On that note, do you think that a Molinist doctrine of extrinsically efficacious grace has a genuine advantage when it comes to this particular issue? Prima facie, it is easier to see how to reconcile God willing the salvation of all with the falsity of universalism if grace must be made efficacious by the consent of a person's will.
Excellent article, Dr. O'Neill! I agree that the question of universalism should be taken seriously. I have a short article on reconciling God's universal salvific will with intrinsically efficacious grace, with the issue of universalism at the core: https://catholicareopagus.blogspot.com/2022/06/thomism-molinism-and-gods-universal.html
On that note, do you think that a Molinist doctrine of extrinsically efficacious grace has a genuine advantage when it comes to this particular issue? Prima facie, it is easier to see how to reconcile God willing the salvation of all with the falsity of universalism if grace must be made efficacious by the consent of a person's will.