You are correct in understanding that Jesus is suggesting that they (publicans and harlots) will achieve the kingdom - before the leaders He was speaking to.
However, don’t take that to mean that becoming a harlot will mean entry into heaven!
Rather, it because the publicans and harlots were more willing to recognize their sinfulness and repent than were the Jewish leaders.
Ok, thanks for the references, but I’d like to take it a little further.
I agree that the sinners (publicans and harlots) were more willing to receive the Word and repent than the Jewish leaders, but I also think Christ often spoke in a larger sense and for not just the immediate time. He would certainly know that there would be more sinners and more obstinate leaders throughout the ages until His return that would die in disbelief.
I am trying to reconcile whether or not unrepentant sin in any age, by anybody, is eventually forgiven. Scripture leads me to think it is, but doctrine seems to suggest otherwise.
I believe the Holy Spirit protects the Catholic message, but must acknowledge the human failures of past injunctions. Luther had a valid point. I think we can become like the old Jewish leaders, thinking we KNOW more than we actually do.
My heart tells me that something is not quite right in emphatic human judgments of who is going to suffer eternal damnation and why.
I asked another question in Apologetics, about whether or not everyone eventually gets into heaven, and if Purgatory is a last opportunity for all souls to repent, not limited to just venial sins of Catholics.
To me, Christs sacrifice has no limits because God has no limits. He established no religion, but a faith. By having heard the Good News, accepting it, and abiding by it only helps those who do so to live a more Christ like life; benefiting themself both spiritually and physically subsequently affecting those around us similarly.
The parable of the landowner who hires workers throughout the day and pays each the same wage. The first hired grumble at his generosity, but the landowner (God) says, “can’t he do what he likes with his own?”
If Catholics, and other Christians did not limit salvation to the strict limits as it seems to, and what does not appear to be supported by the Gospels; we might be better received, or rather not spurned by others and bring more into accepting the Word, and thus making this world a better one by removing much of the division it has brought.
By not insisting non-believers or unrepentant sin dooms the individual takes nothing away from the Word and those who do accept it. It also does not take away the idea of punishment for anyone. All it does is calrify that by accepting the Good News is the Way to Life.
Yes, Christ brought division in families and such, but that was a result of acceptance of the Word, not the intent of His mission. Knowing that some would believe Him, and some would not brought the division. He was speaking a fact. Why would anyone think His intent was to purposely break apart families and societies? It goes against His nature.
I think when we die, we stand before God and realize the Truth of Christ, whomever we are; the Atheist, the aboriginee, the believer. That knowledge and our conciousness of how we lived our life is our judgment as Christ said it would be. (I do not have my reference, but it is in the Gospels.) All of the things the Catholic Church beleives with respect to confession and forgiving our sins I accept, as it quickens or reunion with God as promised.
How long the weeping and gnashing of teeth (concious knowledge of our human failure- hell- that separates us from God by our own actions- not God’s judgement) lasts for the others I suppose is dependant upon the amount of transgression and the heart that holds it.
I am just not convinced that state lasts forever, or for everybody. I do not know. But holding this thought lets me talk to “sinners” and unbelievers in a different and less hubric way. I can think in my heart that they too will one day join the feast, but they might join it sooner if they just believe now.