> being a believer means we summit to the higher authority!
Of course we submit to a higher authority. We submit to God, to the Holy Spirit (who is guiding us into all truth), and to the Word of God, the authoritative revelation of God and guide for life.
> we must use our brains to discern but when it comes to matters of faith
Agreed. John said to test the spirits (1 Jn. 4.1). We see the Bereans checking up on the apostle Paul to make sure he was teaching it right (Acts 17.11). Our minds are key to discernment, knowledge, understanding, and testing for truth.
> 1-What is your church
I'm a Protestant. Not sure what this matters. We all acknowledge and submit to the authority of the Word of God. It is the revelation of God via the Holy Spirit (2 Pet. 1.20-21).
> the people in your church also believes that the bible is wrong?
No, no one in my church believes the Bible is wrong, nor do I. The Bible is God-breathed and is profitable for teaching, rebuking, correcting, and training in righteousness (2 Tim. 3.16).
> "justified by works and not by faith alone"
I've already covered this with you. Please don't just ignore what I say.
First I said this: "James concurs with what we learned from Abraham, Jesus, and Paul: what a person does shows that he has been justified. The last phrase ("and not by faith alone") brings it home: Faith must show itself in deeds as Abraham's and Rahab's did. It has been James’s point all along:
* 1.12. True faith allows you to persevere under trial. It’s a test, much like Abraham’s.
* 1.22, 25. It’s not just a matter of faith (because you listened), but faith that acts.
* 1.27. Real faith shows itself in practical matters.
* 2.1-4, 8. Real faith shows itself in the way we treat people.
* 2.14. Real faith is followed by appropriate godly deeds.
* 2.18. We show our faith by our deeds.
Catch the flow, bro. This is James's point: Faith has to show itself in practical goodness in real life. It's not about that works are part of salvation, but that works are one of the evidences of salvation."
Then I said this: "the sequence matters. Eph. 2.8-9: For by grace we are saved through faith, not by works (though works are necessary [Eph. 2.10]). James is the same way: salvation first, works second, though works are necessary. James is writing to believers, and his outrage is at the great plague of Christianity: hypocrisy—people who say they believe, but then don't live it.
They use the words with different definitions. What Paul and James meant by "faith" and "works" are entirely different things. For Paul, people are justified by putting their "faith" in God (belief, trust, allegiance). For James, "faith" is not trust, belief, or allegiance, but instead what you put into practice. James is not talking about how one comes to Christ but rather what is appropriate after one comes to Christ. That's his whole treatise.
For Paul, "works" are works of the Law, thought by Jews to get them into heaven. Therefore, works to attain salvation are beyond worthless. For James, "works" are the manifestation of practical religion. Therefore, works as an expression of one's faith are priceless.
When Paul talks about justification, he's talking about how we come to Christ. When James talks about justification, he's talking about how one manifests Christ. Both Paul and James advocate living out your faith, and they both speak of good works as the result of faith and salvation, not the cause of it. They also both teach that justification (made right with God by grace through faith) results in sanctification (a changed life of good works)."
You can't just read the words. First, it matters how James is using the words; second, it matters what he means by them.
James is definitely not saying that works are how we get saved. You have to ignore his whole flow, how he defines those words, and what he means by them to distort them into saying that a person is saved by works in addition to grace.
> Matthew 25.31-35
The problem with your reference to this text is that Jesus is not talking about how one gets saved. Matthew 25 is about accountability for how we have lived. In the case of this particular piece, it's about compassion for others. God expects us to act with generosity and justice, and there are degrees of reward in heaven. Our love for others shows our faith is real (J. 13.35). You don't get to heaven because you've been good, but your degree of reward is based on how you live in this life (2 Cor. 5.10). And people who are not in heaven will receive punishments commensurate with their deeds as well (this text and ones like Rev. 20.13).
> 2 Cor. 11.9
I have no idea what this verse has anything to do with what we're discussing. You'll have to explain. There is absolutely nothing here about Paul claiming that his works are contributing to salvation.
> Paul is talking about the jewish law. Works of salvation to christians are the ones that Christ told us to do (baptism etc).
Paul is certainly talking about the Jewish law. No contention there. And there are certainly things that Christ told us to do (love for others, be baptized, serve one another, humility, communion [Eucharist], deny oneself, take up one's cross, follow him, follow God's example, etc.). But there are no works contributing to salvation. The work has been done by Jesus. Our call is to follow (in baptism, in love, in service, in humility, in remembrance, in suffering). And more.
* In baptism: Rom. 6.4
* In love: Jn. 13.34
* In service: Jn. 13.12-17
* In humility: Mt. 11.29
* In remembrance: Lk. 22.19
* In suffering: Mt. 24.9; Phil. 3.10
and more.
We are saved by belief (Acts 16.31; Rom. 10.10). We are saved by God's grace (Eph. 2.8-9). We are saved by following Jesus (Mt. 16.24). We are justified by grace (Rom. 3.24), apart from works of the law (Rom. 3.28).
James is clear: We prove our faith by our deeds (2.18). That's what he means by his words. Faith without works that result from it is a false faith (2.26). It is in that sense that James means works are necessary for faith (2.24).