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MikeDunphy
Guest
A common Catholic belief is that God is outside of time and can see the entire history of the universe. He already knows the choices you will freely make. What you do in life matters, because God is a just judge. “The elect” are those who enter heaven, but the phrase does not imply double-predestination. “The elect” enter heaven because God wills what is good for them, and they consent to His will. The damned reject God and He does not force Himself on them.So are we to assume that Jesus only died for SOME people, but not all?
Are we now to become Calvinists? How are we to know who makes it to the predestined, the so called “elect” and who is just out of luck no matter what they do?
When I left Protestantism I THOUGHT I was leaving Calvinism far behind. Was I mistaken?
If God has already chosen who Jesus died for, and who he did not die for, then why even fool with baptism and going to Mass everything is already “fixed” no matter what we do or do not do.
Perhaps Jesus at the Last Supper refrained from praying for those eventually damned because He did not want to increase their blameworthiness. Perhaps, on the eve of His suffering, He wanted to show His love particularly for those who return His love.
Some say that both the blessed and the damned are surrounded by the same glory of God, but that the experience of God’s glory is joyful for some and painful to others, depending on the state of their souls. Maybe when Christ our God pays particular attention to people, they experience His glory more intensely, so it would have been a blessing to the saved for Christ to attend to them, and a mercy to the damned for Christ in some sense to pull away from them.
Please note the maybes and the perhapses. If this doesn’t help, I’m sure you can find a better explanation. May God help us to know and love the truth and forgive errors made in good faith.