sense, for
the Bible as a whole, although it is by no means the
only biblical or Pauline way of representing God's
saving work" (USA, no. 146).
- "Catholics as well as Lutherans
can acknowledge the need to test the practices, structures,
and theologies of the church by the extent to which
they help or hinder 'the proclamation of God's free
and merciful promises in Christ Jesus which can be
rightly received only through faith' (para. 28)"
(USA, no. 153).
Regarding the "fundamental affirmation"
(USA, no. 157; cf. 4) it is said:
- "This affirmation, like
the Reformation doctrine of justification by faith
alone, serves as a criterion for judging all church
practices, structures, and traditions precisely
because its counterpart is 'Christ alone' (solus
Christus). He alone is to be ultimately trusted
as the one mediator through whom God in the Holy
Spirit pours out his saving gifts. All of us in
this dialogue affirm that all Christian teachings,
practices, and offices should so function as to
foster 'the obedience of faith' (Rom. 1:5) in God's
saving action in Christ Jesus alone through the
Holy Spirit, for the salvation of the faithful and
the praise and honor of the heavenly Father"
(USA, no. 160).
- "For that reason, the doctrine
of justification - and, above all, its biblical
foundation - will always retain a special function
in the church. That function is continually to remind
Christians that we sinners live solely from the
forgiving love of God, which we merely allow to
be bestowed on us, but which we in no way - in however
modified a form - 'earn' or are able to tie down
to any preconditions or postconditions. The doctrine
of justification therefore becomes the touchstone
for testing at all times whether a particular interpretation
of our relationship to God can claim the name of
'Christian.' At the same time, it becomes the touchstone
for the church, for testing at all times whether
its proclamation and its praxis correspond to what
has been given to it by its Lord" (LV:E 69).
- "An agreement on the fact
that the doctrine of justification is significant
not only as one doctrinal component within the whole
of our church's teaching, but also as the touchstone
for testing the whole doctrine and practice of our
churches, is - from a Lutheran point of view - fundamental
progress in the ecumenical dialogue between our
churches. It cannot be welcomed enough" (VELKD
95, 20-26; cf. 157).
- "For Lutherans and Catholics,
the doctrine of justification has a different status
in the hierarchy of truth; but both sides agree
that the doctrine of justification has its specific
function in the fact that it is 'the touchstone
for testing at all times whether a particular interpretation
of our relationship to God can claim the name of
"Christian". At the same time it becomes
the touchstone for the church, for testing at all
times whether its proclamation and its praxis correspond
to what has been given to it by its Lord' (LV:E
69). The criteriological significance of the doctrine
of justification for sacramentology, ecclesiology
and ethical teachings still deserves to be studied
further" (PCPCU 96).
For 4.1:Human Powerlessness and Sin in Relation to
Justification (paras 19-21) (LV:E 42ff; 46; VELKD
77-81; 83f)
- "Those in whom sin reigns
can do nothing to merit justification, which is
the free gift of God's grace. Even the beginnings
of justification, for example, repentance, prayer
for grace, and desire for forgiveness, must be God's
work in us" (USA, no. 156.3).
- "Both are concerned to make
it clear that ... human beings cannot ... cast a
sideways glance at their own endeavors ... But a
response is not a 'work.' The response of faith
is itself brought about through the uncoercible
word of promise which comes to human beings from
outside themselves. There can be 'cooperation' only
in the sense that in faith the heart is involved,
when the Word touches it and creates faith"
(LV:E 46f).
- "Where, however, Lutheran
teaching construes the relation of God to his human
creatures in justification with such emphasis on
the divine 'monergism' or the sole efficacy of Christ
in such a way, that the person's willing acceptance
of God's grace - which is itself a gift of God -
has no essential role in justification, then the
Tridentine canons 4, 5, 6 and 9 still constitute
a notable doctrinal difference on justification"
(PCPCU 22).
-"The strict emphasis on the
passivity of human beings concerning their justification
never meant, on the Lutheran side, to contest the
full personal participation in believing; rather
it meant to exclude any cooperation in the event
of justification itself. Justification is the work
of Christ alone, the work of grace alone" (VELKD
84,3-8).
For 4.2:Justification as Forgiveness of Sins and
Making Righteous (paras. 22-24) (USA, nos. 98-101;
LV:E 47ff; VELKD 84ff; cf. also the quotations for
4.3)
- "By justification we are
both declared and made righteous. Justification,
therefore, is not a legal fiction. God, in justifying,
effects what he promises; he forgives sin and makes
us truly righteous" (USA, no. 156,5).
