Only few enter Heaven?

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All people hear God’s call through the voice of conscience. If we conclude that that only a literal few among the many (each and every one of us) who are called by God get to Heaven, then we must assume that the majority of people who have existed chose to reject the damning voice of their conscience to their dying day. This is something no human being could possibly ever know with absolute certainty unless they received by reliable confirmation, if that could indeed be established, which I doubt, a private revelation from God Himself who alone knows. All we can do is just needlessly speculate on a matter which really isn’t any of our business. What we must be concerned with is the fact that many souls do end up in Hell, and that our own souls might end up there as well if we fail to persevere in faith,. Our business is to constantly pray for the graces we all need to get to Heaven and to repent and make reparation for our sins and those of others through personal sacrifice. This question supersedes the Church’s teaching authority to define dogma, and so we will never know with the certainty of faith whether literally only a few souls enter Heaven. What is dogma is the existence of Purgatory, and for this reason I am inclined to believe that more souls get to Heaven than they would if Purgatory never existed.

You have searched me, Lord,
and you know me.
You know when I sit and when I rise;
you perceive my thoughts from afar.
You discern my going out and my lying down;
you are familiar with all my ways.
Before a word is on my tongue
you, Lord, know it completely.
Psalm 139, 1-4

PAX

:heaven:
This isn’t speculation. It is possible to prove by reason that few are saved. Again, I think it would be best to believe few are saved, because the saved believed that! All of the saints throughout history have said that few are saved. The doctors and fathers of the church believed few were saved. I think it would be best to follow the great theologians and doctors of the church than to believe in our own personal opinion.
 
On another of your points: if only 1% were saved, would that not be a complete victory for Satan? Imagine if 99% of your divinely, eternally created souls went to waste in Hell.
I know it’s only a guess, but that represents the vast, overwhelming bulk of humanity. What a waste. What a disaster of cosmic proportions. It would make a mockery of all creation, I think.
By this reasoning the fact that only two people out of over 600,000 entered the Promised Land would be considered a “complete victory for Satan.” The fact that only eight were saved out of a global flood would be considered a “complete victory for Satan.” Scripture clearly indicates to us that few are saved. It has nothing to do with any sort of “victory” for Satan and everything to do with man’s choice to rebel against God.
 
This isn’t speculation. It is possible to prove by reason that few are saved.
How could you possibly prove by reasoning that a specific percentage of all the human beings who have ever existed in time are either saved or lost permanently? To reach a statistic we would have to survey the number of all the people who have repented of their grave sins against God and their neighbour, which is an impossible human feat. How could reasoning serve our objective when we are unable to even deduce whether a person has died in the state of sanctifying grace? The administration of the final sacrament is a visible sign only. However, what determines whether the soul is saved or lost is the interior disposition of the individual, which God alone knows. Meanwhile the Magisterium of the Church does teach that non-Catholics and non-Christians can be saved. The activity of the Holy Spirit and the grace of God are not physically confined to the actual administration of the seven sacraments. Nor shall Christ judge all the living and the dead on the basis of their religious persuasion, but rather on their deeds and how they conducted their lives.
Again, I think it would be best to believe few are saved, because the saved believed that!
The Catholic Church does not profess to know with infallible certainty that any of her canonized saints have actually entered Heaven. She knows only with a moral certainty that they have. By moral certainty we mean that it would be rash to believe otherwise given the signs of credibility. When the Pope canonizes a saint, he does not make a declaration ‘Ex-Cathedra’ as if he were defining a dogma such as the communion of saints in Heaven. With regard to deciding who should be declared a saint and part of this communion, the Pope is acting in a non-infallible capacity. Again, only God can know, as well as the souls there, which saints are actually in Heaven.
All of the saints throughout history have said that few are saved.
St. Paul wrote that “all Israel will be saved” (cf. Rom 11:12). The Greek word for ‘all’ is pantes, which implies that there will be exceptions among all the Israelites. We mustn’t take this word literally as to mean every single Jew. These saints , too, may not have meant literally a tiny percentage of the entire human population in time, but could have been speaking figuratively to imply that not enough people will be saved as God desires they should be (cf. 1 Tim. 2:4).

The apostle also wrote: ‘I, too, try to please everyone in everything I do. I don’t just do what is best for me; I do what is best for others so that many may be saved’ (1 Cor. 10:33), and: ‘To the weak I became weak, that I might win the weak. I have become all things to all people, that by all means I might save some.’ (1 Cor. 9:22). Paul was inspired to write this letter by the Holy Spirit, and so it belongs to the canon of Scripture which is part of the deposit of faith. His statements contain infallible truths which must be correctly interpreted by the Church through the guidance of the Holy Spirit. So what has God publicly revealed to us through His written word presented to us by Paul? The Greek word for “many” is pollon. What it denotes is that much of the population which the apostle reaches out to in his public ministry may possibly be saved through his endeavours as a “co-worker with God” (cf. 1 Cor 3:9). Now the apostle never claimed to know that much of the people he preached to would in fact be saved; nor does the Greek word imply that most people shall be saved through Paul’s gospel message or that most people have the chance to be saved. On the contrary, every human being has that chance offered to them as is evident in Paul’s Second Letter to Timothy. But it is important to note that Paul does not write ‘that few might be saved’. If he believed that the percentage of the saved population was remarkably and tragically tiny, and God willed to reveal this, he would have written that. He wasn’t inspired to write that at all. The truth is that many people might be saved, and that’s that! This is what God has chosen to reveal to us in His written word. It isn’t only a few who might be saved. Some, but not all.
The doctors and fathers of the church believed few were saved. I think it would be best to follow the great theologians and doctors of the church than to believe in our own personal opinion.
The individual theological opinions of the Church Fathers and Doctors are fallible. So there is a margin for error.

