|


God's Word Needs No Authority
Other Than Itself
Mary Ann Pakiz
God's Word
needs no authority other than itself. When I comprehended that
principle, I was free—free to search the Scriptures for truth! In
them, I found the way to God. Man gets to God, God's way, through
Jesus Christ, as revealed in the Bible. "I am the way, the truth,
and the life; no man cometh unto the Father but by me" (John
14:6).
The Authority Issue
For many years, I had been led to believe that the Catholic
Church was the final authority of my faith, and that I had no
right to question its teaching. The Roman Catholic system teaches
that all authority comes from God, but that God has appointed the
Catholic system to be the guardian of His authority. Therefore,
everything has to be weighed in the light of Catholic tradition
and teaching, as theirs is held to be the only system in which
truth is deposited. A Catholic cannot believe in the Scriptures
without the authority of the Church to accredit the Scriptures!
The Roman Catholic Church declares that God's authority is not
sufficient to oblige men to believe and bow to it; it seeks to
place church authority above God's authority. True faith is faith
in what God has said because God has said it! Faith in God is
belief in God's Word, the Bible, without any authority other than
itself. "Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt
thou serve" (Luke 4:8).
Catholic Baptism
I came under Catholic authority in 1948 when I was re-baptized
and converted to Catholicism. I was born in 1930 to Finnish
immigrant parents of a Lutheran persuasion. Our neighbors, who
were immigrants from Yugoslavia and Italy, had a strong influence
on my formative years. As exemplary Catholics, who witnessed to
us about their faith, and who lived lives of good works and good
deeds, of which we often were the recipients, they were committed
to bringing the neighborhood under the headship of Rome. They
reached out to us with what they thought was the truth. They were
sincere, but sincerely wrong. It is important to remember that
individual Catholics are not our enemies; rather, they are
precious souls whom God loves and for whom He commands us to
reach with the Gospel of His Grace. Salvation is by grace. Grace
is unmerited favor. We cannot earn grace, nor do we deserve
grace. "For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of
yourselves, it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man
should boast" (Ephesians 2:8-9).
Faith's Object
The Roman Catholic believes that salvation is based on water and
works. Baptismal regeneration is the cornerstone of the Catholic
system. The Church teaches that no one can enter the kingdom of
heaven unless he or she is baptized. The source of Catholic faith
is the Church. Its object is loyalty to the Church. Therefore,
Catholic faith is in itself. The Christian, however, knows that
salvation is based on Christ's work alone, a finished work to
which nothing can be added. The source of Christian faith is the
Bible. Its object is Jesus Christ. Therefore, true faith is in a
Person. In order for faith to be operative, it must be anchored
to the person of Jesus Christ.
Blind Acceptance
Rather than searching the Scriptures for truth to find out if
Catholic teaching was in line with God's Word, I blindly accepted
everything the priest told me during my instructions to become a
Catholic, except for one request. He asked me to bring my King
James version of the Bible to the rectory which he said had to be
burned because it was not the official Catholic version. Instead,
I gave it to my mother.
During my instructions, the stress was on papal supremacy and
infallibility. I was told that Christ made Peter the first pope
to head the Church on earth with infallible authority. The Pope,
as Christ's representative on earth, guided all people, Catholic
or not, into all truth (Vatican Council, 1870). Presently, as I
reflect on this Church tenet, I do not find any evidence from
Scripture that Christ actually gave any such authority to Peter
or even that the apostles considered Peter to have a special
position of authority. Furthermore, Peter would have known that
he was a pope and certainly would have said something about it.
If he had know it, how is it that he did not act as pope?
Becoming a "Bride of Christ"
In 1950, I took another step to come further under Catholic
authority by entering the Order of St. Benedict to become a
sister. I had been working as a nurse's aide at a local hospital
run by the Benedictine Sisters, and, as I was so impressed with
their gracious service to the patients and staff, I decided that
I, too, wanted to spend my life serving others.
My first year in the convent, as a postulant, was one of the
happiest years of my life. Our postulant mistress was a kind,
fair, and understanding woman. There were eighteen girls of
various ages and backgrounds in our group. They were eager and
excited to serve the Catholic Church and to live by the rule of
St. Benedict. We shared many happy times together. There were
more serious moments for me, too, when I prayed in the chapel and
gazed up at the crucifix wondering why Jesus had to die on
Calvary's Cross.
Before we became novices, we marched down the church aisle in
bridal attire to become "brides of Christ". Nothing much was said
about Jesus as we prepared for this event. Rather, our emotions
were at high pitch over the changes in our names. I went from
Miss Mary Ann to Sr. M. Laurian, O.S.B. I was a bride of Christ,
and I knew little about Him other than He was the Son of God.
