Ghosty? What does this mean? Are the unborn capable of the Beatific Vision or not?
They are human beings, and human nature is built for Grace. As for whether or not the unborn are actually capable, I’ve answered that when I said:
“We don’t know if the unborn receive Grace or not, we can only trust in the Mercy and Providence of God.”
If that’s not clear enough, let me know what is missing for you and I’ll try to clarify.
What is the difference between materially possible or actually possible? Where does this terminology come from?
The language comes from my attempt to simplify Thomistic theological/philosophical principles, but the terms reflect common human experience in general. Something is “materially capable” if the matter in question can potentially, by its nature, do/have something. A knife is materially of cutting a loaf of bread. Actually capable is when this material potential can be put into act. It’s possible for something to be materially capable, but not actually capable: a knife is materially capable of cutting this loaf of bread, but it’s not actually capable of cutting this loaf because I ate it.
Basically I’m saying that human nature is a “God-receiving thing”, but that doesn’t mean that this or that particular human person will receive God. The fact that a bunch of humans don’t receive God doesn’t somehow make them less human, just like a bunch of knives that never cut something are somehow less knife.
Sorry you had to run into a potter…
It’s best to work within the limits and intent of the analogy, rather than try to stretch it out. My point is simply that clay that is lost before becoming a pot is not “less clay” for not ever having the chance of becoming a pot.
If the soul of the unborn baby still exists and he/she has chosen God then God is eventually where that soul will arrive.
This presumes that the unborn has the choice. We don’t know that they do, according to the Church. Personally I think that God likely provides such a choice, but it would be an extraordinary lifting up of their state to the ability to choose, not a normal, entirely natural use of free will. Regardless, this view is not that of the Church, it’s just a possible solution I can personally offer. The official teaching of the Church, which I accept 100%, is that we don’t know and can’t know that even this idea is possible. It’s a complete blank-spot in our knowledge. I’m comfortable with that.
I have never said that every human gets it. With virtually every post I have made claiming that the possibility for Beatific Vision is there for the unborn, I have also said that there is no guarantee that each specific unborn baby will attain it.
I know, and I wasn’t implying that you did say it. I was including that statement for the completeness of the point, not as an argument against you. The point is that the natural ability to receive doesn’t mean that ANYONE actually receives. The fact that some don’t receive, and can’t because of circumstances, doesn’t negate their possession of a nature that COULD receive.
Hence if it were true that the unborn did not ever have the chance to enact free will, it would not follow that they were not human. Free will is a faculty of human nature, but it’s not a faculty that’s always operating. When we sleep, we don’t have actual free will, for example, even though we have the material capability of it (we have a human soul). Likewise, in my view, with the unborn and infants. Their inability to use their natural faculty of free will doesn’t mean they’re not human.
It is a blatant and persistent misrepresentation of what I have said. I have said exactly the opposite so many times now that it staggers the imagination.
It’s called “reductio ad absurdum”. You’ve said that if an infant can’t use free will, they wouldn’t be human. I’m pointing out that such a premise leads to the conclusion that it’s an act that makes a human, rather than the nature that enables such acts which makes a human.
John the Baptist in his mother’s womb was capable of a cognitive action?
No, he wasn’t. Nor was he capable of an act of free-will. That’s my argument because I’m saying that free will requires the ability to discern and select, to make a choice based on knowledge, a property of cognition. You’ve yet to address this.
So again, St. John the Baptist was NOT engaging in an act of free will when he leaped in the womb of St. Elizabeth. If you have a different definition of free will, present it and lets see if it holds up under scrutiny.
Options available:
- God; or
- not God.
And how does this NOT involve knowledge/cognition?
Nope, sorry. I’ve given a lot of links to stuff on free will. Read those please.
You haven’t posted a single link on this thread. What are you talking about?
Peace and God bless!