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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 believer13,
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].
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