A Stockpile of Good Works
During the five year preparation period for our final vows, we
studied the Rule of Saint Benedict, canon law, church history, a
bit about Jesuit causistry (the end justifies the means), and the
lives of the saints. The emphasis was on self-denial and
submission of one's will to the authority figure under whose
charge we were. St. Therese, the Little Flower, was held up
before us as a role model so we would emulate her way to God. It
was a way based on "offering up" the daily vexations of life to
make up for our sins or the sins of others. We were busy trying
to build a stockpile of good works by which we could make
ourselves more acceptable to God. We were offering our self-made
sacrifices to God because we did not know that we could get to
God because of the offering Jesus Christ made of Himself in our
behalf at Calvary. When Jesus said to God, "I have finished the
work which thou gavest me to do," He meant the work He did in
behalf of sinners was complete and could not be added to (John
17:4).
Back in the World
In our last three years as scholastics, some of the group left
the motherhouse for teaching assignments in the diocese. We
returned in the summer, and it was great to be back together
again. I needed the rest and relaxation after my first year of
teaching forty-five students in grades five and six combined. I
had no training in elementary education but was told there would
be a blessing in obedience. In 1955, five months before my final
vows, I left the convent due to health problems and returned to
the home of my parents.
Back in the world, I was able to get on with my life, by
completing my education at the University of Minnesota, earning a
Bachelor of Science Degree in Elementary Education, and in 1957,
married a man from a staunch Catholic family. We were blessed
with two children. My husband's brother is a priest in our
diocese; a humble, sweet man who writes poetry about nature, God,
and his church.
Salvation's Meaning Brought Home
In 1972, my children, then ages twelve and five, were invited to
a neighborhood backyard Bible club. We asked our priest-uncle if
they could attend; he didn't seem to be concerned about it and
gave his consent. This had to be the work of God! From that point
on, our lives were dramatically changed!
The children came home each day with Bible verses to memorize.
When they recited them, God touched my heart as well as theirs. I
learned the most important truth about myself--I was a sinner,
and, as such, was separated from God! Because God permits no sin
or sinner in heaven, I was lost! How was I going to solve this
sin issue? I wanted to be sure I would go to heaven when I died.
I decided to study the Bible on my own. John 17:17, in which
Jesus said to God, "Sanctify them through thy truth; thy word is
truth", was the first verse the Holy Spirit used to undergird my
study of salvation.
My search for answers began in Acts 16:31, "Believe on the Lord
Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved"", and Acts 4:12, "Neither
is there salvation in any other; for there is no other name under
heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved." Moving on to
Romans, I learned that Christ satisfied the just demands of a
Holy God for judgment on sin by His death on the Cross.
"Therefore, we conclude that a man is justified by faith apart
from the deeds of the law" (Romans 3:28).
It was an overwhelming realization that none of my past sins had
ever been dealt with, even though I had confessed them to the
priest and performed the prescribed penance! Going to confession
had given me a counterfeit peace and security that my sins had
been forgiven by the words of the priest plus the doing of
penance. Actually, the priest does not have the power to forgive
sins even if he claims he does so in the name of Jesus. Our sins
are forgiven only by appropriating the shed blood of Jesus in our
place. "For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God.
Being justified freely by His grace through the redemption that
is in Christ Jesus, Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation
through faith in His blood, to declare His righteousness for the
remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God"
(Romans 3:23-25). God has never given authority to any person to
make the decision as to whether another person's sins will be
forgiven or not, as He is the only one who truly knows what is in
that person's heart. My search caused me to be able to answer the
question I asked of myself while in the convent as to why Jesus
had to die on the Cross. Jesus paid the price for my sin by His
death on the Cross! Jesus paid our hell-death penalty in full.
Yes, we deserve hell for our sins. Remember, under no
circumstance, will God allow sin or a sinner in His heaven. Jesus
paid the penalty for our sin so we can spend eternity with God in
heaven. The time had come for me to make a decision. Acting on
the Bible, as my sole, absolute, and final authority of faith, I
received Christ as my Savior in May of 1973. I wanted to shout
from the roof tops so all the world could hear what Jesus has
done for them by His substitutionary atonement and shed blood.
"And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free"
(John 8:32).
True Christian Faith and the Roman System
As I witnessed to my Catholic friends and relatives, I saw more
clearly that the eternal destiny of many souls was at stake here.
