According to Catholic doctrine it is quite feasible for an SBCer to attain heaven, but only because of the doctrines the SBC and the Church hold in common (i.e. Christ's Incarnation, His redemptive grace, the Trinitarian nature of God), not because of any doctrinal mistakes the SBC has made.
It is a complex issue precisely because the Catholic Church holds that anyone who has been validly baptized in the name of the Trinity is a Catholic, who may by circumstance be either separated from or united in communion in the Catholic Church. And those who are separated from communion may be separated by their own fault or by the fault of others.
And my point was not what Dr. Mohler may opine as to the fate of my immortal soul.
It is one thing for him to erroneously believe that the Catholic Church is mistaken in its teaching.
It is another to call Catholics "false" Christians or purveyors of a "false Gospel".
It implies that Catholics have a deceptive intent in teaching their faith, when in reality our faith is every bit as sincerely felt and preached as Dr. Mohler's.
As far as I'm concerned, Dr. Mohler is a real Christian who teaches a mistaken interpretation of the Gospel. I wouldn't accuse him of being a "false" Christian or accuse the SBC of spreading a "false" Gospel just because they are mistaken.
There is a difference between thinking that someone is in error and that someone is intentionally lying or being deceitful.
Yeah, I can understand your issue with the word "false." Still, I would have to real his entire statement before I could comment on the true meaning of this tiny portion of it.
So the SBC is mistaken but the Catholic church is not? Interesting.