Ghosty? Can you see that my post was in response to bilop’s post and not to yours?
You actually quoted me, not bilop.
Ghosty? I have explained this now several times. We simply disagree.
As I said, I’ve read the thread and I haven’t seen where you explained this at all. It’s not a matter of disagreement, it’s a matter of me having NO idea what you’re talking about. How can we disagree when I don’t know what you’re saying?
Please point me to where you stated how there would be remote material cooperation with abortion. If I’ve responded to them, then they haven’t been clear. Rather than just say “I’ve explained it”, would you please consolidate your arguments and make a clear statement about how leaving this question unanswered is remote material cooperation in abortion?
We cannot have certainty as to the specific fate of specific babies who die due to abortion. But we can have an idea about what is possible in a general sense for the general population of babies who die due to abortion. That idea about what is possible is formed by the Catholic doctrines of Invincible Ignorance, Baptism of Desire, and Baptism of Blood.
Then you disagree with the Catholic Church, not with me. I’m simply telling you the straight doctrine of the Church. If you want to go beyond that, that’s your business. Just understand that what you’re putting forward is not Truth, it’s personal sentiment, and nothing you say here will make it more than that.
If Catholics refuse to do anything to stop the wholesale destruction of innocent lives, then Catholics are in remote material collaboration with this destruction. That is a mortal sin and we will be held accountable.
How are you connecting the admission that we can’t know the fate of the unborn, and that we have no power over the fate of their souls, to not fighting against abortion? These are different things that seem to be mixed up in your mind. Perhaps you can explain how they’re connected, but I certainly don’t see how my saying “I don’t know what happens to those babies” affects my opposition to the evil of abortion.
You’ve said that this affects the pro-life argument, but you haven’t clearly set out HOW it affects it. Furthermore, since the Church has been adamantly pro-life since long before there was ever talk about the unborn possibly going to Heaven, I think your premise lacks even historical grounding.
Ghosty? If there is nothing wrong with the notion that babies who die due to abortion, then what need is there to soothe minds and hearts?
I don’t see how you can think I’m saying there’s nothing wrong with babies dying from abortion. There seems to be some serious crossing of distinct wires going on.
We do know that unborn babies make moral choices. John the Baptist leapt in his mother’s womb. And it is written that he leapt for Joy. That is a choice for God and therefore it is a moral choice. He could afterall have injured his mother out of Rage. That would have been a choice against God.
Leaping for joy isn’t a moral choice, though. You can say “we disagree”, but you need to demonstrate that leaping in the womb is some kind of moral action and not simply a response if you want your argument to carry any weight. Simply saying “this is so” doesn’t make it so, and you’re more likely to turn people away by such “arguments” than convince them of a pro-life cause.
So basically, you say that leaping in the womb indicates moral choice for God. I ask that you explain how this is so, since leaping doesn’t itself indicate any act of the will (plenty of things leap with happiness that we KNOW don’t have free will, for example).
And people arrive in Hell because they have chosen to exist in the absence of God.
Some do, but not necessarily all. The Church has never said that the people in Hell had to freely choose Hell. At this point it’s irrelevant that I happen to agree with you on this point, because my own sentiment is NOT Church teaching, and that’s my point. Let’s stick with the Church’s teaching, and keep our own sentiments in their proper place.
If the unborn are set apart in this way – and I believe that they are not – then that is a statement that they are not human.
Only if you have a weak and flawed definition of humanity based on the notion that acts make a person human. The implications of such a definition, which includes making John the Baptist’s leaping a sign of his free will and therefore humanity, are extremely dangerous; this is the exact line of reasoning that many pro-abortion people use to support their cause, and it’s fundamentally flawed.
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