4th Sunday of Easter
John 20:27-30
My sheep hear my voice. And I know them: and
they follow me. And I give them life everlasting: and they shall not perish for
ever. And no man shall pluck them out of my hand.
John
10:27-28 is a classic text used by Evangelical Protestants to promote the “once
saved, always saved” heretical doctrine of grace. Their argument runs like
this: “If you are Jesus’ sheep, then you will hear his voice and be saved and
never fall away. Therefore, if you hear his voice and believe, you are his sheep
and will certainly be saved – once you are saved, you will always be saved.
However, if you fall away after apparently believing for some time, it is clear
that you never really were one of the sheep in the first place.”
But Jesus
didn’t say that “my sheep will never fall away,” he only said no one shall pluck them out of my hand –
and this makes all the difference!
Do any of the “sheep” fall away? The case
of Judas Iscariot
On the
one hand, it may seem that none of those who are among the sheep could possibly
fall away. If indeed the sheep hear the voice of the shepherd, they are given
eternal life and shall not perish. The sheep are those who have been given to
Jesus by his Father, and none shall pluck
them out of my hand.
However,
was not Judas numbered among the sheep of Christ? Certainly he was among those
who had been given to the Lord by his Father: Those whom thou gavest me have I kept: and none of them is lost, but
the son of perdition: that the scripture may be fulfilled (John 17:12).
Judas is among those who have been given
to the Son, and yet he is lost as the
son of perdition.
Again, at
the conclusion of the Bread of Life Discourse, our Lord said, Have not I chosen you twelve? And one of you
is a devil. Though the twelve were chosen,
not all were saved. Though all twelve were sheep,
yet one was to be lost. Namely, Judas the Iscariot.
[We need
not enter into the discussion of whether Judas is necessarily to be considered
as among the damned. While it is the unanimous teaching of the Fathers and the
clearest meaning of the text of Scripture that Judas is condemned to hell, all
that need be shown for our purpose is that one who was chosen and given and
therefore should clearly be numbered among the sheep who heard the voice of Christ is identified by our Lord in
Sacred Scripture as lost and a devil.]
Jesus said no one shall pluck them out
of my hand, he did not say “none shall be lost”
Following
the commentary of the great Father Cornelius a Lapide, and resting especially
on the moral theology of St. Alphonsus Liguori, we maintain that Jesus does
indeed give [his sheep] life everlasting,
insofar as the Lord does give those who believe in him all the graces that are
necessary for eternal life. Not one of the sheep of Christ has not been given
grace sufficient unto final perseverance and salvation, if only each will
respond to God’s grace and hold fast till the end in that grace. In this sense
then, they shall not perish for ever –
that is, so long as the believer continues to respond to God’s grace, he will
surely be saved and will not perish.
Yes, the
Lord assures us that no man [that is,
no one at all, neither any man nor any angel or devil] shall pluck them out of my hand. The thrust of the argument is
this: The Holy Spirit living in us is stronger than the power of the prince of
darkness living in the world. The grace of God is omnipotent, and all the power
of hell cannot wrestle away the soul who trusts confidently in the Divine Mercy
and invokes the grace of Christ in the moment of temptation. That one who
cooperates with God’s grace will never be overcome by the assaults of the enemy
nor by the allurement of the present age.
However,
Jesus does not say that the sheep “will never fall away.” Indeed, while no one can
possibly overcome God’s power and steal away a sheep of Christ, it is the sad
reality that he who has received God’s grace can yet choose to wonder far from
God and lose that grace. No one shall
pluck them from out of my hand, but the sheep may choose to walk away and
abandon the shepherd.
If we,
having once received the grace of Christ in baptism, were to commit a mortal
sin, we would not be “plucked from out of the Lord’s hand” but rather we would
voluntarily abandon him. It is true that once I am saved, no one can take the
grace of Christ (my salvation) away from me; but I may still give that
salvation away in exchange for the passing pleasures of this life by committing
a mortal sin.
Therefore,
I must not believe that “once I am saved, I am always saved”, but rather I am
mindful of St. Paul’s words: With fear
and trembling work out your salvation (Philippians 2:12) and again, Wherefore he that thinketh himself to stand,
let him take heed lest he fall (1 Corinthians 10:12). Rather than presuming
that I am saved, I will instead trust in God’s mercy and pray for the grace to
persevere. And I will resolve to pray in the moment of temptation, so as never to wander away from the hand of my divine Shepherd.
*Notes on these verses:
The
words of Father Cornelius a Lapide: “I
give unto them eternal life, that is, as far as I may. I make them the
promise. I give them all necessary helps. I wish for their salvation. If then
any of them perish it is not My fault but theirs, for they will not co-operate
with My grace. For neither the devil nor any one else is able to pluck them out
of My hand, if they resolve to abide in it, and will not be torn away. For My
grace, if they cooperate with it, has power to keep them from being taken from
Me. But if they leave Me of their own will, it is not a tearing away, but their
own voluntary act. So S. Cyril, Leontius, Theophylact, and Maldonatus. Christ
means to say that no power can take them away, but they have full liberty to go
away from Christ.”
7 comments:
Is it then official Church teaching that Judas is, in fact, in hell? May we still have a good hope that hell is empty? Is von Balthasar incorrect?
Hell is not empty. Our Lady of Fatima showed hell to the Fatima children. Sr. Lucia later told those questioning her, "Many souls go to hell." She repeated with emphasis, when pressed on this point, "No, *many* souls go to hell."
The children of Fatima are declared Blesseds by the Church.
May God grant us all the grace of final perseverance.
Fr. Erlenbush,
Using Judas to demonstrate that grace can be lost is strong, however I have heard those who respond that since all of this occurred before the resurrection, Judas never was regenerated in the same sense that we are in the Church. The argument is that a soul truly regenerated unto the nature of eternal life cannot fall away. There are those who would even use Augustine for support on this.
Also, I've heard the argument that the verb "take" in this verse is in the middle voice, meaning that noone, including the sheep itself, can successfully take the believer out of God's hand. What say you to this?
Father, I was expounding on this verse for our RCIA group this past week. I explained indeed not even satan can wrest us from the Hand of Our Lord. We only need to partake of the Sacraments and do the will of the Father to remain in God's love. However, if we abuse our gift of free will, then we can fall away from Christ. We must always pray for strength of faith and God's protection from the influence of the evil one.
Judas is in Hell as can be seen in Catholic Tradition, orthodox commentary of the Saints and even in the traditional Mass.
HuVB is not worth a moment of your time and he is a danger to the Faith with his claims about ell being empty.
Stick with Tradition and ignore the modernists.
Where does it say that Judas is one of Jesus' sheep? Please cite a verse on which your whole argument is based.
In fact, Jesus says just the opposite earlier in John 6 which you quoted. In verse 63 He says "The Spirit gives life, the flesh counts for NOTHING. The WORDS I have spoken to you - THEY are full of the Spirit and life. YET there are some of you who do not believe. For Jesus had known from the beginning which of them did not believe and who would betray Him." And who betrayed Jesus?...... You see, this man of whom he speaks NEVER believed the WORDS, he never HEARD the VOICE, of The Shepherd who grants ETERNAL life to those who believe.
Anonymous (April 16), please use a pseudonym.
According to eternal predestination, Judas may not be a sheep; but according to present justification he was certainly a sheep - as being "chosen" and "given". This is precisely the error in the Protestant read of the passage, an inability to recognize the distinction.
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