PAX
:heaven:
 
Would Satan want people to think that many were saved or few were saved?
 
There you go again. Did you not read the post that said,
"No pope is bound by any doctor of the church, any saint or any miracle or a private apparition. All revelation comes from Christ. All law comes from Christ and it is written in the heart of the pope."

You persist in putting saints above the Magisterium. Can’t be done! I don’t care what St. Leonard said - he has no Papal Authority to make his opinion override the Church’s teaching. If you persist, my man, you are the one who is resisting the Holy Spirit, and worse yet, scandalizing Christ’s little ones. And we know what Jesus said will happen to them.
Where has the Magisterium said or even suggested that more than a small minority enter heaven? Where has the Magisterium condemned this expert theological opinion, which so many saints judged - far from scandalous - but actually prudent to teach? You are putting yourself above the Fathers, Doctors and many saints of the Church.
 
Let’s take the example from Ready’s list of saints. View #3, alleging that St. John of the Cross, Doctor of the Church, warned about hell. I am a Carmelite dedicated to study of the writings of this Order’s three Doctors. In all 706 pages of his “Collected Works,” there is only this one single sentence (#72) in the “[Minor Works](http://www.jesus-passion.com/Minor_Works_StJohn.htm#SAYINGS OF LIGHT AND LOVE)” out of the entire magnitude of his words. The one who repeats these quotations from saints has diligently looked for a needle in a huge haystack consisting of the most edifying and beautiful writings, in order to emphasize this insidious agenda, extremely out of context to the whole teaching of the particular saint.

I have read many, many writings of Doctors of the Church who have written magnificent beauty for our benefit, and it is a drop of water in an ocean to try to find excerpts on hell. How sick is the mentality of anyone that attempts to bring a soul to Christ by using threats of hell. Pope Pius XII and others specifically denounced any attempt to convert a soul using this deplorable means. See Mystici Corporis, #104.
Though We desire this unceasing prayer to rise to God from the whole Mystical Body in common, that all the straying sheep may hasten to enter the one fold of Jesus Christ, yet We recognize that this must be done of their own free will; for no one believes unless he wills to believe. Hence they are most certainly not genuine Christians who against their belief are forced to go into a church, to approach the altar and to receive the Sacraments; for the “faith without which it is impossible to please God” is an entirely free “submission of intellect and will.” Therefore, whenever it happens, despite the constant teaching of this Apostolic See, that anyone is compelled to embrace the Catholic faith against his will, Our sense of duty demands that We condemn the act. For men must be effectively drawn to the truth by the Father of light through the spirit of His beloved Son, because, endowed as they are with free will, they can misuse their freedom under the impulse of mental agitation and base desires.
Another saint mentioned was Alphonsus Liguori. Again, one little needle among the ocean of beauty was pulled out of context. Read his true sentiments:
Further, in chapter 6 [he quotes the Council of Trent here] it says that sinners are put in a fit state to receive justification by hope in God through the merits of Jesus Christ: “They are raised to hope, trusting that God will be merciful to them through Christ.” [Sess. 6, c. 6] Now, if Jesus Christ had not applied to all the merits of His Passion, then, since no one [without a special revelation] could be certain of being among the number of those to whom the Redeemer had willed to apply the fruit of His merits, no sinner could entertain such hope, not having the certain and secure foundation which is necessary for hope; namely, that God wills all men to be saved, and will pardon all sinners prepared for it by the merits of Jesus Christ.
You may want to read some of these saints’ writings, and I’ll bet the farm that you will not find such sentiments, other than an isolated comment taken out of context to the whole of their words… Check them out.

In the end, you must remember that the Church has the authentic interpretation and teaching, and no saint or Doctor of the Church is above the Magisterium.
You seem to be labouring under the misapprehension that warning about hell is a sin. A priest who does not warn about hell is not teaching the Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

Your encyclical extract by Pope Pius XII does not condemn trying to convert souls by warning against hell; if you read it again, you will clearly see that he is saying that those who are forced to go to Mass etc. against their will are not Christians. Warning people of the very real danger of hell is not ‘forcing people to convert against their will’.

You seem to think that a great many saints had a ‘sick mentality’, and claiming, without a shred of evidence, that the Church condemns their opinions and behaviour. If you read the ‘Glories of Mary’, by Saint Alphonsus, and also ‘The Dignity and Duties of a Priest’, you will see what he truly believed, and what he taught, in context.
 
Our Lord said “Enter through the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the way is broad that leads to destruction, and there are many who enter through it. For the gate is small and the way is narrow that leads to life, and there are few who find it.”

Thus “few” will be saved, while “many” will be damned; the clear sense of this passage is that more will be damned than saved. Salvation is not easy, but is only achieved by grace and walking the narrow path. I don’t see many walking the narrow path, including myself, which fills me with fear of the judgment of our most just Judge.
The sources for our modern English translations of the NT are the Greek manuscripts, so one can easily misunderstand words in the sacred text by applying modern English meanings to them. The word “many”, for instance, has different meanings in Greek and English. In the English language “many” is restrictive, whereas in Greek it is inclusive. Thus if I said in my native English tongue, “Many of the spectators in the circus cheered when the dancing horses came into the ring,” it would imply that most of the spectators did not join in. If I said the same thing with Greek being my mother language, I would be implying that practically everyone cheered except some people. I would not mean to imply that most of the people didn’t cheer, save a large group of spectators. So what Jesus means to say is that the gift of salvation is for everyone, but some people will not follow the path that leads to it. In the parable of the Wedding Banquet Jesus says, “Many are called, but few are chosen.” Similarly he means to say, as it is meant to be understood in the Greek translation of the original Hebrew text, that everyone is called by God and given sufficient grace to respond to His call. The chosen are those who respond to God’s call by opening themselves to the help of His grace. Everyone is called, but some people obstinately refuse to accept God’s invitation to be saved by their own fault. These are the ones who are not chosen to enter the marriage feast of the Lamb. Scripture simply reveals that out of the entire human population some people will be saved while some people won’t be.

