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Faith Alone : Debates About Justification Before the Reformation

2026 - Augsburg Fortress Publisher

466 p.

Faith Alone investigates the post-apostolic debates over salvation and justification by faith. Author Erik A. Estrada demonstrates that, contrary to the historical outlook of a good number of Catholic and Protestant historians and theologians, there were indeed conflicts within the Great Church (ca. 100-700 CE) over the question "After baptism, is faith alone enough to save the orthodox Christian?" Demonstrating that there were such internal conflicts about justification by faith alone matters because most church historians and historical theologians believe that such debates only began with the reformations of the sixteenth century. Because of this misperception of early Christian history, scholars have regarded the early orthodox church as having little, if anything, to say about the chief point of religious dispute during the early modern era namely, "Is the Christian saved or justified by faith alone?" The unintended consequence of this prevalent view is that it is commonly believed that the early church

had little role in shaping the sixteenth-century reformations, especially on the topic of salvation. One can thus study the Protestant Reformation with little background knowledge of ancient orthodox Christianity. Faith Alone , however, argues that there were indeed vigorous debates about this matter within the walls of the orthodox church, and that those debates continued past the early Christian era and into the early Middle Ages (ca. 600-1100 CE), where their records were left for later generations to ponder. [Publisher's Text]