B
Bengoshi
Guest
I agree. God is the reward of heaven. Without God being there, it wouldn’t be heaven at all. I thought the RCC believed in the different rewards in heaven. This is taught in the Bible. i.e. being least in the Kingdom of heaven, many rooms in Jesus’ Father’s house, etc.Catholics believe that the reward of heaven is being with God. We don’t believe in this concept of more or less heavenly rewards (or brownie points as you describe them).
I agree that to be saved, we need to die in a state of grace, and that grace has already been given freely by God and received bu faith.You see, in Catholic Soteriology, you need to die in the state of grace to go to heaven. You get in the state of grace by being baptized and you stay in the state of grace by avoiding sin and by loving god and neighbor. Through the mercy of God, If you fall from grace through sin, you can get back into the state of grace through the sacrament of reconciliation. If you die in the state of grace but still have a tendency to sin, you will be purified in purgatory. You see, this isn’t about accounting, its about becoming personally holy because nothing unclean will enter heaven.
My question for you is, how much good works do you need for you to be in a state of grace? How much is enough? What if you, a person who really loves God so much, commits a “mortal sin” and on your way to the confessional, you suddenly get hit by a car and die, do you go to hell? I mean, that can happen to anyone, right? And that’s scary! We won’t have any security at all.
That’s “easy believism” you’re describing there. True Christians don’t think that way. True Christians have faith in Jesus and as a result love others as Jesus commanded us; and these are all products of God’s grace.Oh, and by the way, motivation is important. Devout Catholics are motivated by love and the have the desire to follow the lord into holiness. I worry that people that are taught that faith is all that matters will not be motivated to actually become holy and will fall short of their heavenly goal.