A
Amandil
Guest
So you essentially would destroy their natures and rob them of their freedom just so you v ould feel better about yourself.Yes, I see a contradiction.
If God loves me more than I do my own children, then there is nothing that they can do that will keep me from wanting them with me.
IOW, you’d be a “benevolent tyrant”.

And you’re ignoring the fact that there are many who simply won’t listen or won’t care, just like they neither listen nor care now.If God is omnipotent, there is nothing he cannot do in terms of life after death, including showing people who He is, and really explaining to us in very real ways the prevalence of His being and His love.

And what if the your child refuses to listen and eats the mushrooms anyway?Would I let my child eat a poison mushroom, even after explaining that it would kill him? Absolutely not. The child has a death-wish for some reason, and that reason needs to be worked through.
Your problem is that you think that people are always rational. You have this “enlightened” idealistic view that just so long as someone has things explained to them fully and reasonably, that they’ll automatically just do the right thing.
If nothing else my previous conversation with you cannot be anything else but the very proof that disproves your theory.
More often than not it simply doesn’t matter what a person knows, they’re going to choose to do what they want, believe what they want.
You and Arte are perfect examples of this.

Because there is none, except in your imagination.I think it is fairly obvious, by now, that many respondents do not see a contradiction.

Now who’s projecting?
- Many people would indeed send their own child away forever for a number of reasons, and would never let them come back. They are limited by their own experiences, like we all are, and cannot imagine God behaving differently. These people need to be shown what love means.
- Others see a contradiction, but the CCC and assertions of Church infallibility give them a great deal of security, and change is frightening. If revelation actually changes what the Church teaches, these individuals may have their faith shaken to the roots.
- Others cannot fathom God forgiving certain people, and they want those people to be punished forever.
- Others still can imagine God forgiving, but cannot imagine certain people ever repenting. This comes down to anthropology, psychology, self-awareness. Can I ever change my mind? Can I ever be influenced? Those who very stubbornly insist on anything, will not change their mind for any reason whatsoever, will have a lot of trouble imagining that anyone else will either. This, again, is a matter of projection. If I am under the thinking “I will never change my mind.” then I am enslaved by the thinking that no one else can either.
- Others are so focused on the “justice” aspect of hell that they cannot imagine some people not being punished forever. Again, this is a forgiveness issue, but some people have a lot of trouble forgiving those that do the greatest evil in our world.


No, it boils down to one group standing with the Church and Sacred Tradition and conforming to the will of God and another group who refuses to.What I am saying is that there is a place in the Church for all of the examples I gave, and there are as many others examples as there are people who believe in God not relenting.
I suggest that you read Scripture about the rebellion of the Korahites against Moses.

Martin Luther had “different perceptions”. So did the priest Arius.Every one of us has a journey, and every one of us is in a different place and sees God in a slightly different way. We can all come to the table together as a family, albeit a family that has different perceptions.

“…not everyone who says to me “Lord, Lord” will enter the Kingdom of God.”We can present our views and maybe others will listen, maybe not. If someone says “if you say this, you are not Catholic” it is time to let that person be. Their desire to exclude someone is their choice. I encourage everyone, though, to be inclusive. There are issues much more important today than what happens to us after we die.
“…if he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the Church; and if he refuses to listen even to the Church, let him be to you as a Gentile or a tax collector.”(Matt 18:17).