How is it possible that some of us will perish?

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Calvinist theology is all about respect God’s authority and sovereignty. It’s not important that God be good, all that matters is that he has control over your mind and actions and it’s best to just go with that because you can’t resist anyway. And isn’t wonderful that as a Calvinist He’s choosing to give you eternal paradise? Yay God!
Eternal life from and with a God who isn’t necessarily good? Great. Think Calvinists have a lot to learn about Him.
 
What about our first parents, Adam and Eve? Obviously they resisted God’s will. And there it all began and continues to this day.
Well, the same rationale obviously applies to Adam and Eve. They were only able to resist God’s will because it was God’s will that they should resist his will.
 
Yes but in my opinion, Satan is the monkey wrench in your system of logic. After all, you just cherry picked these three statements to make your argument. I’m sure I could come up with a different one.
I see. You believe that it is possible for Satan to resist God’s will. And apparently Satan’s will is more powerful than God’s will because, according to the view of traditional Christianity (including Catholicism), the majority of human beings will perish.
 
I said the bible can be difficult to understand. The Church’s teachings are much clearer-that’s the purpose of a catechism, for one. Hell-and heaven or the afterlife in general for that matter-aren’t topics that God’s chosen to reveal a great about.
Well, that makes my point. The teachings of the Church are not very straightfoward and clear. There’s a lot of ambiguity there.
 
Well, the same rationale obviously applies to Adam and Eve. They were only able to resist God’s will because it was God’s will that they should resist his will.
So when He told them not to eat of the fruit did He* want *them to eat of the fruit? It was never God’s will that any part of His creation should resist His will; that would mean He’d be the author of sin/evil-not to mention that He’d be quite conflicted BTW. He willed that our wills should be free, free enough to resist and oppose even His very own will! Because He values that freedom immensely,our freedom to choose right over wrong, good over evil, life over death, love over lovelessness, heaven over hell, God over no God. He allows, but never causes, evil, for His purposes, ultimately to bring an even greater good out of it as He patiently draws, without force, His creation into alignment with His perfect will…
 
And the biggest problem with the Calvinist position is that, with it, there’s absolutely no guarantee or reason to think that salvation is better that being lost, that heaven would be any better than hell, that God should be any better than satan.
Why do you believe that the Catholic position portrays God in a better light?
 
Well, that makes my point. The teachings of the Church are not very straightfoward and clear. There’s a lot of ambiguity there.
There’s simply not a great deal that God’s revealed about it-or that we could even comprehend at this time.
"No eye has seen, no ear has heard, and no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love Him." 1 Cor 2:9
The more we love Him, however, the greater the odds that He will give us a glimpse of it, revealing something of what He’s prepared even now. Meanwhile the Church isn’t going to engage in fantasy.
 
Why do you believe that the Catholic position portrays God in a better light?
Because the choice is ours. Grace is always resistible in Catholic theology. A God who would predestine any of His beings to eternal torment from before creation wouldn’t be worth the time it took to spit on him.

600 To God, all moments of time are present in their immediacy. When therefore he establishes his eternal plan of “predestination”, he includes in it each person’s free response to his grace: “In this city, in fact, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel, gathered together against your holy servant Jesus, whom you anointed, to do whatever your hand and your plan had predestined to take place.” For the sake of accomplishing his plan of salvation, God permitted the acts that flowed from their blindness.
 
So when He told them not to eat of the fruit did He* want *them to eat of the fruit? It was never God’s will that any part of His creation should resist His will; that would mean He’d be the author of sin/evil-not to mention that He’d be quite conflicted BTW.
Two Points:
  1. The Bible teaches that God did create evil.
“I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the Lord do all these things.” Isaiah 45:7
  1. God, as portrayed in the Bible. does appear to be undergoing internal conflict. Anyone who would argue otherwise clearly has never read the Old Testament. Either that, or they are in denial.
He willed that our wills should be free, free enough to resist and oppose even His very own will! Because He values that freedom immensely,our freedom to choose right over wrong, good over evil, life over death, love over lovelessness, heaven over hell, God over no God.
This is simply saying in another guise that “God wills that we will resist his will.”
 
