Can non-Catholics enter the Kingdom of Heaven?

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Short answer, Yes, non-Catholics can enter Heaven.

However, it is important to note that nobody ever saves themselves. It is Jesus who saves, so when we say non Catholics can be saved it does not mean that a muslim is using his Islamic faith as a vehicle for his salvation, or a baptist is using his baptist faith as a vehicle for his salvation, but rather if such people are saved, they are saved solely by the mercy of Christ, and Christ saw fit for whatever reason to unite these individuals into the Church, that is His mystical body, upon death meaning such people would be saved. In the end we should remember, that God knows the heart, and there are no secrets with God, He knows the things that you do not even know about yourself, and there is not a more understanding and fair judge then He, and He alone knows the true nature of our culpability so we need to strive to to our best to cooperate with His will, and trust in His mercy in a spirit of humility and not a spirit of presumption.
👍👍👍 for a true Catholic Answer:D
 
Coming from a Protestant background, I still believe that salvation can be found outside of the Catholic Church. I was a Christian. I had a relationship with Christ. I thank God for the church of my youth because they taught me to appreciate the cross, to love God, to read his Word, and to seek his will.

That being said, God’s grace has allowed me to believe a deeper truth. I believe that the Catholic Church is the original, true church. I now also thank God that he drew me to the fullness of Catholicism and opened my eyes to so much more than I had known. Before, I didn’t really know much about the Catholic faith, but now that I know better, I could never turn from it, and I want to experience all that it has to offer.

I believe that I was already on the path, but now the trip is going to be so much more enjoyable!
 
My one word answer would be no…
…but read on.

Bishop Tong in his homily mentioned that even (unexposed) non-baptised non-christians may enter the heaven if they act upon their own moral consciences, which is God-given (i.e. will not go to hell), while only catholics may be able to recieve the fullness of grace.

Since “nothing unclean shall enter the heaven”, I guess they are going to purgatory.

L is correct; the same bishop also mentioned that when converts have chosen Jesus, it is actually Jesus who has chosen them to be baptised.
 
Short answer, Yes, non-Catholics can enter Heaven.

However, it is important to note that nobody ever saves themselves. It is Jesus who saves, so when we say non Catholics can be saved it does not mean that a muslim is using his Islamic faith as a vehicle for his salvation, or a baptist is using his baptist faith as a vehicle for his salvation, but rather if such people are saved, they are saved solely by the mercy of Christ, and Christ saw fit for whatever reason to unite these individuals into the Church, that is His mystical body, upon death meaning such people would be saved. In the end we should remember, that God knows the heart, and there are no secrets with God, He knows the things that you do not even know about yourself, and there is not a more understanding and fair judge then He, and He alone knows the true nature of our culpability so we need to strive to to our best to cooperate with His will, and trust in His mercy in a spirit of humility and not a spirit of presumption.
Excellent Answer…I’ll save this for a future occasion 👍
 
Religous pluralism is popular today, but dangerous. As far as I know, the Church accepts anyone who has been validly (Trinitarian) baptized as a brother in Christ, but to me being non-Catholic is risky. The various Protetant religions either add or (more often) take away from the Bible, and I have trouble believing that God either willed or wills such confusion. Jesus said there would be ONE fold and ONE shepherd (John 10:16). I’m on my way into the Church from a non-denominational Protestant background. It’s safer to be Catholic.

By the way, good for you to look into these things:) God be with you on your journey.
 
If you haven’trr bought one already, buy the Catholic Catechism. It’s available on Amazon for about $20, and it should answer your questions:)

If one has the chance to convert, I’d take it. Like I said, it’s just safer to be Catholic.
 
Hi, I’m a Christian and I have attended the same baptist church since I was a young child. I was baptized when I was 7, but only in my recent teenage years have I started to truly look into the Bible and seek God’s Will.
So, my question is: Do you have to be Catholic to enter the Kingdom of Heaven? …
So if we believe that Jesus died for our sins on the cross and rose again to justify us, believe that what the Bible says is true, and seek God’s will – is that enough to get to Heaven?
Let me start by saying I’m glad you’re seeking to deepen and understand your faith - asking questions of it is not a bad thing, indeed it may only serve to deepen you in Christ.

The Catholic Church does not posit that only Catholics will go to Heaven. We don’t put a box around God’s Mercy, but rather hold that the teachings of the Catholic Church put in practice the Way that Jesus called us to live, and so we see Catholicism as being the ordinary, ie normal or expected, way for someone to be saved, but we don’t rule out other extra-ordinary, ie outside of the Catholic Church, ways for Christ to save.

On a person-to-person level, we cannot know who is saved as that is knowledge for God alone. If we look at the criterion of faith - whether you define as “belief that Jesus died for our sins and rose again to justify us”, or as “my faith in Jesus makes me a new creation in the New Covenant, under which my life must be holy and loving” - that is a relationship between only the Lord and the believer, and only those two may perceive it, so it is not our place to say that a person is saved or not saved.

I suspect you have more questions here, but does that assist for now?
 
Religous pluralism is popular today, but dangerous. As far as I know, the Church accepts anyone who has been validly (Trinitarian) baptized as a brother in Christ, but to me being non-Catholic is risky.
I think it also helps that Catholicism doesn’t view salvation as a one-time event, but rather as continual and lifelong, that we are saved, are being saved, and will be saved. It is easier for us to welcome a Trinitarian as a less mature believer and we should (though not all parishes are good at this) help them to grow in maturity.

That’s not to say if you don’t complete some set of goals along the way you fall short and aren’t saved, but rather that you must live as you should for as long as you live. God’s Mercy does not contradict God’s Justice, but rather assists us in being restored to Him when we fall. I think this is an approach that makes more sense out of what Protestants often term “a personal relationship with Christ”, or walk with Christ, and I’ve often thought it odd that this relationship in Protestant churches only seems to begin with “being saved.” If I put my relationship with the Lord in the context of a marriage (which is a popular and useful analogy), I know that my relationship with my wife began before we made the committment of marriage, and that we continually make committments to and increase our reliance upon one another throughout our marriage. Likewise, I find that I don’t have one “got saved” or “born-again” moment but rather I have them as I increase in faith.
 
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