How does a Catholic increase the chance of getting into Heaven?

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I am sorry guys. I KNOW I am talking a little bit out of turn here. I keep reading this threads title and wanting to reply with this response and now I can no longer resist. This is just a humor break. Don’t anyone take this post seriously.
How does a Catholic increase the chance of getting into Heaven?
This is how it works.

Sin is on a point system. It depends upon which commandment you broke and to what degree. For instance, wanting someone dead: 10 points. If you actually kill someone: 100 points. Looking at a woman with sexual lust: 5 points, 1 night stand: 30 points, rape: 70 points, homosexual sex: 80 points etc.

First, you must go to confession. You receive half your points off by simply confessing. Then after that, one point is removed for each “Hail Mary” you recite. Finally, you may receive the body and blood of Jesus in mass on Sunday for an instant removal of any points you may have left from overlooked sins up to 1,000 points.

Finally when you die and go to Heaven, you will receive a 50% Catholic club reduction in sin penalty just for your membership with the church. The final goal is to have 10,000 points or less when you die, which can be quite a challenge since they rack up over the years.
 
But again you have evaded my request for you to definesaved” from a Catholic perspective.
Wrong. I clearly stated that we are not fully saved (having escaped final damnation) until we die. It is a lifelong struggle, as I have demonstrated with the scriptures.

YOU, however, evaded my question:
What is your definition of “saved”?
 
So, you do understand that when Catholics offer the Eucharist in mass it is the SAME ONE sacrifice that the Apostles partook of at the Last Supper and that which was offered on the cross to God don’t you? Since God is eternal the One Sacrifice is timeless and is just as present today as it was 2,000 years ago and as it will be for all Eternity. We call to mind with God the same One Sacrifice we do not re-crucify the Lord.
Hi James,

There is a huge difference between eating and drinking bread and wine in remembrance of Christ, and worshiping bread and wine as though it IS CHRIST.

Do you imagine that it is necessary for Jesus to physically make His body present in the sacrament in order to make the sacrament useful? What then, will you do with the instruction that we are to worship Him in spirit and in truth?

And how will it be consistent to say that His ONE TIME bloody sacrifice is continually repeated in an unbloody manner… which is the SAME sacrifice?
 
Do you imagine that it is necessary for Jesus to physically make His body present in the sacrament in order to make the sacrament useful?
Do you imagine that it is necessary for God to have a physical body in order for salvation to be possible?

Apparently God thought so.

Why would it then be so hard to fathom Jesus making His body physically present throughout all time so that our communion with Him could be efficacious in that salvation?
 
Do you imagine that it is necessary for God to have a physical body in order for salvation to be possible?
Hi SteveGC

Yes, it was all part of God’s perfect plan from before the creation.
Why would it then be so hard to fathom Jesus making His body physically present throughout all time so that our communion with Him could be efficacious in that salvation?
You seem to be suggesting that eating the wafer and drinking the wine are somehow necessary for our salvation. Is this what you believe the bible teaches?
 
There is a huge difference between eating and drinking bread and wine in remembrance of Christ, and worshiping bread and wine as though it IS CHRIST.
Bingo … you now recognize what the Apostles and ECF’s have been teaching that Christ taught them.

Hugh Difference … it not something you can take our leave, cafeteria style w/o consequences … if you choose/believe wrongly.
 
You seem to be suggesting that eating the wafer and drinking the wine are somehow necessary for our salvation. Is this what you believe the bible teaches?
**"Amen, amen, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you do not have life within you. **
**Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him on the last day. ****For my flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink. **
Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me and I in him."
(John 6:53-56).

**In the future, please refer to it as the “host” and not a “wafer”. **
This is disrespectful and makes the conversation less charitable. Thanks.
 
I. Faith Justifies Initially, but Works Perfect and Complete Justification
James 2:24 - the phrase “faith alone” (the Greek “pisteos monon”) only occurs once in the Bible. “Man is justified by works and NOT faith alone.” Unlike what many Protestant churches teach, no where in Scripture does it say that man is justified or saved by “faith alone.” To the contrary, man is not justified by faith alone. In Catholic theology, a person is justified by faith and works acting together, which comes solely from God�s divine grace. Faith alone never obtains the grace of justification (Council of Trent, chapter 8, canon 9). Also, the word �justified� (dikaiow) is the same word Paul uses for justification in Rom. 4:3 in regard to Abraham (so Protestants cannot argue James is not referring to �justification� in James 2:24 unless they argue Paul wasn�t in Rom. 4:3 either).
If I say the word ‘trunk’, what do I mean? I can think of at least 5 different things. …Of a tree, back of a car, part of an elephant, container for clothes, middle part of a body, etc. We must allow a word to take on different meanings according to context.

If we don’t allow “justify” to change meaning based on context, how do you explain Luke 7:29, where the people justified God? “And all the people hearing, and the publicans, justified God, being baptized with John’s baptism” (Douay-Rheims Version).

