Posted on 04/03/2018 4:22:46 PM PDT by huckfillary
As more evidence the world has truly gone mad: The Pope has declared theres no such thing as hell. In a bizarre yet entirely logical way, it makes perfect sense. Read on.
Youve heard the expression, Is the Pope Catholic? Its a figure of speech used to point out that the answer to a particular question is unequivocally yes.
Now that the Pope has come out against the existence of hell, I suppose well have to abandon that expression.
Controversy erupted this week with reports that Pope Francis denied the existence of hell. Quoted by an Italian journalist who is both a friend and frequent interviewer of the pontiff, Francis reportedly said that sinners who die without eternal salvation are not punished but that instead their souls simply disappear. There is no hell, he unambiguously declared.
Interestingly, in the uproar that followed, the Vatican tried to smooth over the rather stunning statement but nevertheless stopped short of expressly denying it, saying that the quote was a reconstruction of the interview and not a transcript.
The uproar over the Popes statements raises an interesting psychological point: Do you value something more only if you know you can lose it?
From a Catholic perspective, losing hell is quite a shocker. Catholics, like most other religious people, believe in an afterlife when you die. If the afterlife isnt based on merit, then whats the point of justice? Whats the point of the Ten Commandments or any other rules youre obliged to follow?
The issue is broader than whether youre Catholic, or even whether youre religious at all. The real questions are: What is justice? And is it merit-based?
Such an issue applies to everyday life as much as to religion or government. A childs concept of justice is formed by how his or her parents treat him, as well as other significant adults. Are the adults/parents arbitrary and capricious? Do they seem to care about enforcing right and wrong consistently? Do they practice what they preach, or at least explain in terms the child can understand why some rules apply to children and not to adults? As a child, are you punished the exact same way for forgetting to put out the trash as you are for skipping a week of school or stealing from the local store?
It doesnt matter what you think about religion or wider human affairs. Justice is part of all of our personal lives, whether we stop to think about it, or not. Whether or not we think about justice as an abstract concept, issues of justice affect us from the time were old enough to have feelings or opinions about anything.
I dont think the Popes comments are accidental. The Pope is a democratic socialist, if not an outright Marxist. People who subscribe to this point-of-view often dont believe in merit. To a socialist-minded Pope, the idea of justice applied to the afterlife is probably too chauvinistic, racist, sexist or just too rational for his tastes. Pope Francis is not a man who yearns for a meritocracy, neither on earth nor in the afterlife.
Im not at all shocked to hear him suggest there is no hell. However, it would come as quite a shock to the nuns and priests who taught little Catholic children in the 1950s and 1960s, wouldnt it?
You dont have to be Catholic or even religious to be appalled by the Popes remarks that there is no hell. What hes really trying to say is that there is no rational, merit-based justice, no accountability, no personal responsibility or at the deepest level no law of cause-and-effect.
In that respect, this Pope is a sign of our times. We live in a culture where any idea of self-responsibility, self-determination and individualism are stripped from our minds from day one. What do you think political correctness is all about? Its a war on the individuals right to live his own life as an end in itself, while simultaneously taking full responsibility for that life.
Thats the deeper reason why liberty and freedom are fading away in so much of the world. Thats why when you read about the art, attitudes, and ideas of periods of history like the Renaissance or the Enlightenment, the eras that gave us Michelangelos David, da Vincis Mona Lisa and ultimately gave rise to liberty and the United States, you can see that were truly living in the anti-Renaissance right now.
The good news is that justice matters, no matter what crazy Popes or other irrationalists try to tell us. Justice is rooted in the law of cause-and-effect. IF you act according to a code that goes against your nature and interests as a rational human being, THEN in some sense youre going to pay, even if only internally and psychologically. Until this particular Pope came along, I thought this was an issue on which secular-minded psychologists and religiously oriented Popes and priests could agree. Apparently no more.
In order to fully value something including life itself its necessary to grasp that you can lose it. Life is as much about keeping and maintaining whats important to you as it is creating and discovering it. Im talking about both material and non-material values here. Throwing justice out the window is like throwing meaning and purpose out the window. We simply cant do it, not if we wish to survive and flourish as the human beings we are supposed to be.
Unitarian Catholic.
Next week he’ll call for all Crosses to be replaced with Hammer and Sickle.
bkmk
Fake news. Sad.
Frankie is nothing more than a lowlife scumbag Marxist thug masquerading as a catholic.
Fake pope.
Jesuit, but first a Marxist.
How was he able to push Benedict out and become pope? I just don’t understand how that happened. I thought a pope was pope for life?
More like: Are bears Catholic?
I truly loathe this human excrement, and I will not go back to donating a drop to the Catholic Church.
I love my Faith but I Can and will not support this SJW, in any way shape or form.
No lectures, please.
I practice in my own way and to me, it is significant.
The expression does not apply to the man who claims to be Pope
This pope is not a catholic...he’s a communist.
Ya got me laughing! LOL!!
This is an actual pic of the Pope receiving a hammer and sickle crucifix, which he has kept:
I was on an Ignatian retreat shortly after Francis became Pope. The Jesuit priest leading the retreat said that he and a fellow Jesuit were elated that the Pope is a Jesuit; that finally “we have a Pope we can understand.”
Hey, are you my cousin?
Wow, isn’t that special.
I wonder when they will announce that the Vatican and Islam have formed a new super religion. It has to be coming soon.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.