C
CopticChristian
Guest
Ben,Ok, I freely admit that I’m going to give you a horrible answer and I hope JonNC comes and saves me.
As I understand it, Lutherans usually say that it is God who finds us and saves us. For us, the idea that we have any part in our initial salvation seem far fetched - we say we should be gratified at that God has moved us in his direction.
The idea being that we have no free will for things that are above us (salvation), but we do have free will for things below us (choosing what pie to eat for dessert) - and if we have free will, we only have just enough free will to rebel against salvation.
As I understand it, the Catholic church teaches, in certain respect, that man cooperates with his salvation from the start - that it’s his joyous free will walks him into church to be freely baptized.
Now… I’m a prideful bugger from the start, so the Lutheran view goes against my nature. If left to my own wits, I would be in (what I think is) the Catholic camp.I don’t like the idea that I didn’t find God. I want to think that I presented myself to him for his love. But the Lutheran understanding also frees me from stressing about why I didn’t find God earlier, and oddly, it frees me from having to worry about why other people are not Christian and if God will save them - it is his will, and such a kind and loving will at that, that he chose to offer me salvation that I don’t fear for those that aren’t obviously Christian.
Again, I crave your understanding in that I’m most likely I’m wrong in this.
Are you sure you are not Catholic…the Universal Catechism is a framework and the Adult Catechism of the USA says this…
People have always asked fundamental questions: Who am I? Where did I come from? Where am I going? Why do I need to struggle to achieve my goals? Why is it so hard to love and be loved? What is the meaning of sickness, death, and evil? What will happen after death?
These questions relate to human existence. They also move one to ask questions about the divine because they pertain to God’s existence. When asked with ever deeper reflection, they uncover an inner sense of longing for God. They challenge our minds, but the mind’s answers are not always sufficient. We must also become aware of the mysterious yearning of the human heart.
God has planted in every human heart the hunger and longing for the infinite, for nothing less than God. St. Augustine, a theologian from the fifth century, said it best: “Our heart is restless until it rests in you” (St. Augustine, The Confessions, bk. 1, chap. 1, 1; cf. CCC, no. 30).
How is our quest for God awakened? **God first pursues us; this spurs us to search for him for whom we were made. **The Catechism presents three paths through which every person can come to God: creation, the human person, and Revelation. In the next chapter, Revelation will be presented as the greatest and most essential path to God. He is discov¬ered also through creation and through the mystery of our inner life.
