Wherefore that we are justified by faith ONLY, is a most wholesome doctrine, and very full of comfort,' &c.
See here, they are disowned by the gospel, because they sought it not by faith; that is, by faith only.
And whatever is true about free grace and justification by faith only, is true because, and only because, this free grace and this justifying faith are necessary means or steps towards the realization of actual righteousness.
It is faith only, and not works, however splendid, which justifies or enables God to take a man, place him amongst the righteous, and work upon and in him.
You see, then, how important it is to have a right view about justification by faith only.
I mean, for instance, the Article says that we are justified by faith only; now the Protestant sense of this statement is point blank opposite to our standard divines: the question was, what I was to say when asked my sense of it.
Freeborn; "why it's in the Articles; the Articles expressly say that we are justified by faith only.
Then why do you make so much of your doctrine of 'faith only'?
Then said I: 'Theckla, thou learnest the alphabet by faith only.
The proclamation of free grace, emancipation from the Law, justification by faith only, in the sixteenth century quickened into being heresies which had lain dead through long ages.
When he proclaimed Justification by Faith only, it was held that he swept away for ever obligation to keep the Commandments.
Though the Valentinians are not accused of licentiousness, their ethical system was plainly immoral, for it completely emancipated the Christian from every restraint, and the true Christian was he who lived by faith only.
Do you see that by works a man is justified; and not by faith only?
It is an undeniable fact, that, in the nine sermons already mentioned, there is scarcely a single trace of the doctrine of justification by faith only.
The only interpretation to be given to what Whitefield here relates is, that he now, at Gloucester, was made more thoroughly to understand the great Scripture doctrine of justification by faith only.
Faith only maketh a man, The member of Christ; The inheritour of heavin; The servand of God.
May we not say, in passing, that the common instinctive sense of the moral discord of self-applause, above all in spiritual things, is one among many witnesses to the truth of our justification by faith only?
Quite recently his Judaist rivals had invaded the congregations of Galatia, and had led the impulsive converts there to quit what seemed their firm grasp on the truth of Justification by Faith only.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "faith only" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.