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You need to mention that God grants perfect contrition to everyone but not everyone will accept it
Fr. John Hardon, S.J.†“If no one is in hell by this date, what crime must one commit to go there?”
This is likely a difference between Orthodox and Catholic. The Catholic dogma is that there is a particular judgement immediately upon death.Of course Hell is empty. Christ has not yet returned for the final judgement so no one has yet been condemned to Hell. After the judgement will be another matter entirely, but until then there is no one there.![]()
Orthodoxy teaches that we receive a foretaste of where we are headed. Souls that were moving towards God will experience joy until the final judgement, while souls that were moving away from God will experience suffering until the same.This is likely a difference between Orthodox and Catholic. The Catholic dogma is that there is a particular judgement immediately upon death.
“Mephistopheles: Why, this is hell, nor am I out of it.The other poster mentioning the fact of satan and the other fallen angels not being sent directly to hell is important I think, they were cast down to earth for a time, but hell was created specifically for them, so why create it when they wont be there for 1000s of our human years?
God could have just as easily sent them all to hell right then, but he didnt…?
Plus the bible says after a period of time, satan and the fallen angels will be let loose again, meaning they will somehow be able to leave hell at some point…if they can do this, it should apply to human souls too, we are spirits at this point anyway, why would they be given any special privileges?
Matthew 7: 13-15“far more”…
Citations of official Church teaching please…
(with all due respect to private revelations)
You’re right BUT,There are two different theological positions being confused here.
Universalism – the idea that God will ultimately save everyone no matter what – is a heresy condemned by the Church. That is the one that you are criticizing, and not the one that a serious Catholic thinker like von Balthasar would ever put forward as a possibility.
The “we may rightly hope that Hell is empty” idea is a different thing. It is not contradicting Catholic doctrine by stating that even those who die in mortal sin would go to Hell. It is expressing the hope that, as we are told God wills, all people ultimately repent before death (even if no but they and God know it in this life) and we wind up finding that everyone is in Heaven in the end. It is something that all Christians should hope, even if for the reasons stated elsewhere in this thread it seems unlikely in practice.
**To know more about Hell, read St. Faustina’s Diary. #741There are two different theological positions being confused here.
Universalism – the idea that God will ultimately save everyone no matter what – is a heresy condemned by the Church. That is the one that you are criticizing, and not the one that a serious Catholic thinker like von Balthasar would ever put forward as a possibility.
The “we may rightly hope that Hell is empty” idea is a different thing. It is not contradicting Catholic doctrine by stating that even those who die in mortal sin would go to Hell. It is expressing the hope that, as we are told God wills, all people ultimately repent before death (even if no but they and God know it in this life) and we wind up finding that everyone is in Heaven in the end. It is something that all Christians should hope, even if for the reasons stated elsewhere in this thread it seems unlikely in practice.
For Hell to BE EMPTYIf hell is empty then it’s impossible to be sent there and everything the church teaches about salvation is completely wrong and none of it ever mattered.
Our Catholic CatechismRather, they hold to what is given in scripture and tradition. And there are many in heaven (from CCC 1023), which are:
the souls of all the saints . . . and other faithful who died after receiving Christ’s holy Baptism (provided they were not in need of purification when they died, . . . or, if they then did need or will need some purification, when they have been purified after death, . . .)
Catholic CatechismIf hell is empty then it’s impossible to be sent there and everything the church teaches about salvation is completely wrong and none of it ever mattered.
Catechism of the RCCNo one knows. But if hell is empty, where is the reward for having tried one’s best to life a moral life?
Still, the Church teaches that no one knows if anyone has been sent to hell. No one knows what a person’s dying thoughts are. Maybe they truly repented.
NOIf its true that FAR more souls end up in hell than heaven or purgatory, that would essentially mean Satan/ hell will triumph over God and the church though…if Satan has managed to ‘steal away’ more souls than those that end up in Heaven, hell will hold the majority of people ever created.See what Im saying?
1036 The affirmations of Sacred Scripture and the teachings of the Church on the subject of hell are a call to the responsibility incumbent upon man to make use of his freedom in view of his eternal destiny.** They are at the same time an urgent call to conversion: “Enter by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the way is easy, that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard, that leads to life, and those who find it are few.”**If its true that FAR more souls end up in hell than heaven or purgatory, that would essentially mean Satan/ hell will triumph over God and the church though…if Satan has managed to ‘steal away’ more souls than those that end up in Heaven, hell will hold the majority of people ever created.See what Im saying?
Permit to amplify my choice of the term" mortal impossibility"And I’m not sure how the word “moral” fits into the question.
Morality concerns the evaluation of acts.
Whether hell is chock full or lonely is not a matter of moral evaluation. It’s simply a matter of speculation.
WHOA THERE:shrug:And every one of those sins is forgivable upon sincere repentance.
No one is contradicting Church teaching by suggesting that even the unrepentant would be saved. But it is logically possible – though unlikely – for every last human to have repented before death. Indeed, we are told in Scripture that God’s perfect will is that all be saved. We are not Calvinists believing that some humans are created just to be damned – and so it must be that each individual has (or had, or will have) a real chance to accept the working of God’s grace.
Naturally, one may believe (and historically, most Christians have) that in practice it is likely that Hell is heavily populated. But those who hold out hope (not certainty or demands, but hope) that God actually triumphs completely in the end are not heretics and are denying no Church teaching.