superfreddy
Muse
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- Jun 22, 2009
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superfreddy
(I noticed that Google translation and the newspaper's human translation were fairly close.)
Thanks for the further comment on what you meant by "going through the motions." Catholics and Orthodox hold that their sacraments have supernatural effects in their own right. Especially contentious with Protestants are forgiveness of sins by a priest after confessing them and the Eucharist as perfomed by a priest - and another sacrament for becoming a priest, someone able to do these magical feats.
As the partial list indicates, Catholic and Orthodox spirtual life has other goals in addition to personal attainment of the beatific vision or theosis. (The Orthodox, however, also contemplate attaining some portion of theosis in this life... this is a tricky point between the schismatics, but there is a great deal of parallelism between the Catholic account of salvation and the Orthodox theosis-in-life.)
If you don't believe any of that, then there would be no particular reason to do it. I think we can all - the Pope included - agree on that.
Still, it doesn't explain the reason one would need to become Catholic (or to believe in God for that matter) if the pope says you can still be saved as long as you're a good person.
The highlighted bit is a little difficult to understand. I thought that the final objective is salvation, what other goals are there?