J
JosieN
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He was asking a question.Why would you put your phrase about “sinners” in the third person rather than the first person plural?
He was asking a question.Why would you put your phrase about “sinners” in the third person rather than the first person plural?
I do not have a personal problem. I am seeking answers because it is good to keep up on what is happening around us. Thanks for your suggestions. I would also like to suggest that we ask our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ for help and pray the Rosary daily. Praying one of the best ways to obtain grace. I believe God is always there if the heart is sincere and we are willing to do His Will.Whoever is confused,has a door open to a priest
We know how to deal with our friends and our closer ones. The time to speak,the time to listen,the time to work, and so on.
In God’s s presence,we are in God’s s presence as we write. I often forget that too,and I am sorry for that. After all ,who knows who can be hurting behind the screen…
Go to your priests,ask a priest,that is what I would say .They know best when it comes to personal things.
I think this is a reasonable concern. People need to know right from wrong. Once they clearly know right from wrong, they can consider culpability. One has to avoid a way of thinking which sees no sin anywhere because of the various mitigating factors relating to culpability. We do not, for example, excuse bullying on the basis of subjective personal factors. We ask that the bullying first stop; then we counsel the bully on his behavior and how to avoid that action in the future. But he must stop the bad behavior.
No, actually, this would be a problematic example – because one is reducing human behaviour and applications of behaviour modification that are properly the province of the social and behavioural sciences to considerations when one is dealing with aspects of human behaviour that relate actually to ethics and moral philosophy (in the realm of philosophy unaided by revelation) or moral theology (in the realm of human knowledge aided by revelation, the deposit of the faith and the Magisterium).I think that is a very good example.
May God have mercy on us,Josie.I do not have a personal problem. I am seeking answers because it is good to keep up on what is happening around us. Thanks for your suggestions. I would also like to suggest that we ask our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ for help and pray the Rosary daily. Praying one of the best ways to obtain grace. I believe God is always there if the heart is sincere and we are willing to do His Will.
The text of which you speak was written in 1899.I bought a second Catechism recently, it should arrive in the mail soon. It is called The Catechism Explained. It is over 700 pages and has stories from the saints lives and things they said. I will take your advice and read through it and educate my faith better using a trusted Catholic source.
:yup:Then why the need to go back in time to try to blur the line between grave mater and mortal culpability?
That would seem to suggest that some here find something deficient in the way the Church currently expresses herself and want to assume that all grave matter is somehow mortally capable as well.
All the Church has done, is try to make a clear distinction between the gravity of the matter and mortal culpability by using more precise terminology.
It seems to me the current Catechism explains sin and culpability for it rather well using precise terms that mean what they say.
I have a copy of the current Catechism but I want to read the older ones too. I plan to purchase and read the Baltimore IV Catechism and the Catechism of the Council of Trent also. Reading these will be like going back in time and learning the religion of my ancestors. I think knowing our faith is important and I can pass them down to my children and one day their children too.The text of which you speak was written in 1899.
Thanks be to God, the Pope who was then reigning saw himself and his mission in the light of living at the end of the 19th century and not the middle of the 18th century – or history might be radically different and not in a positive way. Rather, he saw the need as not retreating to the past but of boldly living in the present.
To retrogress to the the 19th century…or the 17th or the 13th…is to incredibly impoverish oneself intellectually and spiritually, particularly in the face of the advances in scholarship we have seen since the 1800s, which is not an era to be looked back upon as a halcyon age from the perspective of a Church historian.
A doctor as illustrious as Aquinas has been made improved by subsequent scholarship which has been able to elucidate points for which he had no answer and to correct points on which he was, in fact, too limited by his times to have or provide the correct answer.
Even for one who, as a theologian, was schooled as a Thomist, one does not live as if this were still the Scholastic epoch of centuries long dead or without taking account of just how very much things have changed in so very many senses…or looking only at those texts without accounting for subsequent developments, corrections, and improvements. Unless one wishes to be rather a walking anachronism on the one hand and to fall into gross error of failing to sentire cum ecclesia; it, after all, lives in the 21st century presently and not in past as though preserved in amber.
The transition from patristicism to scholasticism was not greeted with universal contemporary acclaim…but that is not always remembered so many centuries later. The effects on the history of academics as we moved from one era to another was, of course, utterly extraordinary.
