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Ender
Guest
Relative to your point, it was Rau who asked the question: “Is reduced culpability key to the reasoning in AL?” This was asked but not yet answered.Nor does adultery cease to be adultery. In the case where the *culpability *is less than grave.
There is the thing itself - the grave sin of adultery in itself.
And then there in is the subjective culpability of the person involved.
As the Church Teaches - to *commit *a mortal sin more than just the grave matter is needed.
And culpability can be be reduced due to various factors.
Such does not lessen the reality of the nature of the grave sin “in itself”. Something that is grave in itself - remains gravely disordered and never able to be justified or lessened. But the persons culpability can be lessened due to for example lack of knowledge or deliberate consent.
I understand the church’s teaching on culpability as well as the conditions for a sin to be considered grave. That said, which of the three criteria is not met such that cases of spousal adultery become less than grave sins? What seems to me to be going on here is a search for ways to excuse the sin of adultery in specific circumstances and categorizing it as “merely” venial. If that’s not what the intent is then I fail to see the significance of the focus on reduced culpability.
Ender