Reference to post:
…I accept brother Malphono’s answers to your query here. Despite the sanguine nature of your statements, there is an underlying concept in the Latin teaching on indulgences that is fundamentally different from the Oriental teaching. Brother Jimmy had previously stressed this difference…
Marduk, I want to politely say, that what you describe about the Mystery of Confession for the Latin Church seems incorrect to me. Following is the way I have learned the Latin theology:
The Lord imparts to his apostles:
- his own power to forgive sins,
- and also gives them the authority to reconcile sinners with the Church.
In the Mystery of Confession:
- One receives forgiveness from God with one’s proper contrition, confession, and absolution of the priest, and at that time receives the Holy Spirit (sanctifying grace, the justice of God by which He makes us just) and the sin is remitted. That is God grants the penitent “pardon and peace.”
- The confessor proposes certain acts of “penance” or “satisfaction” to be performed by the penitent in order to repair the harm caused by sin and to re-establish habits proper to a disciple of Christ. (This used to be done in public prior to absolution, for serious sins, and could be years without communion.)
Therefore what you said for Orientals that “the Justice of God has been fully satisfied in the confessional, and penance is enacted as an aid in one’s sanctification”, is also true for the Latin Church.
The confusion occurs for people due to the terminology used, in the Latin Church “temporal punishment due sin” refers to the purification needed for deification (theosis), for which the penance is useful. This purification brings about our diefication (theosis), and is not requried for forgiveness nor for sanctifying grace. Proper contrition requries willingnes to do any assigned penance however, which for example, could be restitution of a stolen item.
Also, two different forms of confession (mortal and venial) were merged into one in the Latin Church after receiving a more lenient form from the East. The less serious sins (venial) are not damning but do obstruct diefication.
Markuk, you said: “Despite the sanguine nature of your statements, there is an underlying concept in the Latin teaching on indulgences that is fundamentally different from the Oriental teaching.”
Well, I have not commented on the Latin teaching on indulgences, but am familiar with it. That is because it is not necessary to comment on the Latin teachings to accept the indulgence dogmas, nor to utilize indulgences, and is specific to the theology of the Latin Church. The Latin concept is “temporal punishment” which can be translated (for Eastern Churches) to “purification”. As in the three stages of spiritual ascent: purification from the passions, illumination by the grace of the Holy Spirit, and theosis, by the grace of the Holy Spirit. It can also be called healing which is for our Theosis.
I agree with you that “… I do not see that these differences warrant disunity.” And I go further in saying that indulgences are compatible with all particular Churches.
References
Catholic: “Catechism of the Catholic Church”, 1992, and “Modern Catholic Dictionary” by Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J., 1999.
Orthodox: “Patristic Theology: The University Lectures of Father John Romanides” 2007.