Before you take such a position you should know what our Church actually teaches.
Yeah, I’ve read the Catechism already (particularly closely regarding this issue). Anything else you have in mind?
One cannot reject what one does not know.
And yet, as I and others in this thread have pointed out, that’s exactly what happens in the case of Islam. It is not so much “ignorance” on their part, as though no Muslim has ever heard of Christianity outside of the Qur’anic distortion of it, but actually a doctrinal stance on their part.
Lam yalid w lam yulad, remember? The god of Islam hates our religion and thinks it polytheism, so maybe you should take it up with…whatever that is, that you claim to be the same God as the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
What do you say of the Muslim man or woman who has been raised within the falsehood of Islam all of his or her life and has never received the truth about Jesus?
What should we say of
anyone in such a position? Nothing less than the words of Christ, eternal
kalimatullah Himself, as recorded in the Gospel according to our teacher St. John: “But the hour is coming, and now is, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth; for the Father is seeking such to worship Him. God is Spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.” It is impossible to come to the Father but through Christ, so the implications of this passage are clear. He who has ears, let him hear.
One principle of our Church is that we believe in a just and merciful God.
Indeed, His mercy endures forever.
Remember, Jesus died for the Muslims as much as he died for you and is not restricted to the ordinary means of salvation.
Indeed (again), but which is better: To know Christ in this life and depend on His mercy, or to depend on the mercy of the One you have spent your life blaspheming against, as a matter of doctrinal principle? After death there is no chance, so it is best to do what you can now to enter into the true faith of God, which is the worship of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Better to be embraced by Christ as a worker of the eleventh hour than damned by (via) Muhammad as a worker of iniquity who fought against what God has commanded in the Holy Scriptures and the other witnesses of the true faith, our Fathers and Masters the Apostles and their disciples. I would never restrict the action of the Holy Spirit or the salvation of Christ to one people. It is non-Christian doctrines that do that themselves, by denying that truth in the first place. Don’t you ever wonder why the one unforgivable sin, according to Scripture, is blasphemy against the Holy Spirit? Because you cannot be saved if you have shut off the means which God has established that you come to the truth. And as our teacher St. Paul wrote to the Corinthians, no one can say Jesus Christ is Lord
but by the Holy Spirit.
The heretic is, as the Fathers have said, self-condemned in this way. We do not say that Christ cannot work as He wishes or that anyone may not be brought to true faith. But they have to choose it, and they’re not going to if it is constantly reinforced by well-meaning but wrong and naive polemics that they can simply stay Muslims/Jews/whatevers because God is a God of love and mercy. Frankly, I thought that this was one of the ideas that Catholics were most against, having been articulated by various Protestant reformers. Remember Martin Luther’s quote on this idea? From wikiquote: “Be a sinner, and let your sins be strong (sin boldly), but let your trust in Christ be stronger, and rejoice in Christ who is the victor over sin, death, and the world.” I will assume that you think this an incorrect application of the principle you have outlined to try to get me to back away from the truth in such bold terms. So I can’t help but wonder: If Luther’s idea of ‘sinning boldly’ is predicated on trust in Christ as the victor over sin, death, and the world, then how much more can this idea not apply to Muslims, or others who
do not believe that Christ is the victor over sin, death, and the world in the first place? So they do not get to deny Christ, which after all is as bold a sin as anyone can commit.
Do not tempt God. We hope in His mercy, all the while trembling before the almighty seat of His judgment.