PAX
:heaven:
 
Good Fella #102
The Catholic Church does not profess to know with infallible certainty that any of her canonized saints have actually entered Heaven.
The reality of infallibility needs to be known and understood:
Answer by David Gregson of EWTN on Nov-22-2002: **
“You are correct in stating that the Pope exercises his charism of infallibility not only in dogmatic definitions issued, ex cathedra, as divinely revealed (of which there have been only two), but also in doctrines definitively proposed by him, also
ex cathedra
, which would include canonizations (that they are in fact Saints, enjoying the Beatific Vision in heaven), moral teachings (such as contained in Humanae vitae), and other doctrines he has taught as necessarily connected with truths divinely revealed, such as that priestly ordination is reserved to men. Further details on levels of certainty with which the teachings of the Magisterium (either the Pope alone, or in company with his Bishops) may be found in Summary of Categories of Belief.”
tinyurl.com/kllbjdt

The three levels of teaching are:
1) Dogma – infallible (Canon #750.1) to be believed with the assent of divine and Catholic faith.
2) Doctrine – infallible (Canon #750.2) requires the assent of ecclesial faith, to be “firmly embraced and held”.
3) Doctrine – non-definitive (non-infallible) and requires intellectual assent (“loyal submission of the will and intellect”, Vatican II, *Lumen Gentium *25), not an assent of faith. [See the Explanatory Note on ATF by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith]
 
How could you possibly prove by reasoning that a specific percentage of all the human beings who have ever existed in time are either saved or lost permanently? To reach a statistic we would have to survey the number of all the people who have repented of their grave sins against God and their neighbour, which is an impossible human feat. How could reasoning serve our objective when we are unable to even deduce whether a person has died in the state of sanctifying grace? The administration of the final sacrament is a visible sign only. However, what determines whether the soul is saved or lost is the interior disposition of the individual, which God alone knows. Meanwhile the Magisterium of the Church does teach that non-Catholics and non-Christians can be saved. The activity of the Holy Spirit and the grace of God are not physically confined to the actual administration of the seven sacraments. Nor shall Christ judge all the living and the dead on the basis of their religious persuasion, but rather on their deeds and how they conducted their lives.

The Catholic Church does not profess to know with infallible certainty that any of her canonized saints have actually entered Heaven. She knows only with a moral certainty that they have. By moral certainty we mean that it would be rash to believe otherwise given the signs of credibility. When the Pope canonizes a saint, he does not make a declaration ‘Ex-Cathedra’ as if he were defining a dogma such as the communion of saints in Heaven. With regard to deciding who should be declared a saint and part of this communion, the Pope is acting in a non-infallible capacity. Again, only God can know, as well as the souls there, which saints are actually in Heaven.

St. Paul wrote that “all Israel will be saved” (cf. Rom 11:12). The Greek word for ‘all’ is pantes, which implies that there will be exceptions among all the Israelites. We mustn’t take this word literally as to mean every single Jew. These saints , too, may not have meant literally a tiny percentage of the entire human population in time, but could have been speaking figuratively to imply that not enough people will be saved as God desires they should be (cf. 1 Tim. 2:4).

The apostle also wrote: ‘I, too, try to please everyone in everything I do. I don’t just do what is best for me; I do what is best for others so that many may be saved’ (1 Cor. 10:33), and: ‘To the weak I became weak, that I might win the weak. I have become all things to all people, that by all means I might save some.’ (1 Cor. 9:22). Paul was inspired to write this letter by the Holy Spirit, and so it belongs to the canon of Scripture which is part of the deposit of faith. His statements contain infallible truths which must be correctly interpreted by the Church through the guidance of the Holy Spirit. So what has God publicly revealed to us through His written word presented to us by Paul? The Greek word for “many” is pollon. What it denotes is that much of the population which the apostle reaches out to in his public ministry may possibly be saved through his endeavours as a “co-worker with God” (cf. 1 Cor 3:9). Now the apostle never claimed to know that much of the people he preached to would in fact be saved; nor does the Greek word imply that most people shall be saved through Paul’s gospel message or that most people have the chance to be saved. On the contrary, every human being has that chance offered to them as is evident in Paul’s Second Letter to Timothy. But it is important to note that Paul does not write ‘that few might be saved’. If he believed that the percentage of the saved population was remarkably and tragically tiny, and God willed to reveal this, he would have written that. He wasn’t inspired to write that at all. The truth is that many people might be saved, and that’s that! This is what God has chosen to reveal to us in His written word. It isn’t only a few who might be saved. Some, but not all.

The individual theological opinions of the Church Fathers and Doctors are fallible. So there is a margin for error.

PAX
:heaven:
First of all, we don’t have to survey everyone who died whether or not they went to heaven to prove that few are saved. There is history. Only 8 people out of he entire human race in Noah’s time were saved. Only 2 Hebrews out of 2 million made it to the Promised Land, and only 4 were saved out of the entire city of Sodom. What does this mean? There are very few who sincerely renounce the world. Therefore, few are saved. This, according to St. Thomas Aquinas, is because eternal beatitude surpasses the natural state. Basically, we have a fallen nature, and since our nature hasn’t changed, we will repeat the same pattern that few are saved.

As to my second point, I am saying that we are sure these people are in heaven, and these people believed few were saved. Perhaps we should follow their example and believe the same thing they did.

Again, it isn’t infallibly proclaimed, but every theologian and doctor and saint of the church who have spoken about the matter have said that few were saved. Why would we disagree with the most well-respected theologians of the church,and trust our own personal opinion.

Also, they say that a literal few are saved,I could show you some quotes that makes this clear.
 