Also, in Luke 16:15, Jesus tells the Pharisees that they justify themselves before men. Perhaps James is using the same meaning as Jesus did in Luke 16. You may disagree, but it’s a legitimate usage of the term.
 
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CentralFLJames:
Just another typical evasion by MD and I consider it a calumny to claim anyone needs to be liked me - you won’t find a single post of mine holding myself up as a standard.
Good, I’m glad you clarified that you don’t hold yourself up as a standard. Helps us to ignore the demeanor of your posts.
you make a lot of noise and you make a lot of demands in our forum but you never answer the mail on what we give you. Are you too lazy to do the work of giving us real answers to our questions?
I give you many, many, many, many answers. You just don’t like any of them.
MD, we can’t get to deep theology until you can learn to answer simple questions and agree on fundamentals
Agree? I must “agree” with your “fundamentals” first?
Q1: How do you even know what s God Breathed scripture except by tradition and by the Divinely Inspired canonization of the Catholic Church?
Well, we know that the Scripture are “God-breathed” (theopneustos) by Divine revelation (2 Tim. 3:16-17), i.e., Scripture itself. Since neither you nor I were there we both must rely on the the early church (by “church” I don’t mean the RCC) that recognized all the Apostolic writings distributed among the churches. Even Peter himself right away recognized Paul’s writings as Scripture (2 Pet. 14-16). But the true reality is that people and councils only recognized them as what they were from the moment they were penned. The Holy Spirit did not depend on men to confirm His work. As for the councils of Hippo and Carthage they were provincial, not ecumenical, so they had no authority to speak for the whole church (again, by “church” I don’t mean RCC). Nor did the Bishop of Rome even attend those councils and your church didn’t officially have a canon until the council of Trent. Canonization is not “inspired,” the Scriptures are. The canon is made up of those writings which are Divinely inspired (theopneustos). Grasp the difference? Early church writers quoted from the N.T. Scriptures even before a council on canonization ever took place.
Q2; Can YOU produce a single historical church document that proves a single Christian leader in the early Christian Church ever taught “by faith alone” (sola fide) (you can’t use the bible and your own private interpretation).
Now that’s a good one, James. I can’t use the original Source??? I can’t use Divine revelation, true Apostolic teaching? You restrict me to secondary sources only?
Q3: I gave you many OT examples of men who had plenty of faith in God but did NOT enter into the Promised Land. In fact the lesson of Moses himself being denied entrance for disobedience should be the proof text that tells you that no amount of faith and belief in God’s Word is going to gain one entrance into the Promised Land UNLESS that faith is taken together with obedience.
Moses actually did enter the land, and that wholly by GRACE (Matt. 17:2). If we accept your logic we would have to conclude that Moses wasn’t saved. But you fail to understand that God dealt with national Israel as under the Law. Their faith was to be in God alone and their obedience was to be according to the covenant of Law (Mosaic). But James, Someone greater than Moses has come and inaugurated a new covenant in His blood by which men are saved by GRACE through FAITH in Him alone (Jn. 14:6; cf. Rom. 6:14).
So, given this background, if you can, please explain sola fide and how it stands up - esp. with respect to James writings about dead faith without works.
This has been hashed over a thousand times on this forum. The context in which James presents his teaching is that of a “said” faith: “…if a man SAYS he has faith, but he has no works? Can that faith save him?” James isn’t denying salvation by grace through faith alone. Nowhere does James conclude that a man is actually saved or justified by works. But, like Abraham, those whom God declares justified (reckons righteous) by faith demonstrate their faith through works. But it’s not the works by which God justifies any man. Even James quotes Gen 15:6:"Then he (Abram) believed in the Lord; and He (the Lord) reckoned IT (his faith) *to him as righteousness."*After about twenty years his faith in the Lord had matured and was demonstrated by his willingness, in obedience, to offer up Isaac. It’s called “the obedience of faith” (Rom. 1:5; 16:26). James’ point: The justified by faith will demonstrate their faith by works. But, as with Abraham, works are NEVER the cause of divine justification (Rom. 3:28-30; 4:5-6; Gal. 3:24). For the doctrine of justification you must study Paul’s Epistles.
Q4: You commented about not knowing of an apostolic successor but I told you there are many ECFs who explicitly write about the Bishops as “where the Church is”. Can you contradict the ECF’s writings?
I can just as easily say that where true men of faith are there the church is. And I would be far more accurate since the true church is made up only true believers. Not all “Bishops” are believers. “Bishop” (Gr. episkopos) is a church office, it’s not “the church.” In Scripture episkopos (also interpreted “overseer”) and presbuteros (elder) are one and the same. Neither are called hiereus (priest). According to the N.T. Scriptures there is no special office of hiereus in the church. Only the general priesthood of all true believers.