Two Points:
  1. The Bible teaches that God did create evil.
“I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the Lord do all these things.” Isaiah 45:7
Like I said, never build an entire theology around a verse or two out of 30000+ verses. The Church teaches otherwise. And the Church can discern the meaning of scripture from the greater perspective of the faith she’s received.
  1. God, as portrayed in the Bible. does appear to undergoing internal struggles. Anyone who would argue otherwise clearly has never read the Old Testament. Either that, or they are in denial.
God never changes. Man, and his concept of God, does change, however, and is reflected in the changing accounts of Gods will in the OT. The NT set the record straight, when the time was ripe for us to receive it.
This is simply saying in another guise that “God wills that we will resist his will.”
Nope. God wills that we’re free to resist His will. Two different concepts: between willing evil and willing freedom.
 
Like I said, never build an entire theology around a verse or two out of 30000+ verses. The Church teaches otherwise. And the Church can discern the meaning of scripture from the greater perspective of the faith she’s received.

God never changes. Man, and his concept of God, does change, however, and is reflected in the changing accounts of Gods will in the OT. The NT set the record straight, when the time was ripe for us to receive it.

Nope. God wills that we’re free to resist His will. Two different concepts: between willing evil and willing freedom.
It’s always interesting to see how people deal with verses that contradict their theological presuppositions. Romans 9 says that God creates some people for destruction like a potter molds clay? Just ignore that. God explicitly says in Isaiah that he creates evil? Doesn’t matter, it’s just one verse. Seems to me that it’s very disrespectful of sacred scripture.

Counterpoint, you could tattoo these verses all over their bodies, they will never read them or acknowledge what they say.
 
It is this kind of rationale that prompted me to start my thread: “Why does anyone knowingly and willingly reject God?
So they can circumvent Him and play God themselves. What could be better than being God? And what can mess up the world better than creation playing God? We’re designed to covet goodness, whatever we may perceive that to be. But the greatest good-and source of sheer happiness for man-is to be willingly subjugated to and in communion with God. Adam’s disobedience was a rejection of that good, a rejection of God, in favor of his own agenda. We’re here to learn why/how Adam was wrong, why God’s will should be done after all-so we can* choose.*
 
It’s always interesting to see how people deal with verses that contradict their theological presuppositions. Romans 9 says that God creates some people for destruction like a potter molds clay? Just ignore that. God explicitly says in Isaiah that he creates evil? Doesn’t matter, it’s just one verse. Seems to me that it’s very disrespectful of sacred scripture.

Counterpoint, you could tattoo these verses all over their bodies, they will never read them or acknowledge what they say.
Sure and we’d have to throw out all the other verses that admonish us to ***choose ***good over evil, life over death, to choose to remain in Christ, invest our talents, live in the Spirit, keep oil in our lamps, feed the hungry, obey the commandments, clothe the naked, keep the faith, be good soil, persevere, strive, be holy, be perfect, work out our salvation, etc, etc, generally with the loss of the kingdom at stake. Throw out free will and you throw out the bulk of the bible along with the Christian faith.
 
It’s always interesting to see how people deal with verses that contradict their theological presuppositions. Romans 9 says that God creates some people for destruction like a potter molds clay? Just ignore that. God explicitly says in Isaiah that he creates evil? Doesn’t matter, it’s just one verse. Seems to me that it’s very disrespectful of sacred scripture.

Counterpoint, you could tattoo these verses all over their bodies, they will never read them or acknowledge what they say.
I don’t believe that everything in the Bible is absolutely literally true or divinely inspired. The Old Testament is mostly a history book explaining why the Jewish people had such bad luck much of the time. I do think that the Gospels are full of truth. As for Paul, he was developing a theology and forming the Christian Church and as much as I love Paul’s writings, sometimes they are contradictory and hard to follow. Some of the writings attributed to Paul aren’t even by Paul. We can get a lot of truth out of the Bible, but not all of it makes perfect sense or even agrees with other things in the Bible. It was written by many people through many different ages. So taking things out of context like Counterpoint did is really quite silly.
 
