It is of the faith revealed that many go to hell and few go to heaven.
Dear friend
No it isn’t. Pope St. John Paul II spoke on many occasions of a valid and certainly not heretical
hope for universal salvation. Owing to God’s universal salvific will, which contrary to Calvinism
is dogmatic in Catholicism, it is a hope that we are entitled and indeed commended for entertaining, so long as we do not reject human freewill by quashing the possibility of hell as a “definitive state of self-exclusion” from God.
It would be heresy to deny the possibility of hell, mortal sin or to state that all definitely will attain to salvation. However to entertain a hope, based on God’s universal salvific will, is not heresy.
“…From the death of Christ new life flowers, memory and message of an undying hope: universal salvation…”
His Holiness Pope Saint John Paul II (Stations Of The Cross At The Colosseum, Good Friday 2002)
“…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…”
His Holiness Pope Saint John Paul II (General Audience — July 28, 1999)
Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI stated in Spe Salvi that we could harbour a reasonable expectation that the majority of people are not in hell, although some gravely sinful souls will be. This is in direct conflict to what you claim as Catholic doctrine above:
vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/encyclicals/documents/hf_ben-xvi_enc_20071130_spe-salvi_en.html
"…With death, our life-choice becomes definitive—our life stands before the judge. Our choice, which in the course of an entire life takes on a certain shape, can have a variety of forms. There can be people who have totally destroyed their desire for truth and readiness to love, people for whom everything has become a lie, people who have lived for hatred and have suppressed all love within themselves. This is a terrifying thought, but alarming profiles of this type can be seen in certain figures of our own history.** In such people all would be beyond remedy and the destruction of good would be irrevocable: this is what we mean by the word Hell**[37]. On the other hand there can be people who are utterly pure, completely permeated by God, and thus fully open to their neighbours—people for whom communion with God even now gives direction to their entire being and whose journey towards God only brings to fulfilment what they already are.
- Yet we know from experience that neither case is normal in human life. For the great majority of people—we may suppose—there remains in the depths of their being an ultimate interior openness to truth, to love, to God. In the concrete choices of life, however, it is covered over by ever new compromises with evil—much filth covers purity, but the thirst for purity remains and it still constantly re-emerges from all that is base and remains present in the soul. What happens to such individuals when they appear before the Judge?… In this text, it is in any case evident that our salvation can take different forms, that some of what is built may be burned down, that in order to be saved we personally have to pass through “fire” so as to become fully open to receiving God and able to take our place at the table of the eternal marriage-feast…
- Some recent theologians are of the opinion that the fire which both burns and saves is Christ himself, the Judge and Saviour. The encounter with him is the decisive act of judgement. Before his gaze all falsehood melts away. This encounter with him, as it burns us, transforms and frees us, allowing us to become truly ourselves. All that we build during our lives can prove to be mere straw, pure bluster, and it collapses. Yet in the pain of this encounter, when the impurity and sickness of our lives become evident to us, there lies salvation. His gaze, the touch of his heart heals us through an undeniably painful transformation “as through fire”. But it is a blessed pain, in which the holy power of his love sears through us like a flame, enabling us to become totally ourselves and thus totally of God…"
- Pope Emeritus Benedict ZVI, Spe Salvi, 2007
In this encyclical Benedict XVI argues forcefully that the vast majority of people are neither wholly evil nor wholly good and will thus end up in purgatory, while a minority will end up in the states of hell and heaven respectively (the latter without purgatorial purification but directly).
Encyclicals are magisterial teaching documents of great authority that we are obligated to consider prayerfully and obediently and moreover Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI is a stellar theologian in his own right.
No scripture verse “needs no commentary”. It is surely a Protestant notion to assume that a verse means something ipso facto without reference to the Tradition and the Magisterium. The Catholic Church teaches that scripture has
multiple meanings or ‘senses’, not all of them overt. See the Catechism here:
vatican.va/archive/ccc_css/archive/catechism/p1s1c2a3.htm
I should think that Fr. Barron has a better grasp of Catholic doctrine than some seem willing to concede.
I personally concur with others in regarding him as one of the greatest modern preachers of the faith, certainly in North America at the very least.