How Luther came to adopt the sola fidestheory is exhaustively explained by H.
The sola fides theory is open to serious objection also from the ethical point of view.
The first part at least of this injunction was promptly obeyed by his followers, and the rapid deterioration of morals which followed was but a natural sequel of the sola fides theory.
With the exception of “sola fides” there was probably no shibboleth in the sixteenth century so persistently dinned into the ears of Catholics and Protestants alike as “iustitia Christi extra nos.
Thanks to these errors, the “sola fides” and assurance of salvation stand bereft of their theological support.
It was, however, a vastly more difficult matter to find comfort in the bare “Sola Fides” than it had been for the ancestors of these Evangelicals to find it in the Church’s way.
It occupies almost the same place in his mind as the “sola fides” at a later date.
The Silesian also ruthlessly attacked the imputation of the merits of Christ by means of the Sola Fides.
Melanchthon at a later date abandoned the ‘sola fides’ and came to advocate a modified form of synergism.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "sola fides" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.