[Editor's Note: This poem/prayer makes me think of our brethren in Rumania, Lithuania, Honduras and elsewhere. Are we doing our best to "share the wealth?"]
"Sola" By Jon Quinn
Reprinted from the November, 1998 on-line edition of The Expository Files (http://www.geocities.com/~expository/)
It happened 481 years ago this week (it is the last week in October, 1998 as I write this). It was on October 31, 1517 that Martin Luther tacked a paper to a community bulletin board in Wittenburg, Germany which challenged the Roman Catholic Church on ninety-five different points. From this came growing protests against some of the Church's practices and Luther was labeled "a limb cut off from the Church of God, an obstinate schismatic and manifest heretic."
Protestantism had its beginning during these days, Though Luther's intent had been to reform some of the abuses within the Church, schisms did occur because him and others who were doing the same kind of thing in other areas of Europe; Calvin, Zwingli and Knox.
Luther was reacting against several practices within the Roman Church that were definitely departures from the New Testament. These would include the sale of indulgences, which were the sale of forgiveness and release from purgatory for money given to the Church. One zealous salesman, a Dominican by the name of Tetzel, hawked these indulgences telling folks that "as soon as the money fell into the coffer, a soul was released from purgatory."
At one time, Luther was lecturing on the Psalms and Romans. According to the tradition, as he was reading Romans 1:17; "The just shall live by faith."; he wrote in the margin of his Bible a single Latin word; "Sola" -- which means "alone" and this illumined him to a new way of looking at justification.
Today, most Protestants believe that this doctrine is Scriptural. As often as you hear the phrase, "justified by faith alone" you would expect to find it on every page in the New Testament. You do not. Quite simply, while to be sure the practices of the Roman Church were shameful, the "faith only" doctrine was an over-reaction to those practices. The Bible never uses the term. Not once. Well, maybe once, but not twice.
But, once is enough. If the Bible teaches about "faith alone" just once, that will be enough for me. The Scriptures of God really do not have to teach a thing twice for it to be true. Just once is enough, and the Bible uses the term "faith alone" one time. So, whatever the Bible says about "faith alone" I will gladly accept and teach. Will you? What does it say?
"You see that a man is justified by works, and not by faith alone." (James 2:24). That's it. The sole use of the phrase "faith alone" in the Scriptures. It is no coincidence that this is what I teach about faith alone. I teach that one is not justified by faith alone. Once is enough for God to say a thing for me. That's what faith is all about, isn't it? It is about accepting what God says in His word (Romans 10:17).
Bible Quiz by Kenneth C. Davis
reprinted from USA Weekend December 18, 1998.
1. T or F: The "forbidden fruit" of the Garden of Eden was an apple.
2. T or F: Jesus was an only child.
3. T or F: Moses had a speech impediment.
4. T or F: Mary Magdalene, one of Jesus' loyal followers, was a harlot.
5. T or F: Jonah spent three days in the belly of a whale.
6. T or F: The word "Easter" and the phrases "immaculate conception," holy trinity," and "original sin" never appear in the Bible.
7. T or F: Jesus' last name was Christ.
8. T or F: Jesus was born on Dec. 25.
Answers to the Bible Quiz.
1. False. The forbidden fruit is never identified in Genesis.
2. False. The Gospels mention brothers and sisters of Jesus. One brother, James, was a leader of the early church.
3. True. Moses tells God he stutters and would not be a good spokesman.
4. False. The is no suggestion in the Bible that she was either a prostitute or an adulteress.
5. False: The Bible says great fish, not a whale. Whales are not fish.
6. True. "Easter" is derived from the name of the Anglo-Saxon goddess of the dawn, Oestre. The other words refer to doctrines formulated by theologians.
7. False. Christ is a title bestowed on Jesus that means "anointed one."
8. False. That was the date of the winter solstice, a Pagan holiday in Rome. The Christians appropriated it for their own festival.
[Editor's Note: I do not know Kenneth C. Davis' denominational persuasion, but I must say his answers to his own quiz are courageous in this day and age. Davis is the author of a book entitled, "Don't Know Much About...The Bible."]
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