G
gardenswithkids
Guest
But first we must break free of our addiction to our sins so that we can reason properly. Like an alcholic looses some of his ability to reason when they are drinking, we sinners loose some of our ability to reason when we are under the influence of sin.If the Catholic theology is silent on the subject, we are free to use our reason and make our judgment.Yes!
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(Of course even if the Church does make an utterance, I still have the righ and question it. But that is beside the point.)No, it’s not beside the point. Like some math text books provide the answers in the back so we can see if we are understanding the problem correctly, the Church provides us some answers to help us reason and learn to solve our problems correctly. People of faith haven’t lost their ability to reason–rather they are free to learn how to reason correctly!
I understand your conclusion (that people freely and voluntarily choose to stay in hell, in eternal suffering, torment and damnation), but find it highly unreasonable. People on earth often don’t use reason, so why do you expect people in hell would use it? Besides, the intellectual ability to use reason (that you seem to value so highly) is a gift from God. If people in hell have rejected His gifts, then they have also rejected their reason.
That doesn’t follow logically. On this earth there are many things that we don’t have, we wish we had, but we aren’t willing to do what it takes to get. That doesn’t mean we aren’t “tormented” by not having something; it only means we sometimes won’t give up our bad habits in order to achieve something else.Even those posters who downplay hell, (and say that it is merely a separation from God) assert that the torment comes from finally understanding the loss they suffer from this separation and the knowledge that it could have been otherwise. Now, from this it follows logically that if they had a chance, they would change their status. After all if they enjoyed their alleged status, and would NOT want to change it, it would not be a torment.
I don’t think anyone tried to derail your thread, but you jumbled a lot of points together and it was hard to determine what your exact question was.And I want to say that you actually presented your opinion, and did not try to derail. My apologies for not making this distinction before.