Perplexity
3. Reasonable non-belief occurs.
**
Charlegmange II is the main objector here. But, given the clarification of what Schellenberg means by reasonable non-belief, I don’t think his objections apply anymore. There certainly are individuals which mean the description.
“Perhaps the majority of theologians would go father still and allow that inculpable disbelief occurs. Take, for example, the view of theologians at Vatican II, as reported by Karl Rahner: “The council makes no reference to the traditional textbook view that positive atheism cannot be entertained for any considerable period of time by a fully developed person of normal intelligence without involving blame on his part. The Council actually assumed a contrary thesis, i.e. that it is possible for a normal adult to hold an explicit atheism for a long period of time-even to his life’s end-without this implying moral blame on the part of such an unbeliever.”” - p. 69. **
I am unmoved!
Rahner cannot speak for the Council, or for the Catechism of the Catholic Church, or for Scripture.
“The fool in his heart say there is no God.” Psalm 14
Self-deception, lying to oneself, is not a free pass into heaven … all the more so because unbelief violates the 1st and greatest Commandment … to love God.
The person who denies God does so on his own authority … a rather flimsy authority at that.
I prefer the view of Plato:
“Atheism is a disease of the soul before it becomes an error of understanding.”
There is nothing reasonable about this disease of a soul, and only faith is the cure for it.