Scholar in training
sine ira et studio
- Feb 25, 2005
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And how do you know that they HAVEN'T had the chance to change and to choose God? Does someone who is addicted to cigarettes, although heavily influenced by his addiction, lose the ability to stop smoking if someone else enables him to see the ramifications smoking has on him and others?Rae said:Wrong. We don't have free will when we're so miserable that we choose to torture ourselves. Any God worth Her/His salt would heal us of the desire to harm ourselves, and then, sane, we'd choose God. Simple as that. No self-inflicted torture. That's not denying anyone free will. That's RESTORING free will to them.
The Tridentine dogma teaches that the freedom of the will has not been destroyed under original sin, and that this freedom remains unimpaired under the influence of Divine grace. This has interesting ramifications in regards to Peter.
My main reason in using the analogy was to illustrate the importance of human co-operation when God offers salvation to someone. If a person isn't willing to be in God's presence, then God will not force him/her to be - indeed, someone who does not want to be in his presence might see hell as, well, a Godsend.As for your alleged "Peter analogy," you mean you're still clinging to the idea that sane people knowingly reject God?
The atheist who said that he would "fight" God if hell existed is being bull-headed, not honest.That's silly. Pagans, Muslims, Hindus, Jehovah's Witnesses, atheists, no one knowingly rejects God. Atheists honestly believe there is no such being.The others honestly believe they are following Her to the best of their ability.
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