- "Protestant theology does
not overlook what Catholic doctrine stresses: the
creative and renewing character of God's love; nor
does it maintain ..God's impotence toward a sin
which is 'merely' forgiven in justification but
which is not truly abolished in its power to divide
the sinner from God" (LV:E 49).
- "The Lutheran doctrine has
never understood the 'crediting of Christ's justification'
as without effect on the life of the faithful, because
Christ's word achieves what it promises. Accordingly
the Lutheran doctrine understands grace as God's
favor, but nevertheless as effective power ..'for
where there is forgiveness of sins, there is also
life and salvation'" (VELKD 86,15-23).
- "Catholic doctrine does
not overlook what Protestant theology stresses:
the personal character of grace, and its link with
the Word; nor does it maintain ..grace as an objective
'possession' (even if a conferred possession) on
the part of the human being - something over which
he can dispose" (LV:E 49).
For 4.3:Justification by Faith and through Grace
(paras.25-27) (USA, nos. 105ff; LV:E 49-53; VELKD
87-90)
- "If we translate from one
language to another, then Protestant talk about
justification through faith corresponds to Catholic
talk about justification through grace; and on the
other hand, Protestant doctrine understands substantially
under the one word 'faith' what Catholic doctrine
(following 1 Cor. 13:13) sums up in the triad of
'faith, hope, and love'" (LV:E 52).
- "We emphasize that faith
in the sense of the first commandment always means
love to God and hope in him and is expressed in
the love to the neighbour" (VELKD 89,8-11).
- "Catholics ..teach as do
Lutherans, that nothing prior to the free gift of
faith merits justification and that all of God's
saving gifts come through Christ alone" (USA,
no. 105).
- "The Reformers ..understood
faith as the forgiveness and fellowship with Christ
effected by the word of promise itself .. This is
the ground for the new being, through which the
flesh is dead to sin and the new man or woman in
Christ has life (sola fide per Christum). But even
if this faith necessarily makes the human being
new, the Christian builds his confidence, not on
his own new life, but solely on God's gracious promise.
Acceptance in Christ is sufficient, if 'faith' is
understood as 'trust in the promise' (fides promissionis)"
(LV:E 50).
- Cf. The Council of Trent, Session
6, Chap. 7: "Consequently, in the process of
justification, together with the forgiveness of
sins a person receives, through Jesus Christ into
whom he is grafted, all these infused at the same
time: faith, hope and charity" (DH 1530).
- "According to Protestant
interpretation, the faith that clings unconditionally
to God's promise in Word and Sacrament is sufficient
for righteousness before God, so that the renewal
of the human being, without which there can be no
faith, does not in itself make any contribution
to justification" (LV:E 52).
- "As Lutherans we maintain
the distinction between justification and sanctification,
of faith and works, which however implies no separation"
(VELKD 89,6-8).
- "Catholic doctrine knows
itself to be at one with the Protestant concern
in emphasizing that the renewal of the human being
does not 'contribute' to justification, and is certainly
not a contribution to which he could make any appeal
before God. Nevertheless it feels compelled to stress
the renewal of the human being through justifying
grace, for the sake of acknowledging God's newly
creating power; although this renewal in faith,
hope, and love is certainly nothing but a response
to God's unfathomable grace" (LV:E 52f).
- "Insofar as the Catholic
doctrine stresses that grace is personal and linked
with the Word, that renewal ..is certainly nothing
but a response effected by God's word itself, and
that the renewal of the human being does not contribute
to justification, and is certainly not a contribution
to which a person could make any appeal before God,
our objection ..no longer applies" (VELKD 89,12-21).
For 4.4:The Justified as Sinner (paras.28-30) (USA,
nos. 102ff; LV:E 44ff; VELKD 81ff)
- "For however just and holy,
they fall from time to time into the sins that are
those of daily existence.
What is more, the Spirit's action does not exempt
believers from the lifelong struggle against sinful
tendencies. Concupiscence and other effects of original
and personal sin, according to Catholic doctrine,
remain in the justified, who therefore must pray daily
to God for forgiveness" (USA, no. 102).
- "The doctrines laid down
at Trent and by the Reformers are at one in maintaining
that original sin, and also the concupiscence that
remains, are in contradiction to God ..object of
the lifelong struggle against sin ..[A]fter baptism,
concupiscence in the person justified no longer
cuts that person off from God; in Tridentine language,
it is 'no longer sin in the real sense'; in Lutheran
phraseology, it is peccatum regnatum, 'controlled
sin'" (LV:E 46).
