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The Primitive Doctrine of Justification, Investigated: Relatively to the Several Definitions of the Church of Rome and the Church of England is unavailable, but you can change that!

Elucidating the distinctions on the doctrine of Justification between the Church of Rome and the Church of England, George Stanley Faber’s The Primitive Doctrine of Justification Investigated then explores the texts of the early Church Fathers to determine how they viewed the nature of Justification. A major doctrinal difference between these two Churches, Faber’s exhaustive research and...

is briefly this: that Man is justified before God; not by the Extrinsic Righteousness of Christ, faith being forensically imputed to him instead of a Righteousness of his own which he possesses not; but by an Intrinsic Righteousness, which really as much belongs to him as his soul or his body belong to him, being inherently infused into him by God through faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. The difference between the two Schemes which I have included in a single definition, the Scheme rejected by the
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