You missed the point. I said they're not comparatively more or less for the difference in time's affect.
In that the passage of time is the same? 1 hour is 1 hour? That much seems to be true, notwithstanding Einstein.
But then, I don't think I disagreed here. My only point is that everything in time is an admixture of act and potency. And this is pretty trivially contained in the notion of time: "Now and then." Again, "before and after." Time moves from the actually now to the potentially then, making the potentially then actually now.
But God is actus purus.
It's lovely, poetic and interesting.
Pretty much everything in Plato is. Even when he happens to be wrong.
I think you're ducking me twice Trad. There's nothing complicated in my question.
Alright, then let me read carefully:
You said God permits some, that is he doesn't interfere. Can those he permits still move to him, make any choice that doesn't lead to ruin. Because if they cannot then God might as well toss them actively into hell for all he difference.
I'll deal with the bolded first: The question comes to this: can we do anything good, anything which leads to our salvation, apart from the grace of God? I'm inclined to say "no."*
For remember: "So then it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy" (Romans 9:16).
Again:
"No man can come to me, except the Father, who hath sent me, draw him; and I will raise him up in the last day" (John 6:44).
If we were to say "yes," then we would be forced to admit that there could be some good apart from the causal power of God. Again, we would have to say that it indeed is of him that willeth and him that runneth, and not of God that showeth mercy.
But for all that, the non-bolded does not follow. It is one thing to permit. It is another thing to will directly. Yes, apart from the grace of God, a soul almost assuredly is going to be damned. But this is not the say that God, by withholding these graces, is the cause of that soul's damnation. It is the soul himself who is responsible for his own sins.
To which you may be inclined to ask why should God show mercy to one, but not the other? Grant graces to one, but not the other? Leave one to his own sins, but amend the life of the other? To which St. Paul answers:
"Or hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump, to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto dishonour? [Romans 9:21] [Latin] [22] What if God, willing to shew his wrath, and to make his power known, endured with much patience vessels of wrath, fitted for destruction, [23] That he might shew the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy, which he hath prepared unto glory" (Romans 9:21-23).
*But if I am in error, I do hope that my fellow Catholics with correct me with the authority of the Holy Church.
I don't know why it isn't simply a matter of God giving men both the ability to choose and an understanding of the good.
Because the actual choice itself is a good. The ability to choose is good. The understanding of the good itself is good. But something more is required: the actual willing to choose it. And that itself is a good which must come from God.
If that helps you I count it a good. Else, no but God bless you.
"Heretics, all of whom are children of the devil and who clearly bear the sign of God's reprobation, have a horror of the Hail Mary. They still say the Our Father, but never the Hail Mary; they would rather carry a poisonous snake about them than a rosary.
Among Catholics, those who bear the mark of God's reprobation think but little of the Rosary. They either neglect to say it or only say it quickly and in a lukewarm manner.
Even if I did not believe what was revealed to Blessed Alan de la Roche, even then my own experience would be enough to convince me of this terrible but consoling truth. I do not know, nor do I see clearly, how it can be that a devotion which seems to be so small can be the infallible sign of eternal salvation, and how its absence can be the sign of God's eternal displeasure; nevertheless, nothing could be more true" (St. Louis Marie de Montfort, Secret of the Rosary, 17th rose).