Next Post:
 
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CentralFLJames:
Q5: If you believe in grace alone through faith alone (a contradiction) then why do you keep also insisting on sola scriptura by scripture alone??? How many “alones” does salvation really take?
I never said one is saved by the Scriptures. One is to believe the Scriptures which reveal salvation by grace (God’s) alone though faith alone (“apart from works”). IOWs, one is to believe God’s Word. Sola Scriptura has to do with the authority of Scripture.
Q6: Referencing Q5, if by grace alone - why bother to read and quote parts of the bible and exclude other parts MD? Why bother even reading scripture if we are slaves to grace? What good is scripture if all we need is grace?
Slaves to grace.” That’s a new one. You seem to give grace a negative connotation. One does not need the Scriptures to be saved. If I share the gospel of Jesus Christ with my neighbor (which I have), and if he turns from his unbelief to belief in Him (which he did not), then God saves him by grace alone through faith alone. But one grows in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ through the study of the Scriptures, and one’s salvation is confirmed by the Scriptures. It’s good to be grounded in God’s Word and “it is good for the heart to be strengthened by grace” Heb. 13:9). Christ Himself was thoroughly acquainted with the Scriptures and often appealed to them as the final authority in divine matters. The true believer should be as well.
Q7: If it’s by grace alone then why did Jesus pick 12 apostles and why didn’t he just beam us all up to heaven or write us His bible himself?
Grace” is connected to the cross. The Apostles were chosen to deliver to the world the message of the cross for men to believe that they might be saved “by grace through faith” in Christ alone (1 Cor. 1:18,21). In each generation believers are left in the world to pass on the good news of salvation through faith in Christ to their own generation (see Jn. 17:15-17). The Holy Spirit preserved this truth in Holy Writ for all subsequent generations. It’s the way God has preserved His Word in this world since Moses. God has not left His Word concerning Christ, faith, grace and salvation to be passed on by the mouths and ears of fallible men. It’s His written Word that preserves the truth concerning salvation that the Reformers returned to.
 
Wrong. I clearly stated that we are not fully saved (having escaped final damnation) until we die. It is a lifelong struggle, as I have demonstrated with the scriptures.

YOU, however, evaded my question:
What is your definition of “saved”?
Maybe a glitch here, but I can’t find any other of your posts in this thread. Help! I want to read your Scriptural support.
 
Wrong. I clearly stated that we are not fully saved (having escaped final damnation) until we die. It is a lifelong struggle, as I have demonstrated with the scriptures.
So then define “saved.”
 
Md …

If you had your way … your Bible would have only the 3-4 memorized verses taken ‘out of context’ from Paul’s letters. 😃 So much for all the other God-BREATHED verses that you claim to value. These others are the ones that show initial justification (by faith) … is only the past tense, HAVE BEEN part of Eph. 2:8.
(1) If those verses show “initial” justification can you show me the word “initial” before the word justification? (2) Define “saved” as in “For by grace you have been saved through faith…the gift of God; not as a result of works…
 
So then define “saved.”
20 And he that received the seed upon stony ground, is he that heareth the word, and immediately receiveth it with joy.

21 Yet hath he not root in himself, but is only for a time:

I suppose he was ‘saved’ when he received the word with joy; but he was lacking something in himself which caused the loss of what he had just received.🤷
 
20 And he that received the seed upon stony ground, is he that heareth the word, and immediately receiveth it with joy.

21 Yet hath he not root in himself, but is only for a time:

I suppose he was ‘saved’ when he received the word with joy; but he was lacking something in himself which caused the loss of what he had just received.🤷
So then define “saved.”
 
To the O.P.,

Since Catholicism has no concept of the word “saved” for its members in this present lifetime, I don’t think yours is a fair question to ask. I think a more realistic question would be, “How does a Catholic decrease his chances of not getting into heaven.” IOW, what must a Catholic do now in hopes to be saved (help secure his acceptance into heaven) later.
 
Maybe a glitch here, but I can’t find any other of your posts in this thread. Help! I want to read your Scriptural support.
Read my posts, 388, 397, 399.
Let me know if you’re still having problems finding them. 👍
 
**Keep playing your games MD **- I answered the question.
The fact that you are still refusing to answer the same question speaks *volumes *. . .
What speaks volumes is your inability to give me a Catholic definition for “saved.”
 
What speaks volumes is your inability to give me a Catholic definition for “saved.”
Salvation is the freedom from the bondage of slavery to sin.

It is not eternal life in heaven.

As such, salvation is a process, because we are capable of binding ourselves back to sin throughout our lives…

Christ’s atonement made possible what once was not possible…and that is the unbinding of the shackles of sin. Before Christ, we were doomed in slavery.

Christ’s death gave us the key where once it was non-existent…but we must unlock the chains with His help and grace…and we must keep ourselves in His light, lest we re-shackle ourselves to the very sin He came to free us from.

When we die, our eternal destination is based on whether we are still bound to the shackles of sin, or we are satisfactorily unbound.

All by the Grace of God.
 
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