I really do wish attitudes were changing. Hopefully they are, but it's hard to tell. I'm thankful for the Pope's words, but neither was I surprised when a friend sent me the following link:
Dear Open,
TBH There isn't much debate among "ordinary" Catholics (that is ones not on the extreme conservative or liberal end of the spectrum) regarding the salvation of atheists and non-Christians in general. We have been officially taught for decades that non-Christians, including atheists,
can receive salvation and that the mercy of God is infinite. So the import of Francis' speech is not in the area of soteriology. The media, not aware of the complexities of Catholic theology, seemed to think that Francis had made some kind of incendiary, mind-blowing statement that represents a change in Catholic understanding of the salvation of atheists. He didn't. Vatican II
did do that fifty years ago. Even Cardinal Ratzinger (today Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI) fully recognised back in 1964 that there were "many paths to God" and that people of all faiths and none can receive salvation in Christ. In fact the really hot topic is what this meant for "poor" (in their own eyes) Catholics who had to attend mass and say their prayers while an atheist could get to heaven without having the burden of Catholic doctrine. Such a viewpoint is sad IMHO and stems from some kind of primal fault in human nature but there ya go.
The big change is in how Francis
views atheists as individuals in relation to the church, compared with the previous pope and the understanding of many lay Catholics. This is what much of the media missed, ironically, because they were unaware that the Catholic Church already has recognised that atheists can "get to heaven" so to speak.
Fr. Rosica has his own opinions, although I think that his words could be misunderstood and were somewhat imprecise (on purpose, I somewhat suspect,
hmmm). "Know" theologically speaking for Catholics means a rational understanding of something (a belief that is) rather than knowledge such as knowing XYZ about the church's teachings. Its about
knowing that the church has the fullness of Truth, not being knowledgeable about what it teaches but rather
having come to believe in it. If a person does reach an understanding that the church is true in what it teaches but would (for some inexplicable reason) not desire to join the church, it would be presumed that he "cared little for truth" because a person should always stick with what they believe and
know is true. If an atheist is absolutely convinced of his atheism, then he can certainly receive salvation because he does not
know the church even if he knows its teachings thoroughly.
Back in the 40s, their were these great and very orthodox priests who held an American Catholic talk show on radio like Fr. Rosica's today by the name of Rumble and Carty. Read this transcript, its about Judaism but its points are somewhat to all belief systems. They were theologically good for their time and are even respected today
179. Would a good and practicing Jew go to heaven, despite his not being baptized a Christian?
Yes, provided through no fault of his own he did not at any time advert to the truth of Christianity, and to the necessity of actual baptism; and provided he sincerely believed Judaism to be still the true religion, and died truly repentant of all serious violations of conscience during life.
Source: Radio Replies, third volume, by Fathers Rumble and Carty, Radio Replies Press, St. Paul 1, Minn., U.S.A., copyright 1942, page 43.
So it all depends on the individual persons understanding of Truth and faithful adherence to their conscience. A person must always be faithful to what they know is true and live it out. If that truth is atheism, then they must be one hell of a good atheist and be faithful to it as they can be. If they do this, then they can certainly receive salvation.
If an atheist sincerely believes in atheism then I don't for a minute think he's "damned". In our eyes Hell is not a place God sends you too anyway but a state you put yourself in and God essentially accepts.
If your faithful to your conscience, you basically
can't go to hell according to Catholic dogma. Yet since no one can get inside another person's head or read their heart, its impossible for us to know if they are following their conscience or simply doing what they want with no regard for truth or morality. Hence why hell is always a "possibility" even if everyone eventually finds themselves in the state of eternal heaven before the Beatific Vision of the Godhead.
Saint Edith Stein (Teresia Benedicta of the Cross) once noted:
"...I am not at all worried about my dear Master. It has always been far from me to think that God's mercy allows itself to be circumscribed by the visible church's boundaries. God is truth. All who seek truth seek God, whether this is clear to them or not..."
- Saint Edith Stein (1891 - 1942), Jewish Catholic mystic & Holocaust victim, speaking about her atheist/agnostic mentor Edmund Husserl
The pope is the authority, not a priest with a talk show (he is a Canadian Television presenter with a Catholic show know as "Salt + Light"). That isn't exactly putting him in a position to make doctrinal statements on behalf of the church. Pope Benedict XVI appointed Fr. Rosica to a five-year term as consulter to the Pontifical Council for Social Communications. That is not a theological office, its rather minor as you can imagine (tv, radio, publicity etc.).
On Wikipedia we find that someone has already written:
On May 22, 2013, Pope Francis made the statement, "The Lord has redeemed all of us, all of us, with the Blood of Christ: all of us, not just Catholics. Everyone! ‘Father, the atheists?’ Even the atheists. Everyone!"
[3] Two days later, Fr. Rosica directly contradicted the Pope: "...people who know about the Catholic church 'cannot be saved' if they 'refuse to enter her or remain in her.' "
[4]
So some already see him as making a kind of "excuse" on behalf of certain Catholics.
Truthfully, redemption is to do with the universal offer of salvation rather than a guarantee of salvation itself. The Catholic Church holds that we cannot judge the eternal fate of another person (only God can because he All-knowing and beyond time with all history known to Him from eternity), so this is the only reason for this.
What the church does teach, as evidenced by my previous quotes, is that atheists can be saved. What is not known is
how many people of any religion, including Catholics,
will be saved. Only God knows this. Catholics are allowed to hope, and to an extent
believe (so long as the possibility of a person rejecting God entirely still exists) that everyone will eventually be saved. We just can't teach this as definite fact, because that would be presuming to know too much on our part.
God gives his grace to all equally, it is our own choice whether to accept it or not. One does not have to be a Christian to accept this grace. All that is needed is faithful adherence to one's own conscience, provided they have not reached an awareness of the truth (from our perspective) of the Catholic Church.
Hell is not considered to be a place in Catholicism but rather a state of being which begins with actions, thoughts, decisions in this life and extends into eternity, separating our hearts from God and cutting off his saving grace.
This means that one can receive salvation if they have not reached an understanding of the truth (from our perspective) of the Christian, and in particular Catholic, revelation. If they genuinely are committed to another belief, live honest lives and have no violations of their own conscience, then they can receive salvation whether they be atheists, Muslims, Jews or whatever. God judges the heart, not the profession of faith.
That is why St. Augustine said this:
"...How many sheep there are without, how many wolves within!...When we speak of within and without in relation to the Church, it is the position of the heart that we must consider, not that of the body.... All who are within in heart are saved in the unity of the ark..."
- Saint Augustine, Church Father (354–430 AD), Baptism 5:28:39
"...He was ours [a Christian] even before he was of our fold. His way of living made him such. For just as many of ours are not with us, whose life makes them other from our body [the Church], so many of those outside [the Church] belong to us, who by their way of life anticipate the faith and need only the name, having the reality..."
- St. Gregory of Nazianzus, <Oration> 18.5 (c. 374 AD)
There are many Catholics who don't live up to the ideals of the Church, while their are many non-Christians who do. Who is the better "Catholic" in the eyes of the church? The non-Christian.
The significance of what Pope Francis says is less in the realm of salvation theology. There is nothing particularly incendiary here because the Catholic Church has officially and publically taught for nigh fifty years that atheists can receive salvation and for centuries before this theologians answered affirmatively that they believed this too even before it was publically defined at the Council.
His tone and view of atheists as people with whom we can work and respect as "valued allies" is what counts.