Back on 07-03-14, I published a post (link) that brought into question a thread at the Beggars
All blog (link) which adopted the assertion that the Council of
Trent "reaffirmed" semi-Pelaganism that was "condemned at Orange in 529 AD".
There were also those infamous threads at BA which
attempted to defend the charge that Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI "is
pretty much a full-blown Pantheist" (see this
post for links to those
threads). But, it seems that misrepresentation at BA is not limited to
the Catholic Church...
In a thread published on 03/31/15 at Beggars
All (link), James Swan relates to his readers, "what
the Jehovah's Witnesses have to say about Luther".
He provides selections from a The Watchtower, 09-15-03,
article, with the title, "Martin Luther—The Man and His Legacy"
(available online here).
The first two quotes
pertain directly to Martin Luther, but the third quote, moves beyond the
historical Luther into the realm of theology, specifically, what James believes
JWs believe/teach concerning justification. He prefaces the third quote he
provided from the JW article with:
What I looked for as I read the article was how it
gave testimony to the distinctives of the Watchtower. For instance, the
Watchtower article mentions justification.
The quote itself is immediately followed by the
following:
Someone reading these statements quickly might find
them within the realm of orthodoxy. Certainly it's true that Luther thought
himself not worthy of God's favor. Certainly it's true that Luther had his
evangelical breakthrough by "Bible study, prayer, and meditation."
It is true that "Luther recognized that God’s favor cannot be earned."
It is true that salvation is "by faith and not by works, or penance."
What's missing from these statements is Luther's emphasis on the righteousness
of Christ imputed to sinners (alien righteousness), and the word
"alone," as in "faith alone." The majority of the article
focuses on what Luther did: his works. Without stating it explicitly,
the Watchtower has presented its soteriology: having faith in God and doing
works.
The last portion, "having faith in God and
doing works", is a hyperlink that leads one to an online article,
published on John Ankerberg's apologetic website (LINK).
I have some difficulties with James assessment(s).
First, it is an error to extrapolate that if, "Luther's emphasis on the
righteousness of Christ imputed to sinners (alien righteousness), and the word
'alone,' as in 'faith alone'", are "missing" in an article on
Luther, then one should conclude the soteriology of the author writing the
article denies those concepts. If one adopts such methodology, consistency
would lead one to also conclude that the Bible denies those concepts, for one
will not find therein an explicit statement of, "the righteousness of
Christ imputed to sinners (alien righteousness)", nor will one find the
phrase "faith alone" used in the sense that one is "justified by
faith alone"; in fact, "faith alone" is found only once in the
entire Bible, and it is used in a negative sense: one is NOT justified by
"faith alone" (James 2:24).
Second, one should not rely on a professional
apologist to discern what someone else (and/or group) believes. One should
always let that person, or group, speak for themselves. It is a rare instance
to find a professional apologist giving a totally accurate picture of a person,
or group, he disagrees with. The article linked to by James is unreliable, for
it omits a good deal of germane evidence that contradicts the two authors (Ankerberg and Weldon) conclusion:
Jehovah's Witnesses teach a "works salvation". The following explicit
JW texts are not to be found in their article:
Is anything more than faith needed in order to
gain salvation?
Eph. 2:8, 9, RS: By grace ["undeserved kindness," NW]
is not your own doing, it is the gift of God—not because of works, lest any man
should boast.” (The entire provision for salvation is an expression of God’s
undeserved kindness. There is no way that a descendant of Adam can gain
salvation on his own, no matter how noble his works are. Salvation is a gift
from God given to those who put faith in the sin-atoning value of the sacrifice
of his Son.)
Heb. 5:9, RS: “He
[Jesus] became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey him.”
(Italics added.) (Does this conflict with the statement that Christians are
“saved through faith”? Not at all. Obedience simply demonstrates that their
faith is genuine.)
James 2:14, 26, RS: “What does it profit, my brethren, if a man says he has
faith but has not works? Can his faith save him? For as the body apart from the
spirit is dead, so faith apart from works is dead.” (A person does not earn
salvation by his works. But anyone who has genuine faith will have works
to go with it—works of obedience to the commands of God and Christ, works that
demonstrate his faith and love. Without such works, his faith is dead.)
Acts 16:30, 31 RS: “‘Men, what must I do to be saved?’ And they
[Paul and Silas] said, ‘Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved, you
and your household.’” (If that man and his household truly believed, would they
not act in harmony with their belief? Certainly.) [Reasoning from the
Scriptures, 1985, 1989, p. 359.]
These sheeplike ones are not justified or
declared righteous on the basis of their own works any more than the 144,000
heirs of Christ are. The prime thing that counted was the thing that was
evidenced by their trying to do what they could in behalf of Christ just as the
situation afforded, namely, their faith in him as the Messiah or Christ of God.
They recognized that they had no righeousness wholly pleasing to God in
themselves. In harmony with this they availed themselves of the propitiatory
blood of the sacrificial Lamb of god, Jesus Christ. (John 1:29, 36) To gain a
righteous apperance before Jehovah God, they did a washing, as it were, of
their symbolic robes. [God's Kingdom of a Thousand Years Has Approached, 1973, p. 274.]
Finishing his earthly course free from flaw in any sense of the word, Jesus
was acknowledged by God as justified. He was thus the only man, who through
test, stood firmly and positively just, or righeous before God on his own
merit. By this "one act of justification [form of di•kai'o•ma],"that
is, by Jesus' proving himself perfectly righteous his entire flawless course,
including his sacrifice, he provided the basis for declaring righteous those
persons having faith in Christ.—Rom. 5:17-19; 3:25, 26; 4:25. [Aid to Bible
Understanding, 1971, p. 437; also, Insight on the Scriptures, 1988, vol. 1.604, 605.]
[Note: emphasis in the above selections are in the original.]
The above quotes present the offical view of Jehovah's Witnesses concerning
justification by faith [alone]. No amount of sophistry will change this
teaching into a "works salvation" soteriology, as Ankerberg and
Weldon have attempted to accomplish in their misleading article.
As for the Jehovah's Witnesses view of Martin Luther, the fullest treatment
that I am aware of is in the book, Mankind's Search for God (1990). Chapter
13, "The Reformation—The Search Took a New Turn", is 29 pages long,
with pages 314-319 being devoted to Luther. The treatment is certainly a brief
one, but, I find nothing in it that is historically inaccurate.
Shall end this post here, sincerely hoping that I have brought some clarity and accuracy to the Jehovah's Witnesses view on justification.
Grace and peace,
David