B
Brassring
Guest
I’m a new Catholic, and most of my family remains protestant. I understand that for a sin to be mortal, it must meet three criteria:
(1) It must be a grave or serious offense.
(2) The person must be aware that it is a grave or serious offense.
(3) The person must willfully commit the offense.
My question is this: since some protestants believe that once they are “saved” they are always saved (ie. nothing will separate them from God), are any of their sins mortal? It seems that they would be unaware that any of their sins would separate them from God.
I’m referring to protestants with valid baptisms, of course.
(1) It must be a grave or serious offense.
(2) The person must be aware that it is a grave or serious offense.
(3) The person must willfully commit the offense.
My question is this: since some protestants believe that once they are “saved” they are always saved (ie. nothing will separate them from God), are any of their sins mortal? It seems that they would be unaware that any of their sins would separate them from God.
I’m referring to protestants with valid baptisms, of course.