St. Thomas Aquinas was a brilliant and holy man, a doctor of the Church. And even as a former Catholic, I recognize him as such, but I am able to do so, despite the fact that he defended slavery and proclaimed the inferiority of women, precisely because I recognize that he was as you say, “limited by his times.”A doctor as illustrious as Aquinas has been made improved by subsequent scholarship which has been able to elucidate points for which he had no answer and to correct points on which he was, in fact, too limited by his times to have or provide the correct answer.
As I told my own students, they are not without historical value and could be referenced as such in the context of their studies with me – which was a policy of the whole faculty, actually…but, given that most of them would be in a ministerial work, their references, beyond the historical, had to be drawn from The Catechism of the Catholic Church, once it was promulgated. It was what they were to use in their ministry under their bishops and also, to the extent that the task would be entrusted to them by their proper Ordinary, in adaptations of catechetical material for use by those over whom they had pastoral governance and the cura animarum.I have a copy of the current Catechism but I want to read the older ones too. I plan to purchase and read the Baltimore IV Catechism and the Catechism of the Council of Trent also. Reading these will be like going back in time and learning the religion of my ancestors. I think knowing our faith is important and I can pass them down to my children and one day their children too.
It most certainly IS Catholic teaching Blue. Purgatory purifies us of the temporal effects of sin, and ALSO our attachment to sin. Those who are committing grave sins/matter, but do not have one of the other two components necessary for mortal sin, are still committing grave acts and have an attachment to those grave acts.This is not Catholic Teaching ZZ.
Non imputable deeds of grave matter may not even be venial sins in some cases.
Whence then the dire consequences of purgatory you speak of?
Whence then the grave offence against God?
Obviously there may still be negative temporal consequences from unforgiving men on earth…Eye for eye, Pharisees in power, older brother types and so on. Restitution or legitimate civil punishment may also be required.
But God all the same continues to grace those with impaired understanding or who do not consent interiorly as the CCC and Pope Francis clearly teach.
This is called moving the goalposts.Yes Catholic Teaching on mortal sin obviously involves this text.
However the scholastic medieval phrase we use today “mortal sin” is not exactly the same as that concept used in 1John. Nor is the phrase in 1Jn always well translated from Greek in your translation above. The expression is better rendered as “sin leading to death”. This is more ambiguous than the scholastic phrase.
So a mentally ill bully can continue on bullying? Because he doesn’t know what he’s doing is wrong?No, actually, this would be a problematic example – because one is reducing human behaviour and applications of behaviour modification that are properly the province of the social and behavioural sciences to considerations when one is dealing with aspects of human behaviour that relate actually to ethics and moral philosophy (in the realm of philosophy unaided by revelation) or moral theology (in the realm of human knowledge aided by revelation, the deposit of the faith and the Magisterium).
Even in the example cited, apart from a consideration of acquisition of subjective moral guilt by the person who is bullying (and that determination of an acquisition of subjective moral guilt is the competence of moral theology) that may or may not conclude acquisition of subjective moral guilt, there can be a determination by, for example, a court of law that a severe psychological pathology does, in fact, cause one who has physically bullied someone to be exempt from certain forms of redress – and even to determine that the one acting cannot be held responsible for said action based on the determination of an altered state of consciousness. And that without making, or even being interested in, any sort of conclusion remotely derived from moral theology.
That is why distinctions in these various fields is not only essential for their respective operation but are essential for the humane dispositions of human interactions, which have a variety of loci of origin as well as termini. They of course all intersect within the person but unto different proper ends. The different bodies of knowledge can at times enrich each other…even as they remain distinct and properly their own.
These are peaceful thoughts, and I think that I agree with everything you said, except perhaps the part about “do no clarify, that makes it darker.” (I think the saying may have some applicability to spiritual matters of prayer and contemplation, but when it comes to academic matters of moral theology, clarity is a virtue.)Persons grow in families and communities. We cannot have everything under control…
I will be as honest as I can be: once you have walked the walk with a priest,a good community of good willed people and particularly in the Church,well,because it is where we belong, everything falls gently in its place.
It is diffficult to convey experiences,it is a matter of trust,but I wholeheartedly wish there was more silence of words,more trust and more personal dealing with priests and walking the walk.
There is a saying in Spanish" Do not clarify,that it makes it darker"
I have zero concern and all my trust in the Church,out of faith,out of reason.
