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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 death15. 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 death17 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].
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