Perilous
Times and The Great Falling Away
Heaven for atheists and non-believers? Pope Francis says yes
- All get to go to Heaven
By Dan Merica, CNN
(CNN) -– American atheists welcomed Pope Francis’ comments that
God saves nonbelievers, saying that the new pontiff's historic
outreach is helping to topple longstanding barriers.
“The Lord has redeemed all of us, all of us, with the Blood of
Christ: all of us, not just Catholics. Everyone,” the pope told
worshipers at morning Mass on Wednesday. “‘Father, the atheists?’
Even the atheists and all non-believers. Everyone!”
Francis continued, “We must meet one another doing good. ‘But I
don’t believe, Father, I am an atheist!’ But do good: we will meet
one another there.”
Roy Speckhardt, executive director of the American Humanist
Association, said that although he has been skeptical of Francis'
outreach to the nonreligious, he welcomed Wednesday’s comments.
“I gather from this statement that his view of the world's
religious and philosophical diversity is expanding,” Speckhardt
said. “While humanists have been saying for years that one can be
good without a god, hearing this from the leader of the Catholic
Church is quite heartening."
He continued, “If other religious leaders join him, it could do
much to reduce the automatic distrust and discrimination that
atheists, humanists, and other nontheists so regularly face. “
Francis’ comments received a great deal of attention on social
media, with a number of people asking whether the Catholic leader
believes that atheists and agnostics go to heaven, too.
On Thursday, the Vatican issued an “explanatory note on the
meaning to ‘salvation.'"
The Rev. Thomas Rosica, a Vatican spokesman, said that people who
aware of the Catholic church “cannot be saved” if they “refuse to
enter her or remain in her.”
At the same time, Rosica writes, “every man or woman, whatever
their situation, can be saved. Even non-Christians can respond to
this saving action of the Spirit. No person is excluded from
salvation simply because of so-called original sin.”
Rosica also said that Francis had “no intention of provoking a
theological debate on the nature of salvation,” during his homily
on Wednesday.
Although the pope's comments about salvation surprised some,
bishops and experts in Catholicism say Francis was expressing a
core tenant of the faith.
"Francis was clear that whatever graces are offered to atheists
(such that they may be saved) are from Christ," the Rev. John
Zuhlsdorf, a conservative Catholic priest, wrote on his blog.
"He was clear that salvation is only through Christ’s Sacrifice.
In other words, he is not suggesting – and I think some are taking
it this way – that you can be saved, get to heaven, without
Christ."
Chad Pecknold, an assistant professor of theology at the Catholic
University of America, agreed with Zuhlsdorf, pointing out that
the pope’s comments came on the Feast of Saint Rita, the Catholic
patron saint of impossible things.
“The remarks about atheists show that there is even a saint for
atheists,” Pecknold said. “Including all of humanity, on this day
especially, remarks like that are almost called for.”
“To stress that the gospel redeems all people, including atheists,
is the teaching of the church,” he added. “This is an objective
fact that the church believes.”
Greg Epstein, the humanist chaplain at Harvard University, said
Francis' comments reflect “the interfaith and inter-community work
many of us nontheists are dedicated to.”
That said, Epstein hopes that lay Catholics are listening.
“I hope Catholics, and all people hearing the pope's statement,
will recognize that his words about atheists need to symbolize
much more than just a curiosity or an exception to the rule,”
Epstein said. “If someone thinks there are only a few atheists out
there doing good just like Catholics do, that's a major
misunderstanding that can lead to prejudice and discrimination.”
The pope’s comments come a few months after he told worshipers
that Catholics should be close to all men and women, including
those who don’t belong to any religious tradition.
"In this we feel the closeness also of those men and women who,
while not belonging to any religious tradition, feel, however the
need to search for the truth, the goodness and the beauty of God,
and who are our precious allies in efforts to defend the dignity
of man, in the building of a peaceful coexistence between peoples
and in the careful protection of creation,” Francis said shortly
after his election as pope in March.
Even atheists like David Silverman, president of American
Atheists, who has had an antagonistic relationship with the
Catholic church, welcomed the pope’s remarks.
“While the concept of Jesus dying for atheists is wrong on many
levels (especially given that Jesus himself promised hell for
blasphemers), I can appreciate the pope's `good faith' effort to
include atheists in the moral discussion,” Silverman said.
“Atheists on the whole want no part in Catholicism, of course, but
we are all interested in basic human rights.”