D
dianaiad
Guest
No, Rebecca, we don’t. That’s the part about ‘choice.’ You don’t have to do anything you don’t want to do. That’s the whole idea behind our proxy work; you can choose to stay Catholic if you want to; you can choose to reject the baptism.Diana, the souls in purgatory do not need to accept our prayers. Further, I believe that more than Catholics will be with God, in Heaven, fully and completely, no levels. The souls in purgatory are not taught, and are not required to accept anything. God purifies our souls with His fire.
As a Catholic, Mormons would like to tell me that when I am dead, I have to give up being Catholic and be Mormon. (Except that part where being a mormon apostate, I am doomed to outer darkness.) And even then, I will not be with God fully and completely.
As well, you are also aware, I think, that in LDS thought it takes a little more doing than to stop believing and leaving the church at the ripe old age of sixteen to get yourself consigned to ‘outer darkness.’ We believe that this is reserved only for those who, knowing PRECISELY what they are doing, choose Satan. Pretty much walking up to the Holy Ghost, knowing exactly Who He is, and telling him 'sorry, not interested." In full and complete understanding of the choice one is making. Do you believe that you have done that?
Well, this was my point, put as gently as I could. You have just told me that Catholics said a Mass for Pres. Hinckley (or prayed for him…something like that). Now really, Rebecca; did anybody ask HIM if he wanted that? My point is that your prayers for him, according to you, work whether or not he accedes to the idea, and if there was ever an example of a Mormon who wouldn’t…and didn’t…show any hint of wanting to become a Catholic or agree with the idea of purgatory as Catholics describe it, wouldn’t you think that the president of the CoJCoLDS would be that Mormon?I don’t care that you baptize for the dead. I think it is pointless, a waste of time and resources.
What irks me is baptizing Catholics, who lived as Catholics, complete with all the Catholic beliefs, including the creeds that mormons call “abominations”. Some who died for their faith. They were living witnesses to Jesus Christ and His Church. It is a blatant disregard for this, entirely.
Yet you did it anyway.
…and you are now “irked” because we do proxy baptisms, which (if you are correct) your dead will never even know about, and if we are correct, they have the absolute right to say 'no thank you" to. As to that, I have to wonder: if we ARE correct, would you rather that we just do as you do, pray for them in the hope that God will make them Mormon whether they wanted to be or not?
You are, evidently, if you are not Catholic. No choice, no asking, no…‘wait just a cotton-pickin’ minute here…I’ve been a faithful Mormon/Baptist/Jew/Muslim/Hindu/Wiccan ALL MY LIFE, and now…pffft? I went to sleep a Lutheran, and all of a sudden I’m in Catholic purgatory, getting prayed for? Say WHAT???"There is not this idea anywhere in the doctrine of purgatory. God purifies all, Catholic and non, and you are not required to denounce your entire life, as though it were wasted and had no point whatsoever.
Sorry about the way I put that, guys, but, I mean…really?
And you are ‘irked’ because Mormons do proxy baptisms on behalf of the dead, and we believe that those same dead have the ABSOLUTE RIGHT and power to tell us where to stuff it?
You are claiming we believe that Catholic dead for whom we have done proxy baptisms suddenly have to 'denounce your entire life, as though it were wasted and had no point whatsoever," and also claiming that there is no teaching in purgatory, and that God does the purifying (and that your prayers, here, have a hand in that).
That is presenting the situation precisely 180 degrees from what it actually is (at least, as it pertains to our beliefs) and you are criticizing us as if we did what you actually do.
And you don’t see it.
I find that…well, I guess intriguing is a good word.