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Per 1 John 5:16 … Should people pray for dead yet unrepentant pro-abortion advocates?
> 1 John 5:16 If anyone sees his brother sinning, if the sin is not deadly, he should pray to God and he will give him life. This is only for those whose sin is not deadly. There is such a thing as deadly sin, about which I do not say that you should pray.
The recent death of this very public person (and others like him) brought this conundrum to mind.
Retired U.S. Justice John Paul Stevens dies, leaving liberal legacy
Praying for departed souls seems unassailable and charitable. Although the Church usually puts it “souls of the FAITHFUL departed” in its official prayers.
Praying for a soul in Purgatory is likewise not only charitable but a spiritual work of mercy.
One CAN pray for Justice too. But perhaps always cautiously since we hope to receive more mercy than strict justice when WE are judged at the end of OUR lives. And AS we judge so are WE to be judged.
That last line will be or has been applied to the aforementioned Supreme Court Justice too.
Did he repent of giving power to those who dispatch the unborn (that GOD Himself was creating and probably had better plans for) before he died?
Or does all evidence point to the contrary? Though elevated to the heights of secular praise in some sectors … should his lifelong “stands” be those of a role model for the rest of us? Or maybe a cautionary tale.
There is an even Supremer Court.
Stevens may be there now. (Though not presiding as a Judge nor called “Justice”).
He is being celebrated greatly and missed by many here on Earth …
… has his “born again” status been confirmed yet?
… in his life he famously championed the right of those who would deny a “born in the first place” status to unborn babies guilty of nothing.
It’s fruitful if this headline causes us to pray for the repose of souls.
But I’m rather certain there are no pro-abortion souls in heaven.
EX-pro-abortion souls would be another matter.
We must be careful not to be “noisy gong - without charity” people as St. Paul warns.
But there are an awful lot of New Testament warnings, some of them attributed to Jesus Himself (and relating to our final judgement) for us to liberally dismiss them all and reason that … oh … everyone gets to be born again < not even true in THIS life … is it?
> 1 John 5:16 If anyone sees his brother sinning, if the sin is not deadly, he should pray to God and he will give him life. This is only for those whose sin is not deadly. There is such a thing as deadly sin, about which I do not say that you should pray.
The recent death of this very public person (and others like him) brought this conundrum to mind.
Retired U.S. Justice John Paul Stevens dies, leaving liberal legacy
Praying for departed souls seems unassailable and charitable. Although the Church usually puts it “souls of the FAITHFUL departed” in its official prayers.
Praying for a soul in Purgatory is likewise not only charitable but a spiritual work of mercy.
One CAN pray for Justice too. But perhaps always cautiously since we hope to receive more mercy than strict justice when WE are judged at the end of OUR lives. And AS we judge so are WE to be judged.
That last line will be or has been applied to the aforementioned Supreme Court Justice too.
Did he repent of giving power to those who dispatch the unborn (that GOD Himself was creating and probably had better plans for) before he died?
Or does all evidence point to the contrary? Though elevated to the heights of secular praise in some sectors … should his lifelong “stands” be those of a role model for the rest of us? Or maybe a cautionary tale.
There is an even Supremer Court.
Stevens may be there now. (Though not presiding as a Judge nor called “Justice”).
He is being celebrated greatly and missed by many here on Earth …
… has his “born again” status been confirmed yet?
… in his life he famously championed the right of those who would deny a “born in the first place” status to unborn babies guilty of nothing.
It’s fruitful if this headline causes us to pray for the repose of souls.
But I’m rather certain there are no pro-abortion souls in heaven.
EX-pro-abortion souls would be another matter.
We must be careful not to be “noisy gong - without charity” people as St. Paul warns.
But there are an awful lot of New Testament warnings, some of them attributed to Jesus Himself (and relating to our final judgement) for us to liberally dismiss them all and reason that … oh … everyone gets to be born again < not even true in THIS life … is it?