Cecilia said:
Hey everyone!

I'm curious about the Protestant slogan of "Sola Fide". Is it still applicable in the church today?
Hi Cecilia, to answer your first question, yes, Sola Fide remains "the article by which the Church stands or falls". We are saved by Grace alone, through Faith alone, "
NOT as a result of works" (
Ephesians 2:8-9).
Cecilia said:
A Presbyterian minister once told me that faith without works is dead (which is completely true) but how does that comply with Sola Fide?
The first thing for you to understand is that the Reformed faith (or the Protestant faith in general for that matter) completely agrees with both you and the Presbyterian minister you spoke with (and the Bible, of course ..

) "
faith w/o works is dead"! But
Sola Fide isn't about some sort of faith that's void of works, it simply means that "works", which are the natural
end-product (if you will) of saving faith, don't in anyway contribute to or
merit salvation for us. IOW, it's not our works that save us! Only Christ's "works" are capable of doing that!!
Now, for the flip side of the (sola fide) coin, we can simply answer the question posed in James 2:14,
What use is it, my brethren, if someone says he has faith but he has no works? Can that faith save him?
The Protestant answer is, of course,
NO! The kind of faith that "saves" will necessarily result in works, or it should not be considered 'saving' faith. In fact, James himself answers his own question quite nicely for us in
v24. Again, v14 says, "
if someone says he has faith but he has no works? Can that faith save him?" James' answer to that question is "no", because
"a man is justified by works, and not by faith alone". Works are the
proof that a man's faith claim is valid, both to himself AND to others.
Cecilia said:
And what about the biblical references of James 2:24, James 2:20, Romans 4, and Matthew 25:31-46? I'm not about starting a debate or anything, I'm just curious. Thanks!
I think I have covered James 2:20 and 24 above, and Matthew 25 is like them. "Goats" are those who
say they have faith, but they never acted upon it, thus invalidating their claim.
Saving faith results in works as is evidenced by the actions of the "sheep".
As for
Romans 4, I'm not sure what point you are trying to make. This entire chapter is about justification by faith apart from works, is it not? For instance,
v5 says:
"to the one who does not work, but believes ... his faith is credited as righteousness"
Perhaps you could be a little more specific?
I hope this is what you were after. If not, let me know and I'll try again.
Yours and His,
David