R
Religio71
Guest
Well, I cannot speculate on whether a person can say yes or no to God’s judgment. I think that it doesn’t matter, because God’s judgment is final on the matter, and we don’t really have a choice in our destination after judgment. Heaven is what it is, Purgatory is what it is, and Hell is what it is. So, when one goes to Purgatory for purification, we cannot choose whether we want that or not, because that is what God has chosen for us based on our choices in this life. So sure, maybe a person can say “yes or no” to God’s judgment, I don’t know. It just won’t matter.huh. Good point. However, from what Rebecca has said, and what you have said here, there is still, I believe, a difference.
Y’see, I’ve often argued with those who believe that there is no true ‘free will,’ that no matter how constrained the choices in front of you are, there is still a choice one can make. Even the guy in front of the firing squad about to be shot has a choice; no matter how tied up he is, or how blindfolded…no matter that there is nothing at all he can do to avoid dying in the next few seconds, he has a choice; what he thinks about, perhaps. Whether he has his eyes open or shut. Whether he says something, or attempts to…
The example used on me is often something like…a man falls off the cliff; he can’t choose, suddenly, to fly. My answer is–but he can choose to try. From the description Rebecca (and you, come to think of it) have given me of purgatory, even that is denied; the soul there cannot even conceive of another option.
How does that work in your example of the person in the LDS version of ‘spirit prison’ not able to say ‘no’ to being put there? Quite simply…he can indeed say ‘no.’
It just won’t do him any good.
However, saying ‘yes’ while he is there, to the offer of a proxy baptism just might.