I am new (after a long vacation)to Catholic Answers and I would like to throw in my two cents. First of all, “I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the Lord do all these things.” Isaiah 45:7 There are different “evils” that can be understood. The "evil of natural disasters and the evil of sin which is not a created thing, rather it is a turning of a free will against God’s will. God can decide what consequences follow from two “identical” sins and thereby fashion the evil that people bring upon themselves by their bad decisions. The evil of the sin God did not create, God created the free will that turned from the good and most likely said “the good ends justify the evil means”. God creates the storms and earthquakes and such as consequences of all sins so that people see, on the large and small scale, how it could be much worse and hopefully realize that if we got what we deserved for our sins, without the mercy of God, we would all be burning in hell for ever and ever and ever.

As to how can it be possible that some of us will perish? 2 Corinthians 5:19-21, “God was in Christ reconciling the world (all things) to Himself” CCC 2814, “We ask God to hallow His Name which by its own Holiness saves and makes holy all creation” and CCC 2637 " Indeed, in the work of salvation, Christ sets creation free from sin and death to consecrate it anew and make it return to the Father, for His Glory" and CCC 457, “The Word became flesh for us in order to save us by reconciling us with God.” and CCC 314, " Only at the end, when our partial knowledge ceases, when we see God “face to face” will we fully know the ways by which…"
Because of CCC 314 and a number of scripture passages we can know that we must be given truly infinite graces to see God as He is and yet we will still have free will. God cannot override our freewill. God is so infinitely good and powerful that He has created our freewill such that even when given truly infinite graces, we will still have free will, but we will not receive any merits for our freewill decision at that point. Those going to hell will also still have freewill and will freely agree with God’s Will.
God saves us by reconciling us with God. Therefore when God gives truly infinite graces to everyone at the end of time (through the Name “Jesus” spoken by Joseph and Mary in my opinion), all will be reconciled to God because each will freely choose to be reconciled with God. Those going to hell for ever and ever and ever and ever will have the peace, love, joy, thanksgiving and sorrow for sins that Jesus had on the Cross. They will also choose to not have the beatific vision and to thankfully and joyfully offer up that infinite pain of hell for the glory of God. If your God is not infinitely powerful enough to do this, just say so.
 
The world does not consider it possible to be saved in hell. But if we are saved by God reconciling us with Him and in His infinite mercy He reconciles even those in hell for ever and ever and ever…then He accomplishes both sides of the question, saving all and some going to hell forever and ever and ever, just reconciled in the end by God’s infinite mercy and grace. The only important question then is whether we will cooperate with His mercy “in an acceptable time” or we will persevere in obstinacy until we die outside His good graces and sentence ourselves to eternity in hell, where God will reconcile us with himself in the end by giving us truly infinite graces and then our freewill chooses hell in true freedom.
If your God cannot create free will that freely chooses such when given truly infinite graces, maybe your God is not truly infinite in His power. We can not understand how this freewill works. It is just how it must be for us to see God as He is, infinite and still have freewill. We can not see the infinite without an infinite amount of help and we must still have freewill or then God’s thought is transient and not one, single, infinite, always in the present tense thought, Word.
 
The world does not consider it possible to be saved in hell. But if we are saved by God reconciling us with Him and in His infinite mercy He reconciles even those in hell for ever and ever and ever…then He accomplishes both sides of the question, saving all and some going to hell forever and ever and ever, just reconciled in the end by God’s infinite mercy and grace. The only important question then is whether we will cooperate with His mercy “in an acceptable time” or we will persevere in obstinacy until we die outside His good graces and sentence ourselves to eternity in hell, where God will reconcile us with himself in the end by giving us truly infinite graces and then our freewill chooses hell in true freedom.
If your God cannot create free will that freely chooses such when given truly infinite graces, maybe your God is not truly infinite in His power. We can not understand how this freewill works. It is just how it must be for us to see God as He is, infinite and still have freewill. We can not see the infinite without an infinite amount of help and we must still have freewill or then God’s thought is transient and not one, single, infinite, always in the present tense thought, Word.
Amen. Good stuff. We cannot comprehend our God. We can only accept his grace and mercy. In the meantime, we are truly responsible for our own actions, and whether we shall be saved or perish is up to him.
 
God never changes. Man, and his concept of God, does change, however, and is reflected in the changing accounts of Gods will in the OT. The NT set the record straight, when the time was ripe for us to receive it.
I guess we agree. The OT does not furnish us with a very reliable depiction of God.
 
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