Haven’t shifted the goalposts one iota.
Hmm… let’s see:
Gorgias:
Let’s take it a step further: none of the OT patriarchs knew the gospel or Jesus. You’re claiming that none of them are saved?
They knew God’s promises and trusted in them, and those promises even from Adam and Eve point to Christ
Pixle_Catholic:
I have heard people say God has mercy on people who do not know about Him.
Where does scripture say this? It says those who know the gospel yet reject it will be judged more harshly, but does not say that sinful human beings who have no knowledge of the gospel will not be judged.
Nope… that’s pretty much a movement from “no knowledge of the gospel” to “knowledge of God’s promises”. Goalposts. Moved.
By the way the idea of universalism being proposed above is rejected even in OT scripture. I cannot answer why you are so confused on this issue.
You’re confused because you’re falsely misconstruing what I’m saying. It’s ok… let’s talk about it.
“Universalism” means “all are saved, by definition.” That’s the notion of the “Oprah car giveaway”. You know… “you get a car, and
you get a car, and
you all get a car!!!”. The idea behind universalism is that there’s no judgment – for anyone! It’s just that, by definition, all of us attains to heaven. The Church has condemned that outlook as heretical for centuries.
There’s a different – and subtly different – idea, and it take a bit of reflection to recognize how it’s different. It’s the notion that everyone is judged – individually, and on one’s own case – but that we can hope that each is judged worthy of heaven. (Is it likely? I can’t say that this is the case. But, we can pursue it as a theoretical question: “is it possible that Hodos will be judged worthy of heaven?” (Yes.) “Is it possible that Gorgias will be judged worthy of heaen?” (Yes.) We can point to each person who ever lived or will live and the answer is the same: “well… it’s
possible”. And therefore, we can answer “it is possible that each person will be judged individually and attain to heaven.”
And yet,
neither of those two perspectives are the one I suggested upthread. (Hence your confusion. Either you misunderstand what ‘universalism’ is, or you misunderstand my stance upthread.)
I’m not suggesting that
all are saved – just that it’s possible that those who do not know Christ may be saved. The Church teaches that this is so. And… as we’ve seen from your attempts to show “Scriptural backing” for the contrary opinion – and that you have to keep changing your position each time it’s challenged ('cause it’s
not truly Scriptural!) – that this
isn’t what Jesus teaches, either through the apostles or the Bible that they compiled.