This argument actually makes my point, not yours, because Trent is *very* clear that perfect contrition can work before a sacramental confession as long as the intent to eventually go to sacramental confession is there. And yet God still did this miracle.
Ahh, but you’re missing the key part...intent/opportunity to confess. This man had no opportunity to confess at a later date, which is why a “perfect act of contrition” wouldn’t suffice for forgiveness.
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Point - God doesn’t tear down rules of salvation. But he does work miracles so that the rules can be fulfilled. God will not change the requirement for confessing sins to a priest. He created this requirement. If the opportunity to confess isn’t possible, he will work a miracle.
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If God had known (and decided) that this man trapped in an avalanche would be rescued and his life continued, then the man’s contrition/intent to confess would suffice. A miracle would not be needed. But since the man was going to die, and God determined that was this man’s fate, then God worked a miracle because there was no later date to confess.
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God does not create rules in order to break them. This would be a destruction if His integrity, authority and respect. “Oh what kind of God makes rules that can’t be followed and He has to break them?”, pagans would say. It would destroy the fabric of Catholicism.
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This also applies to BOD. The graces of justification ONLY work for those who vow/promise to receive the sacrament. Those that 1) are unable to, or 2) made an insincere promise do NOT get the graces.
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Those that die before reception of the sacrament, we can (and must) say that 1) they were not sincere or 2) God worked a miracle to provide water baptism that we didn’t see or weren’t there.
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To say that a person dies before baptism and goes to heave due to BOD is heresy and accuses God of changing the rules. It accuses God of lying to us, and makes doctrine arbitrary because God changes whatever, whenever.
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The proper catholic explanation is that God created the rules of the sacraments. God is unchanging and eternal, so His rules for grace and holiness are unchanging and enteral. If one can not fulfill the rules humanly, God will work a miracle to fulfill the rules. He does not suspend or alter the rules. In a sense, He’s not allowed. He cannot deceive.
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This is why those who try to explain BOD outside of the rules are utterly confused and never agree. Because anything not of God leads to confusion.