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| | [No title] (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11) |
 | | This position claims that since both justification and the final acquittal are forensic, they must both be based solely and exclusively on the imputed righteousness of Christ; while since both regeneration, sanctification and glorification are transformative, they must be based solely and exclusively on infusion of grace. |
 | | Turretin, as we have seen, is willing to call good works "the means and way for possessing salvation," and "necessary to the obtainment of it," but these statements are in the context of sanctification and glorification. |
 | | When you say that works are not a required condition for standing at the final day, you contradict the scriptures, which everywhere describe the final judgment as a judgment according to works. |
| www.nd.edu /~pwallace/GAjudgment.htm (683 words) |
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