dostoyevskyfan:
Additionally. Such a confession would be an imperfect one, albeit frowned on but tolerated. This too would need to be worked on which will call for an expected perfection to a love of God and the ideal confession.
Andy
Hi Andy, I don’t think you’re understanding what I’m saying, or I may be in error. I can’t tell either way from your short post.
We are talking hypothetically about an atheist going to confession, which is my recommendation to non-believers. It is an entirely rational suggestion to someone who admits to the possibility of an eternal hell, however small they may think it is, and wishes to avoid completely this possibility. Of course for this scenario to be possible to begin with, the atheist would have to smile and nod throughout RCIA, keeping their objections to themselves, and then eventually get baptized into the church.
If St.Thomas Aquinas is to be believed, then an atheist who seeks God and assumes an active role toward seeking God, then **God will reveal himself and his existence to that person either by natural or supernatural means. **
Seeking God and receiving the sacraments solely to avoid hell is, in and of itself imperfect and the wrong reason for seeking God; however, it is a logical reason, and is better than no reason and not seeking God. We cannot logically hold the position, at least from a theological perspective, that God will reject those who seek him for the wrong reasons. Scripture explicitly and incontrovertibly states the Christ will not reject anyone who comes to him. A just and merciful God will have pity on an atheist who admits that they are unable to believe in God but maintains the possibility of hell because they see so much injustice in the world. All atheists, even strong atheists, are philosophically agnostic; even the strict empiricist will admit that it is scientifically impossible to prove a negative.
I believe wholeheartedly that an atheist, upon baptism, will be given sufficient proof for the existence of God which will justify faith. Most likely the holy spirit will physically enter their body and give them the gift of faith, since faith in and of itself is a gift from God that not all are priveledged to.
From the standpoint of scripture, atheism is explained in the sense that the “god of this age” (in other words Satan) has blinded certain individuals to the truth. Forgive me for not having the chapter and verse memorized. Put bluntly, we believe that atheism exists because atheists are slaves to Satan. Of course, atheists will find this ridiculous. From the standpoint of pure pragmatism, it is ultimately irrelevant
why atheism exists. What is relevant is that atheism exists, and atheists go to hell and are tortured for eternity.
In some cases, God may opt not to work immediately upon baptism, for reasons which are incomprehensible to us. God freely tests our commitment to Him unceasingly in this life.
Let’s assume for the sake of my argument that the atheist who was baptized does not receive the gift of the Holy Spirit, the advocate promised by Christ from Christ after his crucifixion who will guide us to all matters of truth.
We now have a baptized atheist who attends mass every week and goes to confession beforehand.
Your assertion, Andy, is that this above individual’s confession is an imperfect one–“frowned upon but tolerated”. My question is…frowned upon by whom?
An imperfect confession is indistinguishable from a perfect one. If an atheist in the Catholic Church never admits to anyone that he is still an atheist, he is indistinguishable from a believer in the Catholic church. The confessor will never know the difference. Parishoners will not know the difference. The pope will not know the difference.
You might say, “well then it is frowned upon by God”, but the person giving the confession does not believe in God, and God, being omniscient, already knows this. It cannot therefore be an “imperfect confession”.
Furthermore, I’d argue that the baptized atheist could never fall into mortal sin. First off the baptized atheist doesn’t believe mortal sin exists, so in essence, in his mind, he is confessing non-existent sins to a non-existent God.
Mortal sin requires full knowledge, full consent of the will, and grave matter. A baptized atheist has knowledge of sin via the catechism and RCIA, but no knowledge of God.
My recommendation is therefore a fail safe plan for an atheist to avoid hell. Many atheists will find it ridiculous in the same way that some people living in New Orleans thought having flood insurance was ridiculous. When hurricane Katrina hit them and flipped their world around, many of them changed their mind.
Andy, as for your other objection, I think I had the wrong choice of words. Of course hell is justified. It is logically necessary for Absolute Justice. I meant to say that, logically, it’s not worth it for anyone to pursue even the greatest pleasures of this world if they must suffer eternal damnation as a result.