V
Vico
Guest
The natural man cannot save himself nor even make the first move toward salvation. It requires the grace of God for both. It is a dogma of faith that God gives the grace needed for conversion, and also for those baptized, the grace necessary to not sin mortally. It is then only by exercise of free will that one would end in hell. It is neither a joke nor cruel because God is all good. It is true that there are those who want to improve themselves and have horrific difficulty doing it, and failing miserably, but that does not imply a state of mortal sin. Saints are sinners that fought the good fight until their death and left this life in a state of grace. We are truly journeying and like Christ, we suffer in the process.So God only cares about the spiritual, and not the temporal. To God, the temporal is unimportant and dismissed.
I have trouble seeing the wisdom of creating people imperfect, which causes their free will to decrease.
I see the wisdom of creating humans with free will, but free will must not be reduced to made into a cruel joke through humans being created imperfect, lest that we be set up to fail and have no choice in the matter.
In addition, free will is eliminated when it is ridiculously easy to go to hell but horrifically difficult to go to heaven. The scales are out of balance, and that is proof that free will is a cruel joke.
Actually, we have far less free will than they did. We are far more imperfect than Adam and Eve ever were, and thus we are at a bigger disadvantage.
Free will is a cruel joke at best or nonexistent at worst when people are imperfect.
And how do we know how big imperfections are before free will is impacted negatively?
There are those who want grace but won’t get it. There are those who want to improve themselves and have horrific difficulty doing it, and failing miserably. God’s going to throw them in hell?
God’s grace is so dependent on God’s willingness to give it, that our willingness and ability to actually receive it is an afterthought. That is the reality.
Mark 10
28 And Peter began to say unto him: Behold, we have left all things, and have followed thee. 29 Jesus answering, said: Amen I say to you, there is no man who hath left house or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or children, or lands, for my sake and for the gospel, 30 Who shall not receive an hundred times as much, now in this time; houses, and brethren, and sisters, and mothers, and children, and lands, with persecutions: and in the world to come life everlasting. 31 But many that are first, shall be last: and the last, first.