As a Protestant, I believe that Jesus is the Savior. Thus, all that has to do with salvation (in the sense of narrow justification) is the work and accomplishment of Jesus (otherwise, I'd be the Savior).
Given that foundational belief, "eternal life" in the sense of narrow justification, is a gift from God earned/accomplished/achieved by the work of Jesus (not mine) since Jesus is the Savior (not me). So, I would view "knowledge" here not as a cognative achievement of my brain, I would interpret "knowledge" in the biblical sense of relationship, being "in Christ" (the meaning of Christian), relying/trusting in Christ.
Cognative awareness and information is a very good thing - but it has to do with sanctification (narrow) not justification (narrow). One may have a Ph.D. in the Bible, one may have memorized every word of the Bible, one may cognatively understand a whole lot more than I do - and not be justified because they don't have the gift of faith and thus don't "know" Christ in that intimate, relationsonal sense.
Yes, one may be cognatively unaware of all 2,865 points of the latest edition of the every-changing official Catechism of the individual, singular RC Denomination and yet have eternal life. Same true for the 10 pages of Luther's Small Catechism. Indeed, I believe I had eternal life at the moment of by Baptism - when I was less than one minute old and "understood" NOTHING (I wasn't even conscience) - but of course many would not share that belief. I believe the Thief on the Cross had eternal life even though I doubt he could articulate the doctrine of the Trinity or believed in Transubstnatiation or OSAS or the Immaculate Conception or the Infallibility of the Bishop of the individual RC Denomination in the Diocese of Rome or in Credobaptism. As a Protestant, I believe Jesus is the Savior, not anything I create. But I know you, as a Catholic, regard that as heresy and apostacy (your individual denomination excommunicated Luther for holding to that).
Pax Christi
- Josiah
.