The reality of infallibility needs to be known and understood:
Answer by David Gregson of EWTN on Nov-22-2002: **
“You are correct in stating that the Pope exercises his charism of infallibility not only in dogmatic definitions issued, ex cathedra, as divinely revealed (of which there have been only two), but also in doctrines definitively proposed by him, also
ex cathedra
, which would include **canonizations **(that there are in fact Saints, enjoying the Beatific Vision in heaven), moral teachings (such as contained in Humanae vitae), and other doctrines he has taught as necessarily connected with truths divinely revealed, such as that priestly ordination is reserved to men. Further details on levels of certainty with which the teachings of the Magisterium (either the Pope alone, or in company with his Bishops) may be found in Summary of Categories of Belief.”
tinyurl.com/kllbjdt

The three levels of teaching are:
1) Dogma – infallible (Canon #750.1) to be believed with the assent of divine and Catholic faith.
2) Doctrine – infallible (Canon #750.2) requires the assent of ecclesial faith, to be “firmly embraced and held”.
3) Doctrine – non-definitive (non-infallible) and requires intellectual assent (“loyal submission of the will and intellect”, Vatican II, *Lumen Gentium *25), not an assent of faith. [See the *Explanatory Note on ATF
by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith*]
Yes, that there is a communion of saints in Heaven is a dogma of the Catholic Church. The pope exercises the charism of infallibility in his divine office when he defines a doctrine concerning faith and morals which is to be universally held by the entire Church. The following excerpt is from the Apostolic Constitution of Pope Benedict Xll, Benedictus Deus (On the Beatific Vision of God), issued in 1336.

"By this Constitution which is to remain in force for ever, we, with apostolic authority, define the following: According to the general disposition of God,* the souls of all the saints who departed from this world ***before the passion of our Lord Jesus Christ and also of the holy apostles, martyrs, confessors, virgins and other faithful who died after receiving the holy baptism of Christ- provided they were not in need of any purification when they died, or will not be in need of any when they die in the future, or else, if they then needed or will need some purification, after they have been purified after death-and again the souls of children who have been reborn by the same baptism of Christ or will be when baptism is conferred on them, if they die before attaining the use of free will: all these souls, immediately (mox) after death and, in the case of those in need of purification, after the purification mentioned above, since the ascension of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ into heaven, already before they take up their bodies again and before the general judgment, have been, are and will be with Christ in heaven, in the heavenly kingdom and paradise, joined to the company of the holy angels. Since the passion and death of the Lord Jesus Christ, these souls have seen and see the divine essence with an intuitive vision and even face to face, without the mediation of any creature by way of object of vision; rather the divine essence immediately manifests itself to them, plainly, clearly and openly, and in this vision they enjoy the divine essence . Moreover, by this vision and enjoyment the souls of those who have already died are truly blessed and have eternal life and rest. Also the souls of those who will die in the future will see the same divine essence and will enjoy it before the general judgment."

The truths which the pope infallibly defines as dogma must be doctrines concerning faith or morals. The scope of papal infallibility is limited. The pope, or the pope in union with the college of bishops, cannot infallibly teach any truth which does not belong to the deposit of faith: sacred Scripture and sacred Tradition. (cf. LG 25) When a pope canonizes an individual saint, he is not teaching a divine truth which belongs to the deposit of faith under the Magisterium. Rather he is exercising his temporal authority to make practical ecclesial rulings and judgments. Whether it is true that Thomas Aquinas or Francis of Assisi himself is in heaven enjoying the Beatific Vision with all the other saints lies outside the range of the deposit of faith unlike the universal teaching of the Communion of Saints in Heaven.

PAX
:heaven:
 
**SAINT JOHN PAUL II
Apostolic Letter Motu Proprio
AD TUENDAM FIDEM, **
by which certain norms are inserted into the Code of Canon Law and into the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches
“TO PROTECT THE FAITH of the Catholic Church against errors arising from certain members of the Christian faithful, especially from among those dedicated to the various disciplines of sacred theology, we, whose principal duty is to confirm the brethren in the faith (Lk 22:32), consider it absolutely necessary to add to the existing texts of the Code of Canon Law and the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches, new norms which expressly impose the obligation of upholding truths proposed in a definitive way by the Magisterium of the Church, and which also establish related canonical sanctions.”
vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/motu_proprio/documents/hf_jp-ii_motu-proprio_30061998_ad-tuendam-fidem_en.html

The CCC #88 (1997) clearly combines exactly with Pope John Paul’s *Motu Proprio *(= on his own authority) Apostolic Letter Ad Tuendam Fidem, 1998 (ATF), which requires the assent of divine and Catholic faith to believe (credenda sunt) dogmas (a category one truth) (Canon #750.1).

A category 2 truth requires the assent of ecclesial faith, as a secondary truth, “proposed definitively” (definitive proponuntur) to be “firmly embraced and held” (now Canon 750.2). In fact, the 1983 revision of Canon Law had replaced in #749.3 “dogmatically declared or defined” with “infallibly defined”, thus NOT expressing a limitation of infallibility to dogmas. ATF better enables Canon Law to apply to the understanding of infallibility including the Profession of Faith covering the two categories of infallible doctrine.

This is quite clear.

No Catholic may take upon themselves to deny or change Catholic doctrine or dogma. It is high time to assent to reality:
The common expression of infallibility is DOCTRINE.
From Vatican I (Pastor Aeternus), for infallibility to be exercised the Pope must teach
(a) *ex cathedra *(from the Chair of Peter), that is as Shepherd and Teacher of all Christians,
(b) speaking with Peter’s apostolic authority to the whole Church,
(c) defining a doctrine of faith and morals.

