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Abraham Justified through Faith[a]

Chapter 4

Justified through Faith, Not Works.[b] What then are we to say about Abraham, our ancestor according to the flesh? If Abraham was justified by the works he did, he has good reason to boast, but not in the eyes of God. For what does Scripture say? “Abraham placed his faith in God, and it was credited to him as righteousness.”[c]

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Footnotes

  1. Romans 4:1 There is but one dispensation, that of grace and faith, which excludes all human pride and allows us to receive everything from God with thanksgiving. The story of Abraham is the purest illustration of this truth. Christian faith is present germinally in the faith of the father of believers (see Gal 3:6-8).
  2. Romans 4:1 The father of believers can do nothing that is of value before God. He is regarded as just, i.e., holy and close to God, because he acknowledges that he is poor and entrusts himself wholly to the Lord. To forgive sins constitutes the gratuitous act par excellence, the act of God (vv. 7-8).
  3. Romans 4:3 At first glance, it seems that the Letter of James (2:24) goes against this statement of Paul. However, it is clear from the context in James that the phrase “by works and not by faith alone” does not mean that genuine faith is not sufficient for justification but rather that faith unaccompanied by works is not genuine. Thus, the teaching of James does not conflict with that of Paul.