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PREDESTINATION OF THE ELECT IS CATHOLIC DE FIDE DOGMA OR CALVINISM?
The Predestination of the elect is Catholic DE FIDE Dogma.
Probably the most active workers on the school of predestination, long before even John Calvin born (1509 – 1564) were St. Augustine (354 – 430) and St. Thomas Aquians (1225 – 1274).
John Calvin adopted the Catholic predestination of the elect from St. Augustine and from St. Thomas Aquians.
Even today the Protestant Calvinistic and the Catholic Thomistic Predestination of the elect to heaven **practically about the same.
**
The Catholic Church declared the Calvinistic predestination of the reprobates to hell is heresy and rightfully so, because the Calvinistic school of Predestination teaches:
God unconditionally predestines the reprobates to hell, which is a random predestination of the reprobates, with other words; predestination to hell without considering demerits.
**THE TEACHINGS OF HE CC ON PEDESTINATION TO HELL; CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA PREDESTINATION **
Quote: Considering that not all men reach their supernatural end in heaven, but that many are eternally lost through their own fault, there MUST EXIST a twofold predestination:
(a) one to heaven …
(b) one to the pains of hell …
However, according to present usages to which we shall adhere in the course of the article, it is better to call the latter decree the Divine “reprobation”, so that the term predestination is reserved for the Divine decree of the happiness of the elect.
The COUNTERPART of the predestination of the good is the reprobation of the wicked.
This plan of Divine reprobation may be conceived either as absolute and unconditional or conditional. End quote.
The Catholic Church teaches conditional (considering demerits) predestination to hell, only call it “Decree the Divine reprobation", which means; **negative or conditional predestination to hell.
**
Continue
PREDESTINATION OF THE ELECT IS CATHOLIC DE FIDE DOGMA OR CALVINISM?
The Predestination of the elect is Catholic DE FIDE Dogma.
Probably the most active workers on the school of predestination, long before even John Calvin born (1509 – 1564) were St. Augustine (354 – 430) and St. Thomas Aquians (1225 – 1274).
John Calvin adopted the Catholic predestination of the elect from St. Augustine and from St. Thomas Aquians.
Even today the Protestant Calvinistic and the Catholic Thomistic Predestination of the elect to heaven **practically about the same.
**
The Catholic Church declared the Calvinistic predestination of the reprobates to hell is heresy and rightfully so, because the Calvinistic school of Predestination teaches:
God unconditionally predestines the reprobates to hell, which is a random predestination of the reprobates, with other words; predestination to hell without considering demerits.
**THE TEACHINGS OF HE CC ON PEDESTINATION TO HELL; CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA PREDESTINATION **
Quote: Considering that not all men reach their supernatural end in heaven, but that many are eternally lost through their own fault, there MUST EXIST a twofold predestination:
(a) one to heaven …
(b) one to the pains of hell …
However, according to present usages to which we shall adhere in the course of the article, it is better to call the latter decree the Divine “reprobation”, so that the term predestination is reserved for the Divine decree of the happiness of the elect.
The COUNTERPART of the predestination of the good is the reprobation of the wicked.
This plan of Divine reprobation may be conceived either as absolute and unconditional or conditional. End quote.
The Catholic Church teaches conditional (considering demerits) predestination to hell, only call it “Decree the Divine reprobation", which means; **negative or conditional predestination to hell.
**
Continue