Really, it all comes back to this: Grace builds on nature; it doesn't destroy it. That's why we can ask of ourselves logical coherence in theological systems. You literally can't say "God does it all" and "Man is not an automaton" for the same system. Well, you could, but you'd be a fideist.
And since all Christian theology relies on the God who reveals Himself in Jesus Christ, (that is shared in common) I am supposed to rely on the superior hermeneutical abilities of Martin Luther and friends (I guess) to somehow deal with the dissonance of the fact that you just asked me to believe in the theological equivalent of a square circle.
Unfortunately for Luther, the basic principle behind CCC, 100 hasn't changed in forever. Something to think about.
And since all Christian theology relies on the God who reveals Himself in Jesus Christ, (that is shared in common) I am supposed to rely on the superior hermeneutical abilities of Martin Luther and friends (I guess) to somehow deal with the dissonance of the fact that you just asked me to believe in the theological equivalent of a square circle.
Unfortunately for Luther, the basic principle behind CCC, 100 hasn't changed in forever. Something to think about.
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