Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 11:35 pm
If I respond to you here it is...to help them understand on what basis a Christian position of a Protestant variety, and how a Christian position of a Catholic variety, are constructed. That is, what are their essential tenets.
It would be much better if you got them right, then.
...you have said, innumerable times, that you either believe and *get with the program*, or you risk an eternity spent in the hell-realm.
Those are your words, not mine. But you mistake them for some kind of threat, which they are not. They are simply a description of what happens: those who hate God get an eternity without Him...which is exactly what they are requesting.
However, at no point have I implied or stated that fear of Hell is an incentive to belief. It should be obvious to you that it can be no incentive to somebody who doesn't believe in it, and unnecessary as any incentive for anybody who already does.
My grasp is that when one has, if I can put it like this, awakened intellect (understanding in a special sense), that one will naturally awaken a will to live in accord with what I have referred to with just one word as *rules*. Is a metaphysical imperative a rule? It is better to say that a metaphysical imperative, when realized, will result in a rule. When one has grasped the *intelligent reason* why a metaphysical imperative is necessary, only then could one choose to align one's will with it.
If reason were sufficient, then all reasonable men would be of the sort you describe. That they are not all like that is quite obvious, however. Reasonable persons often reason very differently: everything depends on the assumptive premises from which reason begins. At the beginning of reason, then, is faith. And the faith that an Atheist has that God does not exist is no less a faith commitment than the Theistic belief that God does...and is founded on an even poorer use of reason, since no sufficient reasons can be adduced for the proposition that an Atheist can know God does not exist.
All this, however, is separate from the essential question: will being a reasonable, or even well-behaved person get one to God? And the Biblical answer is quite clear on that: it will not. And many and strong passages can be produced to show this, though I imagine you'll probably sit still for none of them.
As you well know Catholicism posits a constant renewal of one's commitments.
And more. It claims that one must be a member of itself, and one must follow all the "sacraments," and also keep moral purity which must be renewed constantly through the confessional...in short, it's a religion of works, not of grace.
Put differently, that means that one can fall out of Grace.
Well, that's quite true: that's what the Catholics think. And that's why what they think isn't actually Christian. One has only to look at the very Bible they claim gives them their authority to see how far they've gone wrong on that.