John Paul II’s statement that there are demons who will endure the eternal torments of Hell is contradictory to the universalist claim that all will be saved. The Pope simply doesn’t know whether humans will be damned or not, so he hesitates to voice an opinion.
Yes, the Pope does say that the demons are damned, but, like you said, he questions whether or not humans will go to hell. Without re-reading my previous posts, I think I specified that the Pope questioned whether or not “human being” will be damned. But what you wrote above actually makes my point: John Paul II quetioned whether or not humans will be damned.
John Paul II: “Eternal damnation remains a possibility, but we are not granted, without special divine revelation, the knowledge of whether or which human beings are effectively involved in it.” (General Audience — July 28, 1999)
The Pope publicly questioned whether or not humans would go to hell. That novelty is contrary to everything the Church has ever taught on that subject, and this doubt on the part of John Paul II cannot be reconciled with what Pius II condemned. Anyone who claims that all Christians will be saved is condemned by the Church. How can John Paul II believe that some Christians will be damned, and also wonder if any human will go to hell? The two can’t be reconciled. Maybe John Paul II wasn’t aware of the condemndation of Pius II, but he should have been. And, given his education, he would have known that the Church has never taught universal salvaiton. His teaching is a novelty that cause much confusion in the Church… but the confusion did not stop there.
Here’s part of what you quoted:* “Rather than a place, hell indicates the state of those who freely and definitively separate themselves from God, the source of all life and joy”.*
I remember when he made that statement. I remember because it became common to hear Catholics say “we don’t have to believe in hell anymore because John Paul II said it wasn’t a place”. Do you remember that? I remember it will.
If John Paul II did say “rather than a place, hell indicates the state of those who freely and definitively separate themselves from God”, it is false because
hell is a place. It is a place that will contain the bodily persons who are damned after the resurrection. If he would have said “in addition to a place, hell is a state of being”, there would be no problem. But if he denies the “place” in favor of a “state”, he was certainly in error. It is not either or, but both.
While I think it’s plain that there are going to be a great many people in Hell, and the Tradition of the Church backs this, his hesitation to voice this truth is not itself a heresy.
I don’t know if it would qualify as a heresy, but it is without a doubt an error, and yosupman thinks a Pope can’t even teach error.
Pope John Paul II’s statements about universal salvation can be compared to those the universalists use to justify their take on universalism from the Bible. Jesus does will for everyone to be saved, but Jesus’ will is not the will of every human. Many will choose Hell in spite of Jesus’ desire that they choose Heaven. Some of the quotes you provided from John Paul II reflect Jesus’
desire that all men be saved, and the fact that He bought salvation for everyone. His suffering on the Cross was sufficient that everyone be saved through it . . . but not everyone will choose to be. That is the explanation for the quotes you provided from John Paul II on universal salvation.
Well, the redemption was universal, but salvation is not universal. I can twist most of Dignitatis Humanae so that it fits in with what the Church has always taught about religious liberty, but I cannot find a way to do so with John Paul II’s teaching on “universal salvation”. If he would have said universal
redemption, I would be able to; but not universal salvation.
But once again (as is often the case with the post-Vatican II Papal ambiguities) you have to know what the Church teaches
before you read them, or else you will be misled. If a person does not know what the Church teaches about salvation before reading John Paul II’s statements, they will almost certainly conclude that salvation is “universal” and thus that all will be saved. That is the obvious meaning of what he said. Maybe someone with a creative intellect can find a way to twist his words so that they mean something other than what they say, but to do that you have to approach the document already knowing what the Church teaches.