L
LongingSoul
Guest
There’s the other irony involved here too. If we ignore the certain judgement of conscience and do something we believe is sinful but is in fact not a sin… we are indicted for disobeying out conscience but are infact sinless at that deeper holy court.Yes, we will. It would be sinful. I really thought this was made clear numerous times. It is found at the conclusion of the main text of Cardinal Ratzinger’s letter:
“But it can be very wrong to have come to such askew convictions in the first place, by having stiffled the protest of the anemnesis of being. The guilt then lies in a different place, much deeper–not in the present act, not in the present judgment of conscience but in the neglect of my being which made me deaf to the internal promptings of truth.”
That Cardinal Ratzinger says it is “very wrong” and that the “guilt then lies in a different place, much deeper” means it is an even worse sin.
Simply stated, God’s law inscribed on the conscience is the Objective Truth. As such, it cannot be wrong. I think this is likely what has not been understood. It is when the anemnesis of being (the voice of conscience) is “stiffled” that the certain judgment of conscience errs.
For example if I have been taught that wearing lipstick is sinful but I go ahead and do it, I have sinned by disobeying my conscience, but not at the deeper level.