- "The question is how to
speak of sin with regard to the justified without
limiting the reality of salvation. While Lutherans
express this tension with the term 'controlled sin'
(peccatum regnatum) which expresses the teaching
of the Christian as 'being justified and sinner
at the same time' (simul iustus et peccator), Roman
Catholics think the reality of salvation can only
be maintained by denying the sinful character of
concupiscence. With regard to this question a considerable
rapprochement is reached if LV:E calls the concupiscence
that remains in the justified a 'contradiction to
God' and thus qualifies it as sin" (VELKD 82,29-39).
For 4.5:Law and Gospel (paras. 31-33)
- According to Pauline teaching
this topic concerns the Jewish law as means of salvation.
This law was fulfilled and overcome in Christ. This
statement and the consequences from it have to be
understood on this basis.
- With reference to Canons 19f
of the Council of Trent, the VELKD (89,28-36) says
as follows:
"The ten commandments of course
apply to Christians as stated in many places of
the confessions.. If Canon 20 stresses that a person
..is bound to keep the commandments of God, this
canon does not strike to us; if however Canon 20
affirms that faith has salvific power only on condition
of keeping the commandments this applies to us.
Concerning the reference of the Canon regarding
the commandments of the church, there is no difference
between us if these commandments are only expressions
of the commandments of God; otherwise it would apply
to us."
- The last paragraph is related
factually to 4.3, but emphasizes the 'convicting
function' of the law which is important to Lutheran
thinking.
For 4.6:Assurance of Salvation (paras.34-36) (LV:E
53-56; VELKD 90ff)
- "The question is: How can,
and how may, human beings live before God in spite
of their weakness, and with that weakness?"
(LV:E 53).
- "The foundation and the
point of departure [of the Reformers is] ..the reliability
and sufficiency of God's promise, and the power
of Christ's death and resurrection; human weakness,
and the threat to faith and salvation which that
involves" (LV:E 56).
- The Council of Trent also emphasizes
that "it is necessary to believe that sins
are not forgiven, nor have they ever been forgiven,
save freely by the divine mercy on account of Christ;"
and that we must not doubt "the mercy of God,
the merit of Christ and the power and efficacy of
the sacraments; so it is possible for anyone, while
he regards himself and his own weakness and lack
of dispositions, to be anxious and fearful about
his own state of grace" (Council of Trent,
Session 6, chapter 9, DH 1534).
- "Luther and his followers
go a step farther. They urge that the uncertainty
should not merely be endured. We should avert our
eyes from it and take seriously, practically, and
personally the objective efficacy of the absolution
pronounced in the sacrament of penance, which comes
'from outside.' ..Since Jesus said, 'Whatever you
loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven' (Matt.
16:19), the believer ..would declare Christ to be
a liar ..if he did not rely with a rock-like assurance
on the forgiveness of God uttered in the absolution
..This reliance can itself be subjectively uncertain
- that the assurance of forgiveness is not a security
of forgiveness (securitas); but this must not be
turned into yet another problem, so to speak: the
believer should turn his eyes away from it, and
should look only to Christ's word of forgiveness"
(LV:E 53f).
- "Today Catholics can appreciate
the Reformer's efforts to ground faith in the objective
reality of Christ's promise, 'whatsoever you loose
on earth ....' and to focus believers on the specific
word of absolution from sins. ..Luther's original
concern to teach people to look away from their
experience, and to rely on Christ alone and his
word of forgiveness [is not to be condemned]"
(PCPCU 24).
- A mutual condemnation regarding
the understanding of the assurance of salvation
"can even less provide grounds for mutual objection
today - particularly if we start from the foundation
of a biblically renewed concept of faith. For a
person can certainly lose or renounce faith, and
self-commitment to God and his word of promise.
But if he believes in this sense, he cannot at the
same time believe that God is unreliable in his
word of promise. In this sense it is true today
also that - in Luther's words - faith is the assurance
of salvation" (LV:E 56).
- With reference to the concept
of faith of Vatican II, see Dogmatic Constitution
on Divine Revelation, no. 5: "'The obedience
of faith' ..must be given to God who reveals, an
obedience by which man entrusts his whole self freely
to God, offering 'the full submission of intellect
and will to God who reveals,' and freely assenting
to the truth revealed by Him."
- "The Lutheran distinction
between the certitude (certitudo) of faith which
looks alone to Christ and earthly security (securitas),
which is based on the human being, has not been
dealt with clearly enough in the LV. The question
whether a Christian “has believed fully and
completely” (LV:E 53) does not arise for the
Lutheran understanding, since faith never reflects
on itself, but depends completely on God, whose
grace is bestowed through word and sacrament, thus
from outside (extra nos)" (VELKD 92,2-9).