So the Pope’s ‘ex cathedra’ definitions may be either of revealed dogma, to be believed with divine faith, or of other truths necessary for guarding and expounding revealed truth. Vatican Council II and the post-conciliar Magisterium have explicitly affirmed that both ecclesial and papal infallibility extend to the secondary doctrinal truths necessary for guarding and expounding revelation.

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, June 29, 1998, authorized by its Prefect Joseph Card. Ratzinger, taught clearly the reality that “the canonizations of saints (dogmatic facts) are to be held definitively” so the uninformed would deny also Canon 750 § 2:
“Furthermore, each and everything set forth definitively by the Magisterium of the Church regarding teaching on faith and morals must be firmly accepted and held; namely, those things required for the holy keeping and faithful exposition of the deposit of faith; therefore, anyone who rejects propositions which are to be held definitively sets himself against the teaching of the Catholic Church.”

CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH
Doctrinal Commentary on the Concluding Formula of the Professio fidei

**“With regard to those truths connected to revelation by historical necessity and which are to be held definitively, but are not able to be declared as divinely revealed, the following examples can be given: the legitimacy of the election of the Supreme Pontiff or of the celebration of an ecumenical council, the canonizations of saints (dogmatic facts), the declaration of Pope Leo XIII in the Apostolic Letter Apostolicae Curae on the invalidity of Anglican ordinations.”
ewtn.com/library/CURIA/CDFADTU.HTM

Real Catholics not only pay attention to the Magisterium, they assent to all doctrine and dogma. Denial is dissent. There is absolutely no justification for dissent.
 
Why is it that so many saints say that few are saved and so many non saints say that many are saved?

Who is more worthy to be believed–if not with a divine assent of faith–then certainly with an assent of human belief?
 
Why is it that so many saints say that few are saved and so many non saints say that many are saved?

Who is more worthy to be believed–if not with a divine assent of faith–then certainly with an assent of human belief?
:thumbsup:I’m with the saints, not with the non-saints!
 
Can someone explain this scripture to me:

“Enter by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the way is easy, that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard, that leads to life, and those who find it are few.”

There was another scripture I read that was similar. Does this mean only a few people will enter Heaven?
Jesus refers to himself as The Good Shepherd. Since we are sheep (Is. 53), we must enter by Him because He is the “gate” by which we must go through in order to enter His pasture/heaven. Thus, you cannot attain salvation by any other means but Him. Therefore, you must believe in Him, know Him, and follow His commandments which are outlined in the Bible. I know most Catholics mean well with their faith, however they seem to first resort to and follow the teachings and commandments of men (Acts 5:29) rather than looking to the actual Word of God for instruction, insight, wisdom, Truth etc.

Jesus’ first commandment is often overlooked. The commandment to repent. Many people will claim to be christians here on earth will not have inheritance into the kingdom because they never repented. They never stopped sinning. It is a lie from the Devil that you cannot stop sinning. You can. And God demands you to stop sinning.
 
**SAINT JOHN PAUL II
Apostolic Letter Motu Proprio
AD TUENDAM FIDEM, **…

…Apostolic Letter Ad Tuendam Fidem, 1998 (ATF), which requires the assent of divine and Catholic faith to believe (credenda sunt)** dogmas (a category one truth) **(Canon #750.1).

A category 2 truth requires the assent of ecclesial faith, as a secondary truth, “proposed definitively” definitive proponuntur to be “firmly embraced and held” (now Canon 750.2)…ATF better enables Canon Law to apply to the understanding of infallibility including the Profession of Faith covering the two categories of infallible doctrine.,

So the Pope’s ‘ex cathedra’ definitions may be either of revealed dogma, to be believed with divine faith, or of other truths necessary for guarding and expounding revealed truth. Vatican Council II and the post-conciliar Magisterium have explicitly affirmed that both ecclesial and papal infallibility extend to the secondary doctrinal truths necessary for guarding and expounding revelation.

CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH
Doctrinal Commentary on the Concluding Formula of the Professio fidei
**“With regard to those truths connected to revelation by historical necessity and which are to be held definitively, but are not able to be declared as divinely revealed, the following examples can be given: the legitimacy of the election of the Supreme Pontiff or of the celebration of an ecumenical council, **the canonizations of saints (dogmatic facts), ****the declaration of Pope Leo XIII in the Apostolic Letter Apostolicae Curae on the invalidity of Anglican ordinations.”

**Real Catholics not only pay attention to the Magisterium, they assent to all doctrine and dogma. Denial is dissent. There is absolutely no justification for dissent. **
Since we have veered off topic, I’ll refrain from discussing your citations and extending our argument and simply present and comment on the formula used in the act of canonization, which is:

**“In honour of . . . we decree and define that Blessed N is a Saint, and we inscribe his name in the catalogue of saints, and order that his memory be devoutly and piously celebrated yearly on the . . . day of . . . his. feast.” **

Please note that Blessed N is only declared and defined to be a saint, which presupposes that he or she is in heaven. The saint is not explicitly declared to be there as our Blessed Mother Mary has been by Pope Pius Xll in his encyclical which defines the Assumption. If the pope is indeed safeguarded by the Holy Spirit from making a wrong judgment when canonizing someone a saint, his charism of infallibility must be of a different quality; since on this solemn occasion he is acting under the temporal authority of the Church, not the spiritual teaching authority conferred on the Magisterium. In any event, the person’s canonization is a dogmatic fact in a wider sense in that it is connected with Church dogma. The declaration, based on a temporal inquiry and the prudential judgment of the pope, that Blessed N died in the state of sanctity is connected with the dogmatic teaching of the Church that everyone who dies in the state of sanctifying grace is saved and goes to Heaven, either directly or through Purgatory. This is a divinely revealed truth belonging to the deposit of faith with which canonization is connected. Still, Vatican l Council infallibly defines the scope of papal infallibility.

