It is āworseā than that. He doesnāt have a choice in his acceptation of salvation. It is like a man in the middle of the ocean. He has no means to get himself out of the water. He is COMPLETELY at the mercy of anyone who happens by. He cannot will someone to save him. If someone happens by, the man cannot force the stranger to help him. He is at his mercy. Either the man will save him, or he wonāt.
If someone is drowning in the ocean, and another reaches out to save him, he still retains the free will to choose to not be saved or after making into the boat, he can choose to abandon ship.
When you are coming from an Arminian POV, I can certainly understand that, yes. But my Calvinist POV is in keeping with Scripture.
Your Calvinist POV is keeping with your own private interpretation of Scripture. Yes. But unfortunately, it differs from the early Church fathers. St. Augustine, whom Calvin
thought agreed with his ideas of predestination stated the following:
āIf, however, being already regenerate and justified, he relapses of his own will into an evil life, assuredly he cannot say, āI have not received,ā because of his own free choice to do evil he has lost the grace of God, that he had receivedā (On Rebuke and Grace, Chap. 6:9).
Iām not coming from an Armenian POV. Itās distinctly Catholic. You are creating a false dichotomy that one must either be Calvinist or Armenian.
From the Council of Trent, Canons Concerning Justification:
Canon 4. If anyone says that manās free will moved and aroused by God, by assenting to Godās call and action, in no way cooperates toward disposing and preparing itself to obtain the grace of justification, that it cannot refuse its assent if it wishes, but that, as something inanimate, it does nothing whatever and is merely passive, let him be anathema.
americancatholictruthsociety.com/docs/TRENT/trent6.htm#2
To understand more completely Catholic teaching on this matter and what the Church explicitly does not believe, I suggest reading the other 32 canons along with the explanation that precedes them.
If someone falls out of grace (according to Catholic dogma), then he is NOT IN CHRIST, therefore, he would be performing works OUTSIDE OF CHRIST. That is works-based, and has nothing to do with faith. If that person fell out of faith/grace, then he is simply a seed that was never planted in good soil, and is therefore a false professor.
To be a āfalse professorā one must have the will to do so. One cannot sincerely believe with all his heart in Christ and in his teachings, then fall away, and all that time have been a āfalse professorā for his profession was most sincere by Godās grace.
Also, performing good works
in Christ, has everything to do with faith. A person in a state of grace must have a living faith, a faith working through charity. Without such a faith, a person is not in Christ.
Those who produce fruit as a part of the vine can also later whither and be cast off, as has been pointed out earlier on this thread as attested to by the words of Christ.
Let us remember also the fig tree:
Mat 21:19 āAnd seeing a fig tree by the wayside he went to it, and found nothing on it but leaves only. And he said to it, āMay no fruit ever come from you
again!ā And the fig tree withered at once.ā
Notice that the word āagainā indicates that the fig tree had produced fruit at one time. This understanding is confirmed by Markās gospel:
Mark 11:13-14 And seeing in the distance a fig tree in leaf, he went to see if he could find anything on it. When he came to it, he found nothing but leaves, for it was not the season for figs. And he said to it, āMay no one ever eat fruit from you
again.ā And his disciples heard it.
The fruits are the good works we perform in Christ through which we are justified by his grace. We work out our salvation for we have not yet attained it though in another sense we have already attained it. The words pertaining to salvation and justification have different aspects in Scripture that must be kept in mind such as past, present, and future. As such I can say that I have been justified, I am being justified, and I hope to be justified and that I have been saved, I am being saved, and I hope to be saved (in the future). Many passages in Scripture begin to make a lot more sense when these different aspects of time are taken into account.