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BlessedSacraments
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For all Mortal Sins they choose to not confess?
No. “I absolve you of your sins in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.”doesn’t the priest say I absolve you of these and ALL your sins
I believe this is correct. This is why a given confession is supposed to refer back to your last good confession. If you intentionally withheld mortal sins that wasn’t a “good Confession”If a penitent purposely omits a mortal sin, that sin is not absolved. But if you accidentally forget a mortal sin and remember it later, it needs to be confessed at your next confession. Please someone correct me if I am wrong.
And the one making the confession would have to tell the priest that he/she deliberately withheld a mortal sin from their last confession thus invalidating that confession.Yes, we are. Furthermore, if someone is choosing not to confess something, that’s a conscious decision, and it invalidates the entire confession. So not only is the person not absolved of the particular sin he or she held back, but they are also not absolved of the sins they did bring up.
So he or she would have to go confess those sins again, in addition to the one held back, I order to make a valid confession and receive absolution.
If you accidentally forget a mortal sin it is still absolved, however you should still bring it up at your next confession in order to help you with that sin. Remember, sacraments exist for our sake not for God’s!If a penitent purposely omits a mortal sin, that sin is not absolved. But if you accidentally forget a mortal sin and remember it later, it needs to be confessed at your next confession. Please someone correct me if I am wrong.
A mortal sin requires full knowledge of the gravity and sinfulness of the act (and carry on with it intentionally). If the person genuinely doesn’t believe they have committed a grave sin, they lack full knowledge, thus, not a mortal sin. This does NOT mean they’re entirely off the hook; we should all be striving to form our consciences to better understand these things, and so the person may later come to full knowledge. If the sin is repeated after that, they have committed mortal sin. ***Also, what if they don’t believe it is a mortal sin vs venial?
At Confession if a Catholic deliberately does not confess any mortal sins then the entire Confession is not valid. They do not receive absolution for the ones they did confess.For all Mortal Sins they choose to not confess?
Nah, that Catholic kid isn’t nearly ugly enough, nor mean enough, nor saying enough swear words to be a Catholic in a Jack Chick track.Is that from a Chick tract?!
It would have been uncommon in the 1970s, though still lingering in a few corners. The 1970s were an(over) reaction to this kind of excess.Nah, I just lifted it from the Internet. It has circulated for years. It’s very typical of 1970s children’s missals and prayer books.
I know, I wasn’t referring to the cartoon itself but to the mindset of the cartoon , kind of legalistic and mechanical attitude that sometimes prevailed in some Catholic places prior to the 1960s.I think blaming it on a cartoon is reaching. What deterred people from the sacrament (personal experience talking) was poor catechesis, the Fundamental Option, Universalism and the denial of Hell, and a denial of the Real Presence.