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I would challenge you to read the Catholic link. Just like Protestantism, Catholic theology has two views on foreknown.You would be correct, but not in the way you think. Catholics do not understand predestination in the same manner as a Calvinist. But predestination, from the standpoint of it being based upon God’s foreknowledge of our response to his grace is the basic Catholic position as far as I know. I certainly do not claim to be an expert on this issue but the Catholic Encyclopedia covers it in great detail.
catholicchampion.blogspot.com/2009/08/misunderstanding-of-catholic.html
Here are the two basic premises a Catholic must hold, as I understand them.
Premise one, God’s predestination of efficacious and gratuitous grace.
- Man cannot be saved without the efficacious and gratuitous grace given by God alone. The elect that God chooses are not chosen because God foresees how the elect will respond to His grace, but because of His grace alone. The Council of Trent tells us that the gift of final perseverance cannot be obtained or merited, but it is given by God as a gift. Complete predestination, which includes first grace, as well as a series of graces up until glorification, is gratuitous and is chosen by God previous to foreseen merits. It is not based upon God’s foreknowledge. Finally no man can boast of being better than another, because it is God’s grace only that can elevate man to being better than another, not one’s own choices or works. If we say that we choose or act better than another apart from God’s grace, and as a result we are saved because of that choice or act, then we surely will be able to boast that we are better than another.
Canon 20 Council of Orange.
“That a man can do no good without God. God does much that is good in a man that the man does not do; but a man does nothing good for which God is not responsible, so as to let him do it.”
Even prayer is a gift from God.
Council of Orange Canon 3.
“If anyone says that the grace of God can be conferred as a result of human prayer, but that it is not grace itself which makes us pray to God, he contradicts the prophet Isaiah, or the Apostle who says the same thing, “I have been found by those who did not seek me; I have shown myself to those who did not ask for me” (Rom 10:20, quoting Isa. 65:1).”