Belloc Fan:
That’s the radical simplicity of the Gospel. There’s no, “you were 80% good and 20% bad, so you go to Heaven.” It’s either, “you loved and served God and neighbor” or you didn’t. If you did, it wasn’t because God made you a better person than the damned. It was because you responded to His grace, while the damned refused it…
Exactly. There are some who respond to his grace, and others who don’t. But there certainly are inequalitities in this response Grace, as the Blessed Mother followed by many of the canonized saints, seem to have responsed at a much higher level, then one who repents at the last second of his life. The experience of God in the beatific vision as experienced by the Virgin Mary will be different than that experienced by someone who just barely made it to heaven.
So if the degree to which we respond to God’s grace can vary, then there is a point where we have not responded enough to make it to heaven. Tell me how our response to Grace is not the meassure of our merit or demerit??
Belloc Fan:
And again, if salvation were based on being sufficiently “good,” we’d all have cause for despair. All have sinned and fall short of the Glory of God. This whole 80% good, 20% bad business completely misses Catholic soteriology.
Do we not choose God or choose against him?? and is our choice not the criterion that establishes our union or seperation from God eternally??
Now what would our choice consist of but some action of our will?, as our will is all we have to make choices with. Therefore, it will be some difference in what is freely willed by some between what is freely willed by others which will determine one’ s eternal state.
The precise nature of what must be freely willed to attain salvation in every individual case is unclear, but there are two options and the line is drawn somewhere, and you must be on one side of the line by responding “good enough” right?
Belloc Fan:
Same assumption as above, plus another logical fallacy. Even if, hypothetically, 90% of people went to Hell, that wouldn’t mean that each individuals chance of going to Hell was 90%. Two reasons. First, we’re each created individually. For example, maybe 30% people in a restaurant on a given night order the chicken. I don’t eat chicken. My odds of eating chicken in that restaurant aren’t 30%. They’re 0%. Second, salvation isn’t based upon risk and probability. This isn’t like choosing two socks blindly out of a drawer, and then calculating the odds of finding a matching pair. We choose to accept or reject God as surely as we choose to order or not order chicken. It’s either 100% or 0%, we respond to His grace or we don’t. So statistics are unhelpful here.
Well, statistics are relevant because a statistic does indeed exist, namely, at the end of time you WILL be able to count the number of souls in heaven, and the number of souls in hell, and determine a real ratio. This was a ratio which God forknew when he set his creation in motion. do you dispute that there will be a countable population in heaven and hell at the end of time? This is a statistic.
Now I agree with you that it does not follow from this that your odds have any correspondance to the final statistic, being that you are completly free to choose 0 vs 100, chicken vs no chicken.
God does not infringe on our free will. We are certainly all free to go to heaven if we so choose, no matter what the final statistic may tell us about the odds.
HOWEVER, the final statistic does have meaning from an external perspective, See Summa(I.23.Article 7 Whether the number of the predestined is certain). Aquinas uses really strong language to demonstrate this point that this ratio not only has meaning but is directly willed and established by God.
God himself created MAN. he CREATED what’s in a man; He CREATED the inside and out of man’s heart, and how man makes his decisions and his responses to grace, etc. This being the case when he created the universe God being God, as he created man, knew how many would choose to to seperate from him, instead of serving him.
Now maybe he didn’t actually will the ratio in his mind, but that doesn’t change the fact that he knew what the result would be.
Therefore, God created the universe with a final result, a final statistic of those in hell and those in heaven.
While we may exist independantly from this statistic, it nevertheles stands, that this statistic represents a “risk level” of the universe. It is an insight into the very nature of the universe what ever this statistic is. It represents the true meaning of man, it measures the success of man in achieving his final end.
The risk is unknowable by us, it very well could be very very high, as some Catholics and some saints seem to believe.
Most people will make it to Heaven eventually. Some will take a lot longer than others, but most will make it.
You happen to believe that the risk is quite low, because you believe most will make it. How do you know this? There are many good Catholics who diagree. God does not reveal the numbers.
With an unknown risk of a terrible and fiery eternal fate, I’m still angry at God for subjecting me to existence, a gamble he didn’t have to take. He created man who he knew would fall into original sin, so most of the time we’d be very finite and limited, groping in the dark, with an eternal bet on the table, madness!! cruel!!