Within these walks one may be comfronted with ourselves,and others by the hand of Jesús,and start a lifetime relationship which grows with its lights and shadows but foward.
Be calm,all will be well.
Thank you,Jim.These are peaceful thoughts, and I think that I agree with everything you said, except perhaps the part about “do no clarify, that makes it darker.” (I think the saying may have some applicability to spiritual matters of prayer and contemplation, but when it comes to academic matters of moral theology, clarity is a virtue.)
Despite my agreement with these comments, I cannot see that they have any relationship to the matter at hand, which is the distinction between grave matter and moral culpability for sin. There seems to be a consensus that the two are distinct, yet it also seems to me that the thrust of the discussion is to confuse the issue of wrong action to the point of non-existence.
Surely the Church teaches that some actions are wrong in themselves. Murder is wrong, fornication and adultery are wrong. Assault and battery are wrong. Stealing is wrong. Mowing down pedestrians with a truck is wrong. Examples could be multiplied. These things are wrong in themselves, even if the perpetrator does not have full knowledge and consent, even if he thinks that the wrong action is what the Almighty demands of him. Culpability or not, wrong actions remain wrong. They violate the moral laws of our Creator. They have bad personal and social and spiritual consequences.
That is my only point. I only ask this: Is it possible for anyone to recognize right and wrong any longer? Or have we so drowned the simple idea of right and wrong in a sea of words about culpability as to deprive them of meaning? If we have, then society is in trouble.
I don’t disagree, but if you aren’t recognizing it (since you admit you left), why are you lecturing Catholics on the same thing?St. Thomas Aquinas was a brilliant and holy man, a doctor of the Church. And even as a former Catholic, I recognize him as such, but I am able to do so, despite the fact that he defended slavery and proclaimed the inferiority of women, precisely because I recognize that he was as you say, “limited by his times.”
The problem that I see in the Church today is the failure to recognize that we are also products of our times and limited, as such. Truth does not change, but our understanding of it grows with the guidance of the Holy Spirit. It is the height of arrogance to believe that we are at the pinnacle of our understanding of this truth as a Church…that the generations that came before us did not have a complete understanding, but the generations following us are headed down the wrong path. Why is there no trust in the Holy Spirit to guide us to a greater understanding?
The Holy Spirit is at work within the Church today, this very moment. Unfortunately, many will not recognize the Spirit.
She is offering her opinion, I do not believe it is lecturing, An opinion always gives us something to consider and think about. Some will agree, some will not.I don’t disagree, but if you aren’t recognizing it (since you admit you left), why are you lecturing Catholics on the same thing?
Its called critical scholarship ZZ.This is called moving the goalposts.
Sarah we might equally well ask why lay people do not trust the common understanding of our theologically and pastorally experienced leaders - in which I include Fr Don.Why is there no trust in the Holy Spirit to guide us to a greater understanding?
If we can find what we are looking for in an old Catechism or an older version of the Bible, then maybe that is where the Holy Spirit is leading us. When the Holy Spirit says to us, something is not right, we should listen, and when the truth is presented to us in a way we no longer recognize it, we should open our eyes. With searching and God’s guidance I believe we will find what we are looking for.Sarah we might equally well ask why lay people do not trust the common understanding of our theologically and pastorally experienced leaders - in which I include Fr Don.
Perhaps that is the trust the Holy Spirit is wanting of us rather than some unsubstantiated lay belief in our own infused knowledge which the HS may or may not be responsible for.
Regardless of Aquinas’s alleged errors, the Magisterium and certainly the CCC are very heavily based on Aquinas’s very influential understanding of the Human person and creation before God.
One cannot understand the finer points implicit in the CCC nor the relatively seamless connections between all parts of the CCC without long training in Aquinas’s system.
Personally I would reflect considerably more on the broad outlines that Fr Don kindly contributes on this thread.
Josie good luck with that approach though I fear it will not pull you out of the theological confusion you seek to free yourself from.If we can find what we are looking for in an old Catechism or an older version of the Bible, then maybe that is where the Holy Spirit is leading us. When the Holy Spirit says to us, something is not right, we should listen, and when the truth is presented to us in a way we no longer recognize it, we should open our eyes. With searching and God’s guidance I believe we will find what we are looking for.