R
Rob_in_Oregon
Guest
I’m 59 years old and have been a supporter of Catholic Answers since it first started. I’ve been a This Rock subscriber since the very first issues. I have given This Rock subscriptions to friends and relatives whom I thought would benefit from them.
After about 30 years of apologetic debates with atheists, secularists, pagans, evangelicals, and weak Catholics, I’m weary of it all.
Thomism/Molinism: St. Thomas reasoned that God’s grace, not human free will, is the primary determinant of whether a person gets to Heaven. Molina (spelling?) reasoned that since all souls have sufficient grace to be saved, human free will is the primary determinant of whether the individual accepts that saving grace.
As someone practicing apologetics, I always thought the Molinist position made the most sense. If I could just lovingly present the irrefutable arguments for Catholic faith, people would see the good reasoning and make a decision for Christ & His Church.
In 30 years of these discussions, I begin to see the wisdom of the Council’s phrase, “invincible ignorance.” These people are so attached to their drugs, their sins, their radical politics, and their faulty ideas, that they’re not going to give them up, no matter how convincingly I argue.
Perhaps St. Thomas had the better idea. Perhaps the best thing I can do is say prayers and make offerings for them, in hope that God’s grace will break through their hardness of heart. My arguments and debates only increase their resistance, even when I’m being kindhearted in my presentations.
At least I know my own faith much better now that I have studied the reasons for it.
Sign me… “fed up for now.” God bless… - Rob in Oregon
After about 30 years of apologetic debates with atheists, secularists, pagans, evangelicals, and weak Catholics, I’m weary of it all.
Thomism/Molinism: St. Thomas reasoned that God’s grace, not human free will, is the primary determinant of whether a person gets to Heaven. Molina (spelling?) reasoned that since all souls have sufficient grace to be saved, human free will is the primary determinant of whether the individual accepts that saving grace.
As someone practicing apologetics, I always thought the Molinist position made the most sense. If I could just lovingly present the irrefutable arguments for Catholic faith, people would see the good reasoning and make a decision for Christ & His Church.
In 30 years of these discussions, I begin to see the wisdom of the Council’s phrase, “invincible ignorance.” These people are so attached to their drugs, their sins, their radical politics, and their faulty ideas, that they’re not going to give them up, no matter how convincingly I argue.
Perhaps St. Thomas had the better idea. Perhaps the best thing I can do is say prayers and make offerings for them, in hope that God’s grace will break through their hardness of heart. My arguments and debates only increase their resistance, even when I’m being kindhearted in my presentations.
At least I know my own faith much better now that I have studied the reasons for it.
Sign me… “fed up for now.” God bless… - Rob in Oregon