No, you are quite wrong. Faith is a gratuitous gift from God which man can never “work for” or merit. We, who have received the gift of faith, are to be instruments of the Holy Spirit in speaking the good news that others might hear. See Romans 10:17. While God does all the heavy lifting, we have a role in His salvation plan for humanity.
Not everyone **accepts **the gift of Faith from God. Sorry - even Jesus knew & taught that fact. We have to expend some effort to have our Faith. Otherwise, its empty words & promises. God
wants everyone to be with him, but since humans have free will, they are free to **reject **him as well. If people are more than willing to reject God, don’t you also think they’ll reject rehabilitation? I do. Sorry if you disagree. There’s an old saying “You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink” that seems very appropriate here to me… You can give people every opportunity, but you can’t
make them take the right/good one.
Really? You think that publishing your negative judgment about others whom you’ve never met based on hearsay evidence is a
sufficient foundation to avoid being labeled “rash”?
CCC #2477 “Respect for the reputation of persons forbids every attitude and word likely to cause them unjust injury. He becomes guilty:
- of rash judgment who, even tacitly, assumes as true, without sufficient foundation, the moral fault of a neighbor; …”
I don’t feel that I made a judgement. I merely stated what I knew & what I believe. Its my opinion that not everyone can be rehabilitated. I think there are actually even statistics (if I wanted to look) that indicate that rehabilitation does
not always work. Its not a rash judgement - its my acceptance of the facts as I know them. Sorry you seem to disagree.
What does “many” mean – more than a few? On what basis do you make such a claim? You’ve already admitted you have no personal experience.
Many is a non-specific term that generally means some. I don’t have to have personal experience w/ inmates to know that in my work we receive many cases from previously convicted, rehabilitated, & released criminals. My work shows me this. Sorry you seem to disagree.
There you go again. Take me up on my challenge. Become a prison minister and find out first hand rather than second hand the real disposition of inmates.
Not everyone is called to be a prison minister or a minister of anything. Sorry - that’s fact - early Christians & Jesus recognized this too. We all have our talents & mine does not deal well with large groups of people face-to-face. Sorry you seem to disagree. I am awestruck by the progress that some prison ministers are able to acheive. However, even they don’t claim 100% rehabilitation (at least not the ones that came to my parish to ask for donations). Recividivism (spelling?) was decreased by about 80% in jails (not prisons) w/ the prison ministry. However, that still leaves 20% that refused to accept help and/or live the new non-criminal way of life. I am thankful that God has given some people the gifts necessary to bring about this type of change. However, I accept that I’m not one of those people. I don’t feel like I need to try to be something I’m not either. I know the gifts God gave me & I willingly use them to the best of my ability for God’s greater work. It may not seem like much to someone accomplishing great works of mercy, rehabilitation, etc, but I’m doing my small part as best I know how. I believe that’s what God calls many of us to do.
I still stand by my statement that instead of merely being cooped up in prisons, inmates should be on chain gangs working for their room, board, health care, etc. They should have access to rehabilitation, but if they’re not willing to work w/ a counsellor, they should not be labeled as ‘rehabilitated’ and released back out into society. I don’t think executions should be the norm by any means. However, I do not see the death penalty (as a sentence) as an option that should be taken off the table entirely. I don’t think the Church teaches that either.
We’re free to disagree b/c there is ambiguity in the Church’s teaching allowing for differing opinions.