I was grieved by their response to the Gospel, they continued to
believe that the Catholic Church was the one true church and they
trusted it for salvation regardless of what the Bible said. In
other words, they had been brought up allowing other human beings
or a set of man-made rules to do their thinking for them. In
1545, the Council of Trent declared that church tradition was of
equal authority with the Bible. To put anything on a par with or
above God's Word is idolatry! In fact, the "leaven" of the
Catholic system is the discrediting of the Bible as the sole,
absolute, and final authority of faith.
We must think of God rightfully as He is revealed to us through
His Word. God the Father and God the Son are one. In John 10:30,
Jesus said, "I and my Father are one." Because Jesus Christ is
God, our sins have been cleansed in the blood of God; only the
perfect blood of God could wash them completely away in order to
thus satisfy the demands of a holy and righteous God. The ground
of my salvation or the basis of my justification is the perfect
righteousness of Jesus Christ, and, when I, by faith, receive
(appropriate) the substitutionary atonement of Jesus in my place
as full payment of my hell-death penalty, God imputes the
righteousness of Jesus Christ to me. That is, He reckons me as
righteous. In no way am I righteous of myself, and as such in no
way can I save myself or keep myself saved; it is all of Jesus!
Jesus Christ is my righteousness. It is only "in Christ" that I
am righteous. I am not worthy to approach God of myself. However,
when I approach God in my substitute, that is, in Christ, I am
accounted worthy to do so by God because He sees me in the
perfect righteousness of His Son! Justification of the believer
is instantaneous.
The Catholic system denies that we are justified by that faith
which receives and rests on Christ alone for salvation which is
freely offered to us by grace. Instead, they teach we are
justified, not simply by faith in Christ, but by faith which has
become activated by good works. This faith, as taught in the
Catholic system, is said to justify the sinner, not because it
rests on the righteousness of Christ, but because it is a
righteousness inherent in man, a righteousness which is the
product of baptism which makes an individual capable of obedience
to the teaching of the Catholic system of divine grace through
the sacraments. Justification is not of faith, but of the
sacraments. So, therefore, the justification of the Catholic
individual is progressive, being regenerated by baptism, being
purified from time to time by confession and penance, growing in
grace and holiness through the reception of the other sacraments,
so that one day he or she will be holy enough to make it to
purgatory! So, then, the Catholic believes he is accepted by God
by his inherent righteousness which has been sacramentally
infused at baptism and nourished by the worthy reception of the
other sacraments. As the Catholic receives sanctifying grace
attached to each sacrament, he or she is taught that he or she
actually becomes righteous or holy on the basis of his own
intrinsic word without any righteousness imputed.
My Mission Field
The differences between the true Christian faith and the Roman
Catholic system were becoming so obvious to me that in 1976, I
left the Catholic Church and took my place with Bible-believing
Christians. When I was saved in 1973, I told the Lord that I
would be willing to go to the mission field anywhere. He took me
at my word, and, in 1994, sent me to my mission field--dialysis.
He permitted my kidney to fail first, and in order to survive, I
need dialysis therapy three times a week. I thank and praise God
in these circumstances as He has given me the opportunity to
share His precious Gospel of Grace with seriously ill patients
who need to prepare to meet God!
Taken from: The Truth Set Us
Free: Twenty Former Nuns Tell Their Stories
Richard Bennett, Editor With Mary Hertel
The Book
Under the title The Truth Set Us Free: Twenty Former Nuns
Tell Their Stories, this important new collection is now
available. The testimonies give authentic first hand
documentation of how under the authority of the Bible by the
grace of God alone, these women saw through the Roman Catholic
system.
Many Catholics exhibit intense, consistent, and often covert
interest in the testimonies of nuns who have left "Holy Mother
Church". It stands to reason that the drawing card for these
readers, haunted by their own lack of peace with God, is that in
these testimonies of the Catholic system's own dedicated women
leaving her and surviving, there may be a clue for them
personally. Indeed, they may be right--since the thread which
binds the testimonies together is the witness of the truth of the
Bible as the factor which converted each nun from Roman
Catholicism to true faith in God through Jesus Christ alone.
The second purpose of the collection is to inform truthfully all
Bible believing churches and people about the realities of the
Roman system. These converted women straightforwardly articulate
the deception which they had been taught, the form of the
deception which they had lived, and the truth which has set them
free.
In form, the book is classic: each woman tells her own story.
Strong draught which destroys today's proffered ecumenical sop,
these testimonies of conversion from the Roman Catholic system to
Biblical faith which these women voice are wrung from their
hearts, by the Spirit. Thus the conflict--some of it of long
duration, some of it quite intense--reflects clearly the light of
Scripture as each tells of how that light circumcised her own
heart.
Print this page | Back
to Top
|