For 4.7:The Good Works of the Justified (paras.37-39)
(LV:E 66ff, VELKD 90ff)
- "But the Council excludes
the possibility of earning grace - that is, justification
- (can. 2; DS 1552) and bases the earning or merit
of eternal life on the gift of grace itself, through
membership in Christ (can. 32: DS 1582). Good works
are 'merits' as a gift. Although the Reformers attack
'Godless trust' in one's own works, the Council
explicitly excludes any notion of a claim or any
false security (cap. 16: DS 1548f). It is evident
..that the Council wishes to establish a link with
Augustine, who introduced the concept of merit,
in order to express the responsibility of human
beings, in spite of the 'bestowed' character of
good works" (LV:E 66).
- If we understand the language
of "cause" in Canon 24 in more personal
terms, as it is done in chapter 16 of the Decree
on Justification, where the idea of communion with
Christ is foundational, then we can describe the
Catholic doctrine on merit as it is done in the
first sentence of the second paragraph of 4.7: growth
in grace, perseverance in righteousness received
from God and a deeper communion with Christ.
- "Many antitheses could be
overcome if the misleading word 'merit' were simply
to be viewed and thought about in connection with
the true sense of the biblical term 'wage' or reward"
(LV:E 67).
- "The Lutheran confessions
stress that the justified person is responsible
not to lose the grace received but to live in it
..Thus the confessions can speak of a preservation
of grace and a growth in it. If righteousness in
Canon 24 is understood in the sense that it affects
human beings, then it does not strike to us. But
if 'righteousness' in Canon 24 refers to the Christian's
acceptance by God, it strikes to us; for this righteousness
is always perfect; compared with it the works of
Christians are only 'fruits' and 'signs'" (VELKD
94,2-14).
- "Concerning Canon 26, we
refer to the Apology where eternal life is described
as reward: '..We grant that eternal life is a reward
because it is something that is owed - not because
of our merits but because of the promise'"
(VELKD 94,20-24).
[1]The Smalcald
Articles, II,1; Book of Concord, 292.
[2]"Rector
et judex super omnia genera doctrinarum" Weimar
Edition of Luther's Works (WA), 39,I,205.
[3]It should
be noted that some Lutheran churches include only
the Augsburg Confession and Luther's Small Catechism
among their binding confessions. These texts contain
no condemnations about justification in relation to
the Roman Catholic Church.
[4]Report of
the Joint Lutheran-Roman Catholic Study Commission,
published in Growth in Agreement (New York; Geneva,
1984), pp. 168-189.
[5]Published
by the Lutheran World Federation (Geneva, 1994).
[6]Lutheran and
Catholics in Dialogue VII (Minneapolis, 1985).
[7]Minneapolis,
1990.
[8]"Gemeinsame
Stellungnahme der Arnoldshainer Konferenz, der Vereinigten
Kirche und des Deutschen Nationalkomitees des Lutherischen
Weltbundes zum Dokument 'Lehrverurteilungen - kirchentrennend?',"
Ökumenische Rundschau 44 (1995): 99-102; See
also the position papers which underlie this resolution,
in Lehrverurteilungen im Gespräch, Die ersten
offiziellen Stellungnahmen aus den evangelischen Kirchen
in Deutschland (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck &
Ruprecht, 1993).
[9]The word "church"
is used in this Declaration to reflect the self-understandings
of the participating churches, without intending to
resolve all the ecclesiological issues related to
this term.
[10]Cf. "Malta
Report," paras. 26-30; Justification by Faith,
paras. 122-147. At the request of the US dialogue
on justification, the non-Pauline New Testament texts
were addressed in Righteousness in the New Testament,
by John Reumann, with responses by Joseph A. Fitzmyer
and Jerome D. Quinn (Philadelphia; New York:1982),
pp. 124-180. The results of this study were summarized
in the dialogue report Justification by Faith in paras.
139-142.
[11]"All
Under One Christ," para. 14, in Growth in Agreement,
241-247.
[12]Cf. WA 8:106;
American Edition 32:227.
[13]Cf. DS 1528
[14]Cf. DS 1530.
[15]Cf. Apology
II:38-45; Book of Concord, 105f.
[16]Cf. DS 1515.
[17]Cf. DS 1515.
[18]Cf. DS 1545.
[19]Cf. DV 5.
[20]Cf. DV 5.
[21]Condemnations
of the Reformation Era, 27. |