M
Montgomeryatty
Guest
Linkowski,I have already made the statement that the Catholic Church indeed teaches that there is an elect group. By Romans 9, we know that they were chosen before they did any good or evil…and it is not of him who wills or of him who runs - but God that shows mercy. They are chosen only in accorance with God’s gracious choice.
So, you cannot use these scriptures as an argument (i.e. that God desires all men to be saved) as a defense against election because if he can do it for some, why did He not do it for all. So this argument not only falls on us but on the CC as well. The only difference between us is that we say only the elect are justified, whereas you say that the is a non-elect group that can be justified and saved as well. But in my posting on the previous page, I show clearly that “elect” and “Christian” are used synonymously.
Your view depends upon what I, and Catholics, see as a skewed prioritization of theological principles. You take a difficult-to-interpret passage from Romans 9, somewhat ignoring the context of the singular and continuous theological thought expressed in Romans 9-11, and interpret it to reach a predestinarian theology. With your stake firmly planted in Calvinism, you THEN set off to interpret other verses. The problem is that you’re reading the rest of the Bible with Calvinist glasses. Hence the utterly ridiculous doorway analogy Calvinists (although not you, . . . yet) make to interpret John 3:16.
Start with a clearer, less controversial, more essential passage, and use IT to interpret the remainder of the Bible. So, I would recommend starting with 2 Timothy 2:4 and 2 Peter 3:9, stating that God desires that all are to be saved, and that he wills for ALL to repent and have faith in him. THEN proceed to Romans 9 and the other verses concerning election, and interpret them in light of this bedrock principle.
What’s that you say? How are we to decide what’s the bedrock principle and which one must be interpreted in light of it? Well, you go sit down with your Bible and figure it out. It should be clear and obvious to any literate person reading the Bible, right? While you’re wrestling with that behemoth question, I’ll be on my way to Rome, with a firm, satisfied, and Biblical assurance in the only authority explicitly established by Christ which has handed on the faith since approximately A.D. 33 without teaching a single heresy. Good luck!