Therefore, faithfully adhering to the tradition received from the beginning of the Christian faith, for the glory of God our Saviour, the exaltation of the Catholic religion, and the salvation of the Christian people, with the approval of the sacred council, We teach and define that it is a dogma divinely revealed: that the Roman Pontiff, when he speaks ex cathedra, that is, when in the discharge of the office of pastor and teacher of all Christians, by virtue of his supreme Apostolic authority, he defines a doctrine regarding faith or morals to be held by the universal Church, is, by the divine assistance promised to him in Blessed Peter, possessed of that infallibility with which the divine Redeemer willed that His Church should be endowed in defining doctrine regarding faith or morals; and that, therefore, such definitions of the Roman Pontiff are of themselves, and not from the consent of the Church, irreformable. But if anyone—which may God avert!—presume to contradict this our definition, let him be anathema.
[Pastor Aeternus, Chap. 4.]


The divine truths that are defined under papal infallibility by the assistance of the Holy Spirit comprise doctrines taught by the Magisterium concerning faith and morals. The canonization of a saint is not a Church doctrine magisterially taught concerning faith and morals. The Church infallibly teaches without a doubt only that the Blessed Virgin Mary was assumed body and soul into heaven. This is a teaching that must be universally held by the Church through sacred assent. There is no magisterial or conciliar document to my knowledge that defines papal infallibility extending beyond the limit of the deposit of faith. In fact, Vatican ll reaffirmed the infallible declaration of the prior council. Many Catholics in favour of extending the range and limit of papal infallibility are putting their own spin on the documents you have cited.

To be concluded.
:harp:
 
**And this infallibility, with which the Divine Redeemer willed His Church to be endowed in defining doctrine of faith and morals, extends as far as the deposit of Revelation extends, which must be religiously guarded and faithfully expounded.
[Lumen Gentium, 25] **

The act of canonization simply certifies, for the benefit of the Church, that the deceased is with God in Heaven, judging by the state of their sanctity at the time of their death. The language used in proclaiming a saint—“we solemnly declare and define”— does suggest that papal infallibility might play a part in the decision making process, but the act of canonization is not a teaching on matters of faith and morals. With regard to the canonization of a saint, the deposit of revelation extends as far as the truth that any person who dies in a sanctified state shall go to Heaven and join the community of saints there. This is a dogmatic fact. As we have seen above, the dogma of papal infallibility does not have to do with a pope canonizing saints. The Catechism of the Catholic Church describes the canonization of a saint as a “solemn proclamation”, not a solemn dogmatic definition which applies to Church doctrines. The CCC adds:

891 The Roman Pontiff, head of the college of bishops, enjoys this infallibility in virtue of his office, when, as supreme pastor and teacher of all the faithful–who confirms his brethren in the faith–he proclaims by a definitive act a doctrine pertaining to faith or morals….The infallibility promised to the Church is also present in the body of bishops when, together with Peter’s successor, they exercise the supreme Magisterium,’ above all in an Ecumenical Council. When the Church, through its supreme Magisterium proposes a doctrine ‘for belief as being divinely revealed,’ and as the teaching of Christ, the definitions ‘must be adhered to with the obedience of faith.’ This infallibility extends as far as the deposit of divine Revelation itself.

There is absolutely no new revelation since the death of the last apostle. Hence, papal infallibility is meant to preserve the deposit of faith handed on by Jesus to his Church through the apostles. Infallibly declaring and defining Maria Goretti a saint who really is in heaven as assuredly as our Blessed Mother is, rather than must be or probably is because of her sanctity, would amount to defining a new revelation from God given after the death of the last apostle - posterior to the deposit of faith. This particular proposition - Maria Goretti is actually in heaven - is not even a dogmatic fact or secondary doctrinal truth, not only because it presupposes a new revelation from God, but also because there is no implicit evidence in sacred Scripture and Tradition that Maria Goretti herself actually is in Heaven. The Magisterium has already dogmatically defined the scope of papal infallibility, and all the dogmas of the Church are irreformable. The election of the pontiff and the canonization of saints are indeed dogmatic facts which are to be definitively held just as the non-infallible teachings (i.e., Mary, co-Redemptrix) of the ordinary magisterium are, but the Church is in no position to infallibly declare which individual saints actually are in heaven as surely as Jesus and Mary are. A saint’s actually being in heaven is not a secondary doctrinal truth safeguarded and expounded by the Church. And the act of canonization itself is not a teaching on matters of faith and morals. When the pope canonizes someone a saint, he acts as the head ruling authority of the Church and exercises his prudential judgment with the assistance of the Holy Spirit. The charism of infallibilty does not necessarily apply.

PAX
:heaven:
 
Good Fella #113
The election of the pontiff and the canonization of saints are indeed dogmatic facts which are to be definitively held just as the non-infallible teachings (i.e., Mary, co-Redemptrix) of the ordinary magisterium are, but the Church is in no position to infallibly declare which individual saints actually are in heaven as surely as Jesus and Mary are. A saint’s actually being in heaven is not a secondary doctrinal truth safeguarded and expounded by the Church. And the act of canonization itself is not a teaching on matters of faith and morals.
Such suppositions deny the authoritative clarification of the teaching of the Magisterium.

Doctrine – infallible (Canon #750.2) requires the assent of ecclesial faith, to be “firmly embraced and held”. Good Fella’s fundamental error lies in the presumption that the canonization of saints is indeed a dogmatic fact “to be definitively held just as the non-infallible teachings”, thus presuming that the teaching is non-infallible – thus misinterpreting the doctrine and ridiculing the expressed teaching of St John Paul II in his Apostolic Letter Ad Tuendam Fidem, as well as confusing dogmas with non-infallible teachings.

In fact, the 1983 revision of Canon Law had replaced in #749.3 “dogmatically declared or defined” with “infallibly defined”, thus NOT expressing a limitation of infallibility to dogmas. ATF better enables Canon Law to apply to the understanding of infallibility including the Profession of Faith covering the two categories of infallible doctrine.

