GhostWriter16
Deity
1: One can believe in a literal seven day creation and not be considered heretical as nothing on the matter has been declared dogma, however the general view is that it is metaphor. So although you can hold your personal conviction on the matter your holding to a view that is in the minority and is also blatantly contrary to reason and scientific evidence.
Do you know of any Catholics who believe it?
2: scripture is inspired but it does not neccesarily have to be innerant, they are two very different things. Inspired means that it reveals something about God and the human relationship with him, innerant means it is totally correct on everything. Therefore an innerant bible would contain no scientific errors, whereas an inspired one could but would contain no theological error and would reveal truth.
OK that makes sense.
3:I honestly don't know if a protestant marraige is considered valid, however I think it would be considering the fact that a marriage does not need to be repeated and only merely confirmed for a protestant couple who converted to the Church.
This makes sense.
4:I hold no opinion on the matter of post death pre judgement repentance as since I happen to be alive it concerns me not. It is much more important to focus on living in fidelity to all Christ commanded and repenting my sins now than musing over what happens after one dies, which naturally the living cannot know.
Yeah, it is obviously just speculation.
5:As to infants we cannot know their fate, since no man can pronounce the fate of another. We can merely entrust the unbaptised infant to God's mercy.
Well, 2 Samuel 12:23 seems to give insight
6:Exceedingly few are saved. Many of the doctors of the Church wrote that out of a city of thousands only a few hundred would be saves. The fewness of those who are saved is emphasised everywhere amongst the church fathers. So I think it is a safe bet that the vast majority of people who are catholic will not achieve salvation, and I would think that the prospect for those who lack the guidance of the Church is dim.
If to be damned, you would have to knowingly choose great evil and never repent of it, why are so many damned? It stands to reason that few people would know that they could be damned for a sin and still do it. If the person did not realize at the time what they were doing is gravely immoral, it doesn't damn them correct?
Also, even for someone in the Church that seems to be following it, should there be fear of damnation, or can you be confident (Note, this is different than absolute certainty) of Heaven?
The path to hell is wide and flat, the path to heaven is winding, steep. The gates to hell are wide, the gates to heaven narrow.
Yes this is true.
7: To be baptised a christian is to be ontologically changed as the original sin of the person is washed away. Furthermore through the sacraments of the Church man is ontologically changed through the grace of God on the path towards sanctification his soul being changed and purified by Christ. The spirit within him strengthens him against the world and whispers to him calling him forward on the path, however that does not negate the free will of man for man can reject the Lord. By God's grace one is made a new man in Christ, however this does not mean one is automatically saved, for even the foulest of sinners who is baptised has the intrinsic mark of a christian on their soul, they even in their state of depravity are distinguished from the unbaptised, for the mark of Christ is in them, yet should they choose to reject Christ they still face the just end for their rejection.
Furthermore to choose God over sin is a choice. God does not reject anyone who chooses to follow him. As I have said before God damns no one to hell, rather the sinner throws himself into hell, for having made the choice to remain in unrepentant sin God respects that choice and as the pain of God's infinite love to the sinner is exeedingly great, the sinner throws himself away from God into hell to avoid that burning fire, for it is less harsh in hell for the one marred by mortal sin than in the presence of the perfect God, and nothing imperfect can exist in God's presence.
Thus it is not so frightening that one would be damned for falling into the depravity of sin. Rather whats frightening is that so many make the choice to do so.
So, to commit mortal sin, do you have to know that what you are doing is gravely wrong? Say, a Protestant does not believe that using contraception with his wife is gravely wrong, yet he knows the Catholic Church teaches it is wrong, he just doesn't believe it, so he does it. Since he knew the Catholic Church teaches it is mortal, is he condemned? Or is he not condemned since he did not actually know he did grave wrong?