This answers your concern of “distorted lens”…God obviously anticipates these distortions. These are speculations on the manner in which you suppose the Gospel must be received and we simply don’t see these speculations supported by Scripture.
In deed it will be said by way of reply that Cornelius still needed to be saved, still needed to hear the Gospel – that is precisely the point. This truth simply can’t be glossed over with what amounts to emotional speculation – what we think God should be doing as opposed to what He is doing.
Dear kelman,
Cordial greetings and a very good day. Compliments of the Season. Thankyou for all of your replies to date and my apologies for not responding to them sooner, but, alas, I have been otherwise engaged. However, I will make every effort, my dear brother, to answer them during the course of this week, God willing.
As a Protestant Christian you are failing, quite understandably, to make any allowance for the development and expansion of Church dogma and this leads to the erroneously belief that post VII Church teaching is not congruent with previous teaching. Development of Church dogma has led the conclusion that the Church extends not only to her avowed baptised membership, but also to all men of good will who earnestly seek after truth. This does not mean that all men will necessarily benefit from the salvific plan, merely that they may do so. However, notwithstanding the unbiblical Calvinistic theory of the indefectibility of grace, that is true for Christian and non-Christian alike: the whole course of this life is a state of probation and men, because they are endowed with freewill, can defect from the faith. Apostasy is always a very real possibility as long as we remain and live in this world.
The Parable of the Sower is not germane to the topic currently under review as it treats of four
states of heart and says nothing about the inculpably ingnorant who never even have the opportunity to receive the word in the first place. In each case our Lord specifically states that the “word of the kingdom” is heard (S. Matt. 13: 19,20,22,23).
The case of Cornelius is very unique event inasmuch as the Gentiles were formally being admitted to the Church for the very first time. Thus it was most fitting that St. Peter should preach Christ unto Cornelius so that all could see that the Gentiles had also been “granted repentance unto life” (Acts 11: 18) and that “the Holy Spirit fell on them just as on us at the beginning” (Acts 11: 15). We would expect the man upon whom Christ established His Church, and who was given the “keys”, to be present to preach Christ and open the doors of the Kingdom to the household of Cornelius, the firstfruits of the Gentiles (equally he shut those doors in the case of Simon the sorcerer (Acts 8)). Therefore, it is just reading too much into the narrative to use it prove that that a man must
always have the Gospel preached unto him if he is to be brought into a state of salvation.
The passages that you cite from the Romans and Corinthian epistles simply declare the universal sinfulness of mankind, with which no Catholic would quarrel. They do not address the invincibly ignorant and those who sincerely aspire after the benefits which the Sacrament of baptism declares. They do not expressly deny that our Lord’s Incarnation and Passion may be extended to many who have not heard His Blessed name. Contrary, to what you contend, dear friend, Sacred Scripture pronounces no opinion on the state of the unevangelised (or upon men of good will) and we must resort to our informed view of divine revelation and what is says respecting the infinite mercy of God and,
especially, the infallible teaching of the Church, which has spoken authoritatively upon such matters.
Whilst little is said in God’s word respecting those who who live and die out of reach of the Gospel, sufficient is revealed, not only to make us recoil from pronouncing their condemnation, because we are taught not to judge “those outside” (I Cor. 5: 12-13), but even enough to enable us to entertain a good hope concerning them. God is “the Saviour of all men, especially of those who believe” (I Tim. 4: 10) - an expression which surely can only mean that others besides the Christians or “believers” can be saved. St. Paul also speaks of the “Gentiles who have not law do by nature what the law requires” showing “what the law requires is written on their hearts, while their conscience also bears witness” (Rom. 2: 14,15), and it is probable that the parable of the Sheep and Goats in St. Matthew’s Gospel (chapter 25) is intended to refer primarily to their case. Consequently, notwithstanding what some individuals (e.g. Father Leonard Feeney) or groups have taught, the Catholic Church has never denied the possibilty of salvation to non-Christians. Whatever grace may be theirs here, or glory granted them in the next life, they will only have been saved by Christ, who is “the true light that enlightens every man…coming into the world” (S. Jn. 1: 9).
To conclude this post I give these excellent words by the great Victorian Protestant scholar, Dr. Arnold, which are most apposite: “I hold it to be a most certain rule of interpreting Scripture that it never speaks
of persons when their is a physical impossibility of its speaking* to* them…So the heathen, who died before the word was spoken, and in whose land it was never preached, are dead to the word; it concerns them not at all: but the moment it can reach them it is theirs, and for them” (Dr. Arnold’s
Life and Correspondence).
More to follow.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait
Pax