In reality,** Doctrine – non-definitive (non-infallible) requires intellectual assent *(“loyal submission of the will and intellect”, Vatican II, Lumen Gentium 25), NOT an assent of faith, requiring only intellectual assent, and thus is NOT the same as the infallible canonization of saints. [See the Explanatory Note on ATF by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith]
When the pope canonizes someone a saint, he acts as the head ruling authority of the Church and exercises his prudential judgment with the assistance of the Holy Spirit. The charism of infallibilty does not necessarily apply.
Such confusion and dissent against the Magisterium has been exposed and condemned by St John Paul II:
There has never been, and is no, “licit dissent” as Pope John Paul II has confirmed: “It is sometimes claimed that dissent from the Magisterium is totally compatible with being a ‘good Catholic’ and poses no obstacle to the reception of the sacraments. This is a grave error that challenges the teaching office of the bishops of the United States and elsewhere.” [Meeting with US Bishops at Our Lady Queen of Angels Minor Seminary, Los Angeles, Sept 16, 1987].

There is no right to dissent and, in fact, this is because the teaching of Vatican II in the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, 25, is clear as to even non-infallible doctrine on faith or morals:
“This religious submission of mind and will must be shown in a special way to the authentic Magisterium of the Roman Pontiff, even when he is not speaking ex cathedra; that is, it must be shown in such a way that his supreme Magisterium is acknowledged with reverence, the judgments made by him are sincerely adhered to, according to his manifest mind and will.”
 
Such suppositions deny the authoritative clarification of the teaching of the Magisterium.

Doctrine – infallible (Canon #750.2) requires the assent of ecclesial faith, to be "firmly embraced and held". Good Fella’s fundamental error lies in the presumption that the canonization of saints is indeed a dogmatic fact “to be definitively held just as the non-infallible teachings”, thus presuming that the teaching is non-infallible – thus misinterpreting the doctrine and ridiculing the expressed teaching of St John Paul II in his Apostolic Letter Ad Tuendam Fidem, as well as confusing dogmas with non-infallible teachings.

In fact, the 1983 revision of Canon Law had replaced in #749.3 “dogmatically declared or defined” with “infallibly defined”, thus NOT expressing a limitation of infallibility to dogmas. ATF better enables Canon Law to apply to the understanding of infallibility including the Profession of Faith covering the two categories of infallible doctrine.

In reality,** Doctrine – non-definitive (non-infallible) requires intellectual assent *(“loyal submission of the will and intellect”, Vatican II, Lumen Gentium 25), NOT an assent of faith, requiring only intellectual assent, and thus is NOT the same as the infallible canonization of saints. [See the Explanatory Note on ATF by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith]
  • ewtn.com/library/CURIA/CDFADTU.HTM
    Such confusion and dissent against the Magisterium has been exposed and condemned by St John Paul II:
    There has never been, and is no, “licit dissent” as Pope John Paul II has confirmed: “It is sometimes claimed that dissent from the Magisterium is totally compatible with being a ‘good Catholic’ and poses no obstacle to the reception of the sacraments. This is a grave error that challenges the teaching office of the bishops of the United States and elsewhere.” [Meeting with US Bishops at Our Lady Queen of Angels Minor Seminary, Los Angeles, Sept 16, 1987].
There is no right to dissent and, in fact, this is because the teaching of Vatican II in the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, 25, is clear as to even non-infallible doctrine on faith or morals:
“This religious submission of mind and will must be shown in a special way to the authentic Magisterium of the Roman Pontiff, even when he is not speaking ex cathedra; that is, it must be shown in such a way that his supreme Magisterium is acknowledged with reverence, the judgments made by him are sincerely adhered to, according to his manifest mind and will.”
The actual canonization of saints falls under the temporal ruling authority of the Church, not the spiritual authority of the Magisterium, the teaching office of the Church. The term ‘dogmatic facts’ refers to a teaching and doctrine which has been defined by the Magisterium. It’s a dogmatic fact that anyone who dies in the state of sanctity shall be saved and go to heaven and join the communion of saints. What isn’t a dogmatic fact is that a particular individual really is in heaven. To infallibly judge and rule that Maria Goretti really is in heaven, this being a secondary object of papal infallibility according to your reasoning, it must be at least implicity evident in Scripture and Tradition that this individual saint herself is in fact in heaven just as Jesus, Mary, and all the saints recorded in Scripture really are. We mustn’t confuse the temporal ruling authority of the Church with its spiritual teaching authority, which is what you are doing.

Hence, papal infallibility is consigned to the spiritual teaching authority of the Church. The act of canonization is just that - an act of prudential judgment exercised by the pope under the temporal ruling authority of the Church. Canonization is not a teaching on faith or morals. The secondary object of papal infallibiltiy concerns truths which are taught as implicitly found in the deposit of revelation. It isn’t either a dogma or an undefined doctrine of the Church that Maria Goretti herself really is in heaven. Are you proposing that papal infallibility serves to establish newly revealed truths posterior to the deposit of faith? According to the dogmatic decrees and definitions of the Vatican Councils, it doesn’t.

Finally, the election of the Supreme Pontiff is a dogmatic fact, in that it is connected with Peter’s election in the Gospel of Matthew. Yet the pope isn’t part of the election process. The cardinals are not acting in union with the pope, and can’t be, since he is deceased. So the charism of papal infallibility cannot apply on this occasion. The Church has had its fair share of bad and immoral popes. The infallibility of the Church does not extend to the Church’s temporal ruling authority; nor should authority be equated with infallibility. Former Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger himself once told a theologian that the Holy Spirit does not choose a pope for us, but rather flexibly assists the College of Cardinals in their judgments and decisions. Not all of them put down the same name of the candidate in their ballots. Still we are required to give our ecclesial assent to the result of the papal election. Sorry, but your argument is a red herring.

