The Practices Of Liberty In Martin Luther's Treatise On Christian Liberty

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In Martin Luther’s Treatise on Christian Liberty, the idea of sola fide, or faith alone, is introduced and expanded upon. Luther writes that for Christians, their salvation is based on their belief in Jesus as the son of God, who came to Earth, died for our sins, and rose from the dead three days later. Having faith in Christ is what enables a person to be saved or go to heaven, according to Luther’s beliefs. A man’s works are not what earns him a ticket into heaven, rather, it is by his faith in the son of God. Does that mean that works are then not needed? In my perspective, after one professes faith in Jesus on their lips and in their heart, or as Romans 10:9 puts it, “because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” (ESV), then the good works will start to manifest in the new believer’s life due to the changing work of the Holy Spirit inside of him, thus demonstrating that one is saved by faith, but that works should still appear in a Christian’s life.
To start with, in the Treatise of Christian Liberty, Luther addresses this very same issue. After having stated his grounds for why salvation is by grace through faith alone, he then answers the question and statement of “If faith does all things and is alone sufficient unto righteousness, why then are good works commanded? We will take our ease and do no works
Revolutionizing the way that Christians thought about their heavenly father and their salvation. Due to sola fide, many have argued saying that works are no longer important in a Christian's life. In my perspective, though we are saved by grace through faith, but works are still important and necessary in a believer’s life, overall conveying that once we are saved, others will know we are saved by our works, and most importantly, by our love for Christ and

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