What is the penalty for not believing in God? Are you sure you know who gets into heaven and who doesn’t?
Yup Seems like someone said something once about Reject me and I’ll reject you, hmm, let’s see…ah, here it is.
Mt 10:32-33
32 Every one therefore that shall confess me before men, I will also confess him before my Father who is in heaven. 33 But he that shall deny me before men, I will also deny him before my Father who is in heaven.
I’d say that pretty well clears it up. But, I guess if you’re willing to take that bet, go for it.
Invincible ignorance works as a claim for some, but only if it is truly genuine, and not born of pride.
Invincible ignorance, whether of the law or of the fact, is always a valid excuse and excludes sin. The evident reason is that neither this state nor the act resulting therefrom is voluntary. It is undeniable that a man cannot be invincibly ignorant of the natural law, so far as its first principles are concerned, and the inferences easily drawn therefrom. This, however, according to the teaching of St. Thomas, is not true of those remoter conclusions, which are deducible only by a process of laborious and sometimes intricate reasoning. Of these a person may be invincibly ignorant. Even when the invincible ignorance is concomitant, it prevents the act which it accompanies from being regarded as sinful. The perverse temper of soul, which in this case is supposed, retains, of course, such malice as it had. Vincible ignorance, being in some way voluntary, does not permit a man to escape responsibility for the moral deformity of his deeds; he is held to be guilty and in general the more guilty in proportion as his ignorance is more voluntary.
Hence,
the essential thing to remember is that
the guilt of an act performed or omitted in vincible ignorance is not to be
measured by the intrinsic malice of the thing done or omitted so much
as by the degree of negligence discernible in the act./QUOTE] In other words, you are responsible for putting into practice as much as you can understand, and if you miss the finer points of something because you are either incapable of understanding it, you’re home-free. However, if you decide that you just ‘won’t learn’ so that you can retain ‘ignorance’, well, you’re still guilty of it.
**Originally Posted by Leela **
I can. It is my understanding that being a Catholic is no guarantee of salvation and that not being a Catholic is no guarantee of damnation, so Eklecktika’s comments about belittling Catholic faith in terms of wagering seem way off point.
Do I have that right? Is there anything one can do to guarantee a ticket to Heaven?
I wasn’t belittling the catholic faith. I’m not sure how, exactly, you inferred that, but as that’s not germane to the subject, we’ll leave sleeping dogs alone. That was a wager-now considered the classic argument for belief in the light of uncertainty- set by Blaise Paschal, regarding the argument against the existence of God. He makes the argument that a wager requiring finite effort for a potentially infinite gain, is obviously the correct choice, when the alternative is to NOT extend finite effort, and risk infinite loss. His point was that when one has no way of determining the veracity of either side of the argument, it’s best to reduce it to the simplest logical argument possible, and look at risk vs reward. Do your best to live the way He asks, maybe gain everything, maybe gain nothing. Live like a hedonist, definitely lose everything either way.

Looks pretty obvious to me. That isn’t using Hell as a cudgel, that’s using Heaven as a reason!
The Bible itself seems to be of two minds on the matter of whether or not belief is enough or works are enough and I don’t think Catholics claim to know what combination of belief and works is sufficient. Is that correct?
The bible isn’t the sole source of revelation. Christ says “Do all these things that I have told you” yet the same bible states that not everything Christ did was written down. How could the bible possibly be the “final word” when it wasn’t even compiled until 300 years after Christ’s death, and not readily available to the public for another 1200 years?
I’m pretty sure that if a person were to say “God, I don’t know exactly what you want, but I’m trying my very hardest to do it right”, He might cut you some slack, whereas I doubt saying “Gee, God, I don’t know what you want, so I’m not going to even try to figure it out, because I’m pretty sure it doesn’t matter anyway, but I can’t know for sure” will impress him very much.
I have no delusion about my religion-my church-saving me, Leela. Christ is the one who will do the saving; My belief simply colors my actions and determines what I do, and don’t do. If I do my best, repent when I fail, and trust in Him, what more can I do? He has said that He is Absolute Justice.
If you really want a guaranteed ticket to Heaven, go to confession on a regular basis, receive communion as often as possible, and love your neighbor, as Betterave stated. No one is guaranteed anything but doing that will be the best chance you can hope to get.