If I may, I'd like to use your post to move away from the unproductive jousting about "faith-alone" which IMO is simply a failed systematic theology at this point of its history. It began with a purpose, but it's become a slogan for a tradition that at minimum does not understand biblical Faith, which I assume most of us would agree is an incredibly important word for all of us to properly understand.
I'm going to begin by saying I've been looking at ways to think about how the Text ultimately written by the Creator of the Universe is structured. Lexical words like "synonyms" just seem to fall short when trying to explain how words and concepts in the Bible interact and are interconnected. At the moment I'm using "entanglement" theory from physics. The Bible seems to me to be an entanglement. It's words are entangled, interconnected in a way that in-depth studies
always lead from one word to another. In a way, if we could think more like Him, maybe the entire Text can be reduced to one word, one thought, and in that one word all the Text is contained. Maybe this is comparable to His saying His name in YHWH.
To cut this short, these theological systems that choose one word to focus on and to isolate are simply treating the Text unnaturally and in doing so end up in error. It seems to me "faith-
alone" is in essence the epitome of this.
This is being done on the fly, so to speak, to see where it takes me or us, assuming I continue. I'm going to be very technical with the language of the Text because I think we take too much for granted when we compare verses and words. Greek is very specific and very detailed much unlike English.
Please don't take this as being confrontational. I'm just going to be dealing with what's stated both by you and very literally in places in the Text. I'm going to use [ ] to show where interpretive English translation is taking place. I'me going to use "pistis" for faith because some tend to want to translate it different ways especially in faith-alone discussions.
Is "The phrase
“saved by faith”' "absolutely biblical" per the referenced verses?
- Eph2:8-9 says [by] grace you are saved [through] pistis...
- Rom5:1 says: Therefore, [since] we were justified-declared righteous-vindicated-freed [ek-from] pistis...
- Looking just at these parts of the Text, I don't immediately see them telling us "saved by faith" is absolutely biblical. But I'm looking for intensive biblical accuracy - the mind of Christ - and taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ.
Although based upon the "because..." statement I might find a way to agree with the premise that "faith alone must be carefully understood", at this point I think we may be long past working with this slogan other than to go back to where it began and realize the context in which it was originally used.
I do find some agreement with what's stated in this "because..." statement. Biblical Pistis is a concept that is entangled with several other words that become facets of pistis apart from which pistis is not "true faith". Obedience and repentance are attached to pistis. Repentance may well be a part of it, but maybe more in a lexically and logically sequential way. Obedience on the other hand is absolutely entangled with pistis to such a degree that it is essentially used synonymously with pistis in the Text. They are used as co-defining responses to the Gospel - the Gospel is believed and the Gospel is obeyed. They are not sequential. They are co-instantiated and mutually defining expressions.
This is the beginning issue with faith-alone soteriology. It has isolated pistis from other words that define and explain it - words that are facets of pistis and integral parts of it. Then we also have to deal with the multiple expressions of the soteriological system. What's the point? We have the Text.
I'll try to continue when I have time. Maybe some will respond to this first session. If it's not productive maybe I'll stop here.