D
davidv
Guest
Statement (1) above is false, and any conclusion based on it are also likely false. The statistics you cite are not meaningful as a result.I’m going to answer this assuming that which I think I know about Catholicism is accurate. If I have made a fallacy, please feel free to let me know.
**(1) **First, the church teaches that only those who have be baptized IN (or at least BY) the church are even hypothetically eligible for salvation.
Since only about 33% of humans self-identify just as Christian, much less Catholic, that leaves 2/3’s of us out in the cold. When you consider that only a sub-set of Christians are Catholic (I know not what that number is), it’s even worse.
Even assuming that 100% of baptized Catholics are given salvation, that still means a great majority of us are headed for eternal torture, and indeed the church teaches that cannot be the case. For to receive salvation, one must not only believe, but one must die when NOT in a state of mortal sin.
(2) So a young, 20-something married couple who has sex using a condom is in mortal sin, but they go to confession and are released from that sin, so when they are killed in a car crash on the way home, they go to heaven. (3) On the other hand, an identical couple who dies in a car crash while on the way to confess is doomed to hell. And, yet another identical couple, Christian, but not catholic, who does not believe in (or participate in) confession, lives a long, loving, kind life, and yet is damned to hell because they used a condom decades earlier.
(4) My examples notwithstanding, to be Catholic requires one to believe that non-Catholics are destined for hell, regardless of their behavior or beliefs. Since the number of non-catholics outnumber the number of catholics by a large margin, it therefore requires you toe believe that your God has created a system in which, as previously stated,
(5) I have committed many acts that catholicism considers a mortal sin. I’ve used condoms. I’ve fornicated. I’ve even committed adultery as your church defines it, though my wife and I do not consider our actions as adulterous. And yet despite my sexual sins, I’m basically a good guy.
(6) I don’t harm people, I don’t kill people, and I damn sure don’t rape people. Most folks that I interact with consider me to be a good guy, and I have a LOT of friends, for whom I do good things.
But despite the fact that I am good and kind to people, because I look at the Jesus story and say, ‘Well, it just may not be accurate’ I am to be punished by eternal torture.
Statement (2) above also if not necessarily true. Three conditions are required for a sin to be mortal, 1. Grave matter, 2. knowlegde of the gravity, and 3. full consent.
Statement (3) is false as it does not allow for the condition of perfect contrition.
Statement (4) is false. There no Church teaching that says this.
Statement (5) is evidence of self-deception. Nothing in the list of things listed are good. Labelling yourself good given these not good actions is false advertising.
Statement (6) is false because at minimum you harm yourself spiritually.
Since nearly everything that you used as a basis for this conclusion are false, so is this conclusion.Does that seem like the act of a just, loving God?