Hi Cavalier -
The Catholic Church refutes predestination absolutely. 'God predestines no one to go to hell' the Council of Orange II (529) and Trent (1534)
BTW - the argument at:
http://teampyro.blogspot.com/2006/04/bad-thinking-and-unconditional.html
is equally wrong - both models assume God chooses whom He will save, and whom He will abandon, by some arbitary process, some kind of lottery (straws, a flip of the coin, odd numbers only - who can say?) so 'less wrong' - but still poor philosophy.
The Council of Constantinople stated:
"one God and one Father from whom all things are, and one Lord Jesus Christ through whom all things are, and one Holy Spirit in whom all things are."
The last is the key:
God is omniscient and omnipresent, but He is not present as a disinterested observer, nor does his omniscience mean that he doesn't give a damn who lives and who dies.
How can God comdemn those whom He loves, even in their weakness and sin?
How can God deny the invocation of His son moments before His crucifixion, "Father forgive them, for they know not what they do?" for He did not say, "Father forgive him, and her ... and him, and that one over there, but not the others ... and certainly not him ... "
Christ in his Resurrection carried the wounds to His Father in Heaven - as a mark of his triumph over death, but also as a mark of His incorporation of our fallen humanity - look, Father, upon your Son and upon the wounds He bears for our sake - we are perfected by, through and in those wounds - wounds which He bore for all, without condition.
God is present in every moment, He seeks us out at every turn and pours His grace into every human activity towards the good, but man is not obliged to accept nor respond to God's gift (were it so, then it would not be a gift but an obligation, and man would not be free but a slave, no more, an automaton).
It is axiomatic that the Good does not will anything other than Itself.
God was present when Judas made his fateful decision, but God did not make his decision for him, nor did he over-write Judas' free choice - and in those last moments Christ forsaw what Judas was to do, but did not say 'don't do it' but rather 'do what you feel you must do'.
If we are predetermined, then the Cross is absolutely pointlesss, as is all and any human endeavour.
The Catholic Church holds that to be damned a wilful turning away from God is necessary, and such a turning away must persist, wilfully and knowingly, until the end. Man is then damned by his own free choice and determination.
Rather a God who knows what decisions we make, yet a God who never ceases trying to show us 'a better way' - it is we who actively deny the incarnation of the Divine Word in the soul, not God who ceases to speak to us.
Rather the Catholic Church speaks of a twofold Mystery - of God and of man - in which all are called to partake of our own free will in the realisation of God's eternal Glory.
God wants man to love Him because man chooses to love Him, not because man is obliged or coerced or predetermined.
That Primordial Freedom is a dignity accorded to humanity, a gift of God that transcends all creation, and even our own created nature.
Cherish your freedom then, a gift from the love of God, given to us through the love of God, lived fully in the love of God.
Thomas