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Refl ection

Refl ection

WHAT ABOUT UNIVERSAL SALVATION?

Is universal salvation compatible with the teachings of the Catholic Church? Yes, in the sense that it is possible. No, in the sense that universal salvation is inevitable. Th at would render repentance for one’s sins no longer necessary and suggest that free will is a comfortable sham.

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Th is teaching is sometimes called “Origenism,” named for the Egyptian biblical scholar who died in Tyre in 253 or 254. Although Origen had critics during his lifetime, Origenism was not condemned as heretical until the Second Council of Constantinople (553). It is not at all certain that he believed all the statements lumped together 300 years later as Origenism.

According to A Concise Dictionary of eology, by Gerald O’Collins, SJ, and Edward G. Farrugia, SJ, Sts. Athanasius of Alexandria, Basil the Great, and Gregory of Nazianzus (all bishops and offi cially recognized as doctors of the Church) admired Origen and his teachings.

Something similar happened to Antonio Rosmini (1797–1855). Although “Rosminianism” (40 statements taken from his writings) was condemned by Pope Leo XIII in 1887, he was cleared of any heresy by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in 2001, which declared, “Th e meaning of the propositions, as understood and condemned by the [1887] decree, does not belong to the authentic position of Rosmini.”

He was beatifi ed by Pope Benedict XVI in 2007. In his 1998 encyclical, “Faith and Reason,” St. John Paul II referred to him as a “great Christian thinker.” It is easy to distort a person’s teachings aft er that person has died and, therefore, cannot respond to accusations of heresy.

AM I STILL FORGIVEN?

Does God forgive me after I have asked for forgiveness and repent? What if I did not even ask for forgiveness from the person I wronged? Yes, God has forgiven you in the situation that you describe. To think otherwise would make God’s divine forgiveness dependent on a human action that may no longer be possible. What if the person wronged died before you could ask for his or her forgiveness?

Forgiveness is real when the guilty party wants for the innocent person what God wants for that individual: to share divine life.

One of Satan’s favorite tactics is to raise doubts by linking a fact (for example, I regret having wronged this person) with something that is no longer possible (the person has died before I realized that what I said or did about her or him was seriously wrong).

Th ings get even more complicated when people speak as though the guilty party’s desire for forgiveness (onesided by defi nition) is the same as reconciliation, which clearly must be mutual. Unfortunately, many people think asking for forgiveness is useless if reconciliation is no longer possible. Satan wins whenever that way of thinking is accepted as true.

I encourage you not to doubt the good eff ects of forgiveness (you are living more honestly with yourself) even when the reconciliation I have described is unlikely or physically no longer possible.

ORTHODOX OR CATHOLIC?

My Orthodox friends say that they are “catholic.” How can that be? Th e word catholic is fi rst an adjective meaning “universal.” Only in the 11th century did it become a noun meaning “member of the Roman Catholic Church.” Th e Nicene Creed that all mainline Christians accept and pray concludes with the words, “I believe in one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church.”

Th e word orthodox literally means “right teaching.” In time, it came to mean “member of an Orthodox Church.” Your friends have every right to say that they are catholic. Both Pope Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew use this same wording.

VACCINES OR MEDICINES THAT USE STEM CELLS

Is using them morally permissible? The Catholic Church has said that it is OK to receive a COVID-19 vaccine that was developed with the assistance of stem cells. Many other vaccines or medicines also use them. What is my moral obligation about using or not using such products? How much research in this area do I need to do? What are reliable sources to use in researching this? On November 20, 2020, heads of the US bishops’ Committee on Doctrine and Pro-Life Activities issued a clarifi cation on this issue (available at usccb.org). Th ey noted that neither the Pfi zer nor the Moderna vaccine involved the use of cell lines that originated in fetal tissue taken from the body of an aborted baby at any level of design, development, or production.

“Some [people] are asserting,” that statement continues, “that if a vaccine is connected in any way with tainted cell lines, then it is immoral to be vaccinated with them. Th is is an inaccurate portrayal of Catholic moral teaching.”

Referencing three Vatican documents on this subject, the US statement notes that “at the level of the recipient, it is morally permissible to accept vaccination when there are no alternatives and there is a serious risk to health.”

I am indebted to Father Dan Kroger, OFM, an ethicist and our publisher, for these references.

FINDING TIME TO PRAY

How can I obtain the discipline to say the rosary and the Chaplet of Divine Mercy daily? I try, but I would like to be more consistent. We don’t fi nd time the same way we might fi nd a quarter on the sidewalk. We need to make or create time for what is truly important to us.

It might be easiest to link these prayers to something you already do each day. Could you pray the Chaplet of Divine Mercy before you brush your teeth in the morning? Or aft er your evening meal? Could you pray the rosary while you are taking a walk?

Every good or harmful habit takes time to develop. Please don’t become discouraged if you fail to carry out your good intention right away. Remember the days when you succeeded—and how much better that day probably went.

Know that we care.

Let us pray for you. Submit your prayer requests to StAnthony.org or Franciscan.org.

FATHER PAT WANTS TO HEAR FROM YOU!

EMAIL: Ask@FranciscanMedia.org MAIL: Ask a Franciscan, 28 W. Liberty St., Cincinnati, OH 45202-6498 All questions sent by mail need to include a self-addressed stamped envelope. ONLINE: FranciscanMedia.org/Ask-a-Franciscan Archived Q&As are available and searchable by category: FranciscanMedia.org/St-Anthony-Messenger/Ask-Archives

The Franciscan Friars, Province of St. John the Baptist 1615 Vine St, Ste 1 Cincinnati, OH 45202-6492 513-721-4700, ext. 3219 /StAnthonyShrine /ShrineStAnthony /StAnthonyShrine

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