M
MindOverMatter2
Guest
I am not sure I agree with predestination. But I am not sure that I understand what that is exactly. I stumbled on a website which claims to be Catholic; but i don’t think it is, or at least I hope it isn’t. Their arguement on predestination appears to contradict this site - catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?id=1203&CFID=49766363&CFTOKEN=64799965
Here’s a link to the site in question - romancatholicism.org/
Here’s a link to the predestination part - romancatholicism.org/jansenism/thomism-ignorance.htm
Overall, there idea of predestination disturbs me. Here a quote that greatly disturbs me -
And indeed St. Thomas explained that those who die invincibly ignorant, who have heard nothing about the Faith through no fault of their own (except for the fault of original sin, which is in them as their own, as was defined at Trent, and for which they have an ignorance of divine matters), are damned for their sins, including original sin, which cannot be taken away without the Faith; thus they fail to obtain their end, God not preventing this by sending them a missionary:
This to me sounds as if God arbitrarily chooses who he wants in heaven. Nobody goes to hell because they have freely chosen to go there, but because God has given them the nature to go there. It makes no sense.
What is predestination as legitimately taught by the Catholic faith?
Is it a Dogma or is it a an accepted theological Theory?
Philosophically speaking, I think this doctrine to be the most difficult to accept.
Here’s a link to the site in question - romancatholicism.org/
Here’s a link to the predestination part - romancatholicism.org/jansenism/thomism-ignorance.htm
Overall, there idea of predestination disturbs me. Here a quote that greatly disturbs me -
And indeed St. Thomas explained that those who die invincibly ignorant, who have heard nothing about the Faith through no fault of their own (except for the fault of original sin, which is in them as their own, as was defined at Trent, and for which they have an ignorance of divine matters), are damned for their sins, including original sin, which cannot be taken away without the Faith; thus they fail to obtain their end, God not preventing this by sending them a missionary:
This to me sounds as if God arbitrarily chooses who he wants in heaven. Nobody goes to hell because they have freely chosen to go there, but because God has given them the nature to go there. It makes no sense.
What is predestination as legitimately taught by the Catholic faith?
Is it a Dogma or is it a an accepted theological Theory?
Philosophically speaking, I think this doctrine to be the most difficult to accept.