PAX
:heaven:
 
Good Fella #115
your argument is a red herring.
False.
  1. The reality is that it is NOT MY ARGUMENT, it is the deliberate acceptance and explanation of the Papal teaching of St John Paul II by none other than Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI as Josef Cardinal Ratzinger on June 29, 1998, who taught clearly the reality that “the canonizations of saints (dogmatic facts) are to be held definitively” so “Good Fella” would deny also Canon 750 § 2:
    Furthermore, each and everything set forth definitively by the Magisterium of the Church regarding teaching on faith and morals must be firmly accepted and held; namely, those things required for the holy keeping and faithful exposition of the deposit of faith; therefore, anyone who rejects propositions which are to be held definitively sets himself against the teaching of the Catholic Church.”
As Fr Brian Harrison has so succinctly remarked: Infallibility is far too important to be left to “the long-standing confusion (even amongst orthodox theologians)…and the resulting widespread (though clearly false) impression that it [the Vatican I dogma] guarantees infallibility only for ‘de fide’ definitions of revealed truth, or of heresies which directly oppose it.” [Fr Brian Harrison, O.S., *The Ex Cathedra Status of Humanae Vitae, 1992, p 42]. Thus there are several infallible papal definitions of doctrine.
  1. It is a strange quirk that, without any facts, one would feel that one knows more than Dr David Gregson of (EWTN), can discard the teaching as explained by the CDF under the illustrious Josef Cardinal Ratzinger, and discredit the Apostolic Letter *Ad Tuendam Fidem *of St John Paul II.
The revered Fr John A Hardon, S.J., is another faithful Catholic who has explained for the confused:
“DOCTRINE. Any truth taught by the Church as necessary for acceptance by the faithful. The truth may be either formally revealed (as the Real Presence), or a theological conclusion (as the canonization of a saint), or part of the natural law (as the sinfulness of contraception). In any case, what makes it doctrine is that the Church authority teaches that it is to be believed. This teaching may be done either solemnly in ex cathedra pronouncements or ordinarily in the perennial exercise of the Church’s magisterium or teaching authority. Dogmas are those doctrines which the Church proposes for belief as formally revealed by God. (Etym. Latin doctrina, teaching.)”
Modern Catholic Dictionary
by Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.

therealpresence.org/cgi-bin/getdefinition.pl
 
False.
  1. The reality is that it is NOT MY ARGUMENT, it is the deliberate acceptance and explanation of the Papal teaching of St John Paul II by none other than Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI as Josef Cardinal Ratzinger on June 29, 1998, who taught clearly the reality that “the canonizations of saints (dogmatic facts) are to be held definitively” so “Good Fella” would deny also Canon 750 § 2:
    Furthermore, each and everything set forth definitively by the Magisterium of the Church regarding teaching on faith and morals must be firmly accepted and held; namely, those things required for the holy keeping and faithful exposition of the deposit of faith; therefore, anyone who rejects propositions which are to be held definitively sets himself against the teaching of the Catholic Church.”
As Fr Brian Harrison has so succinctly remarked: Infallibility is far too important to be left to “the long-standing confusion (even amongst orthodox theologians)…and the resulting widespread (though clearly false) impression that it [the Vatican I dogma] guarantees infallibility only for ‘de fide’ definitions of revealed truth, or of heresies which directly oppose it.” [Fr Brian Harrison, O.S., *The Ex Cathedra Status of Humanae Vitae
, 1992, p 42]. Thus there are several infallible papal definitions of doctrine.
  1. It is a strange quirk that, without any facts, one would feel that one knows more than Dr David Gregson of (EWTN), can discard the teaching as explained by the CDF under the illustrious Josef Cardinal Ratzinger, and discredit the Apostolic Letter *Ad Tuendam Fidem *of St John Paul II.
The revered Fr John A Hardon, S.J., is another faithful Catholic who has explained for the confused:
“DOCTRINE. Any truth taught by the Church as necessary for acceptance by the faithful. The truth may be either formally revealed (as the Real Presence), or a theological conclusion (as the canonization of a saint), or part of the natural law (as the sinfulness of contraception). In any case, what makes it doctrine is that the Church authority teaches that it is to be believed. This teaching may be done either solemnly in ex cathedra pronouncements or ordinarily in the perennial exercise of the Church’s magisterium or teaching authority. Dogmas are those doctrines which the Church proposes for belief as formally revealed by God. (Etym. Latin doctrina, teaching.)”
Modern Catholic Dictionary
by Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.

therealpresence.org/cgi-bin/getdefinition.pl

As I said, the canonization of a saint is not a teaching of the Magisterium, but a ruling under the temporal authority of the Church based on the judgment that an individual lived a holy life and had a holy death. No theological conclusion can be drawn to the effect that Saint M is really in heaven. All theological conclusions must be grounded on Scripture and Tradition. And there is absolutely no implicit evidence in the deposit of faith that Saint M themselves actually are in heaven. The institution of the canonization of saints is a dogmatic fact insofar it is connected with the dogma of the Communion of Saints. If Saint M has been rightly judged to have lived a holy life and had a holy death, then they must be in heaven according to the deposit of divine revelation. But Scripture and Tradition do not implicitly reveal the truth that Saint M actually lived a holy life and had a holy death and consequently really is in heaven. Thus at best we may say that Saint M probably is in heaven, judging by their sanctity, unless God decides to explicitly reveal something new to us outside the deposit of faith. According to n. 88 of the CCC, the truths connected with divine revelation are truths implicitly contained within it - not outside of it. I’m sorry you fail to see the problem with your argument. :imsorry: Should we continue with our debate, we’ll just be going in circles. So there’s really nothing more to say. Believe what you want.

PAX
:heaven:
 
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