I think we agree on that. I’m still not sure exactly what the Catholic objection is. Is it the belief in the depravity of man? I would assume that that would make it difficult to believe that works have a role in salvation if Catholics believed that were true?
The real problem is that some people have not learned about Adam before the Fall. Consequently, they get hung up in the tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil and thus miss the very clear temptation of Satan. Also, there is the funny mistake of thinking that “innocence” means dumbness.
Here are some Catholic teachings on human nature. “Being in the image of God, the human person possesses the dignity of a person, who is not just something, but someone.” (Source:
Catechism of the Catholic Church, Second Edition, paragraph 357) The human person is called to share, by knowledge and love, in God’s own life. (Source: CCC 356)
And here is the clincher, which I did not fully see until I returned to my research stamping grounds. "God created man …God established him in His friendship. (Source: CCC 355). At this initial point in creation, it is obvious that being in God’s friendship is part of human nature. Being sinless is why Adam could remain in God’s friendship. In other words, it is before the Fall, before the actual Original Sin, that sin was foreign to human nature.
Here we need to clarify human nature. Human nature is an unique unification of
both the material world
and the spiritual world. This unity of soul and body is so profound that one has to consider the soul to be the “form” of the body: that is, it is because of its spiritual soul, that the body made of matter becomes a living human person. (Source: CCC 365)
Hold that thought while I go back to CCC 357. I know that this says persons in the plural. But who is the first person Adam was in communion with? Here is the interesting sentence portion. The human person is capable “of freely giving himself and entering into communion with other persons.” It is because Adam is, at that point, free from sin, that he is in communion with God. It is because of Adam’s spiritual soul that he has the rational intellect and free will which can keep him sinless. It is those words “freely giving himself” which tells us that Adam has to make a choice.
At times, the Catholic Catechism is like a maze. Yet, by blending the above, we have a good idea of what Adam was like before the Fall. He was a fully-complete human being with rational intellect and ability to choose his own actions. His relationship with God was firm. Catholicism calls this state of Adam’s nature, original holiness and justice. In addition, Catholicism teaches that Adam had received original holiness and justice not for himself alone but for all human nature. Unfortunately, Adam defied the limitations of his humanity and chose himself over God. Instead of original holiness coming to us through one person, St. Paul has to say that [human] death came to us through one person. And one person, Jesus Christ, True God and True Man, conquered the reign of death by His conquering death on a cross.
I am not sure how works having a role in salvation would fit with this early part of the human story.
Sometimes, I get the impression that people consider Original Sin a simple sin of eating organic fruit in disobedience. Without knowing the pre-Fall Adam, all kinds of scenarios are presented. In order to understand the seriousness of Original Sin, one needs to understand the importance of Adam for all humanity descending from him.
I am not sure if Pentecostalism goes into this much depth in regard to Adam, but I would guess that their theology would come close to the above.
What say you, Itwin?
In post 230, you say “We believe that sin is both a condition and an act.” My apology, but there are so many ways “sin” is used. Does this comment refer to Adam or to us?
Where we start to differ theologically is at this sentence “The transgression of Adam passed to all his descendants, except for Christ.” This is where Catholicism separates the act of the individual, first human Adam committing Original Sin from the natural consequence of Adam’s act which becomes a “state” or a “condition” which is then transmitted. Therefore, Original Sin does not have the character of a personal fault in Adam’s descendants. This is why Catholicism teaches that human nature was wounded, but not cursed into a sin nature.
This a good spot to pause.
