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So, what I am getting from your last paragraph is that God created some souls to attain everlasting life in heaven. (sainthood). And he created other souls to languish in everlasting punishment. Is that what you mean?
Even though, some are roses and some are a lowly daisy, all are in God’s garden. (heaven and are therefore saints). What is wrong with my understanding of these words?
Exactly. What I’m getting from his opinion is that we are not equal in the eyes of God: that those of us who are not called to be Saints are to spend the rest of eternity in purgatory or hell. Sounds like predestination to me.
When we get to heaven, whether the church recognizes us or not, we become Saints. IMHO, the canonization of Saints is an exercising of the Church’s authority to bind or loose. She is declaring that a certain saint is already in heaven. This is ascertained by the Church through the miracles that occur with the Saint’s intercession–proof that the saint is now in the company of Christ. Now, the Church canonizes a Saint also so that the faithful, us saints, can follow in his/her footsteps.
Indeed we need grace to be a Saint. But it doesn’t stop there. Yes, grace enables us, but we need to freely choose and love Him extraordinarily. This was what St. Ignatius of Loyola meant with “magis.” In the First Principle and Foundation found in the Spiritual Exercises…
*The human person is created to praise, reverence, and serve God Our Lord, and by doing so, to save his or her soul.
All other things on the face of the earth are created for human beings in order to help them pursue the end for which they are created.*
It didn’t say… “Certain human persons were created…”
Mind you, that if it’s absurd to aspire to be a Saint then we better ask Fr. Robert Barron to remove that part from the “Catholicism” series, because it’s going to be used as aninstructional video too. Which means it’s not only opinion, it’s Church teaching.
Could it be that the quotes from the Doctors of the Church were used out of context? Because St. Therese was talking about her vocation, not about being a Saint, in that quote.