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glendab
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…Does Catholicism teach all will be saved?
You believe that invoking “free will” somehow makes your position more palatable.
No. Catholicism doesn’t teach that all will be
…Does Catholicism teach all will be saved?
You believe that invoking “free will” somehow makes your position more palatable.
No. Catholicism doesn’t teach that all will be
Can you please provide the Scriptures that you are referring to. It would help for the sake of this thread.Correction. I am not the one who is proposing that God predestines some individuals for damnation. Paul is. (Apparently, you don’t believe your own scriptures.)
It is true that Peter says that God is not willing that any should perish. But the Calvinist would argue that this refers to God’s prescriptive will, not his decretal will. Also, Peter is speaking to the elect, not the reprobate.
The Calvinist attempts to resolve this apparent contradiction in the Scriptures by proposing two wills. You attempt to resolve this contradiction by pretending that it doesn’t exist. I’m afraid you don’t have that luxury.
St. Paul didn’t think so.Proponents would argue that this teaching leads to gratitude, not pride.
Paul teaches predestination.Counterpoint:![]()
St. Paul didn’t think so.Proponents would argue that this teaching leads to gratitude, not pride.
In Romans, he excoriated the Jews for believing that they were saved through the Law out of God’s fiat (very much akin to the Calvanist predestination, except on a national corporate level).