T
TMC
Guest
Well, as I said before, to me the belief that some acts are sinful and others righteous is only tangentially connected to salvation. Everyone naturally desires salvation, but we act righteously and avoid sin because that is good and proper behavior. We would hopefully try to avoid sin and be righteous regardless of whether we received reward or punishment for doing so.The teaching has always been that one must be baptized. Even Jesus was baptized by John the Baptist, so it must be important. According the the Catholic Catechism it includes forgiveness of original sin and all personal sins, and birth into the new life by which man becomes an adoptive son of the Father.
“1279 The fruit of Baptism, or baptismal grace, is a rich reality that includes forgiveness of original sin and all personal sins, birth into the new life by which man becomes an adoptive son of the Father, a member of Christ and a temple of the Holy Spirit. By this very fact the person baptized is incorporated into the Church, the Body of Christ, and made a sharer in the priesthood of Christ.”
vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P3O.HTM
I cannot find any Christian Catholic source that says we can sin freely and not repent and go to heaven and still be children of God, can you? Every source I find says the opposite.
“The concern of the flesh is death, but the concern of the spirit is life and peace. For the concern of the flesh is hostility toward God; it does not submit to the law of God, nor can it; and those who are in the flesh cannot please God.” **Romans 8:6-9
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"For if you live according to the flesh, you will die, but if by the spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will live. "** Romans 8:13**
To me that means one’s soul cannot enter heaven if the soul becomes dead with the sins of the flesh. If that is not the case why do we believe in sin?
As far as the Church’s teaching, the Church teaches that baptism is the normative route to salvation, but formal baptism is not always necessary. The unbaptized, including non-Christians and even atheists, can be saved despite their lack of formal connection to the Church. The Church does not profess to fully understand the mystery of how all this works, but does profess it with confidence. This has been the teaching of the Church at least since the publication of Lumen Gentium in 1964. But I (and many others) would argue that this is wholly consistent with the teaching of the Church in ancient times.
None of that means that sin does not matter, that it does not matter if one is Catholic or not, or that repenting sin is not important. But to get back to what took us down this path, I believe it is related to the fact that all of us, of any religion or no religion at all, are Children of God.