Go | New | Find | Notify | Tools | Reply |
Ralph Martin, an official expert at the synod (of the Roman Catholic Church) on the new evangelization, talks about the "practical universalism" pitfall. He alludes to what I think is called the "Baptism of desire" RCC teaching of salvation, which he feels has been misunderstood. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...Ahx2KQ&feature=share | |||
|
Well done! The RCC teaching on salvation by non-Christians has always presumed that they had no tenable access to the Gospel or Christian community and that rejecting the Gospel in favor of another religion or way of life was a very serious matter. The traditional teaching on "Baptism of Desire" always assumed, too, that given the opportunity, those who held such desire would actually receive the Sacrament of Baptism. Karl Rahner's teaching on "Anonymous Christians" and "implicit faith" mined the theology backing this approach and contributed greatly to the Vatican II teaching on salvation by non-Christians. A young German theologian named Joseph Ratzinger (sounds familiar? ) concurred. Writing in 1968 about salvation for pagans, he noted:
Note the implication that some who are Christian in name only ("Anonymous Pagans"?) might not be saved, while those who are not Christian but who are faithful to the movement of the Spirit within will be. | ||||
|
Powered by Social Strata |
Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |