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FrDavid96
Guest
I think I see what you mean.I think I may have been a little more obtuse that I wanted. I understand that the Bible is not our only source of spiritual truth. I am not a believer in sola scriptura. What I have a problem with is the idea that a teaching, especially one as important as this, can be considered part of the teachings which Jesus passed on to the apostles and they, in turn, passed on to us (my definition of Sacred Tradition). Thomas Aquinas wasn’t born until 1225. If he is the first person to mention absolution as something separate from forgiveness, in other words, without the ECFs weighing in on it, how do we know it’s not just an idea that Aquinas came up with. He’s not infallible; he denied the Immaculate Conception, after all.
I thought - and, perhaps, I’m wrong - that the pope cannot just make any statement about faith or morals and declare it to be infallible. It had to have some foundation in the historic teaching of the church. That’s why I was asking about the ECFs. This isn’t a minor point. I have to think that someone would have mentioned it before the 13th century if it was solid church teaching.
I hope I’ve clarified my thoughts a little better.
Let me put it this way. The words that we use now in our vocabulary–words that go back at least to St Thomas (yes, he used Latin, we use English), are merely an expression of a reality. What I mean by that is to make the point that vocabulary as such is not what’s central; instead the spiritual concepts are important.
Let’s look again at our modern definitions (in brief, very brief):
Forgiveness—reconciled to God
Absolution–reconciled to the Church
Now, even if we do not have evidence from the early Church Fathers that they had a distinct vocabulary, we have plenty of evidence that they understood (and certainly affirmed) that both concepts existed. To the Fathers, a penitent had to be reconciled to both God and the Church.
We can find plenty of examples of this.
Here is just one example to illustrate the point:
St. Ignatius of Antioch
“For as many as are of God and of Jesus Christ are also with the bishop. And as many as shall, in the exercise of penance, return into the unity of the Church, these, too, shall belong to God, that they may live according to Jesus Christ”
(Letter to the Philadelphians 3 [A.D. 106]).
wenorthodox.com/2012/12/the-bible-and-early-church-fathers-on-confession-of-sin/
It’s very clear that in the mind of St Ignatius, a penitent needed to be reconciled to both God and the Church.
The Saint says “return to the unity of the Church” (or at least that’s how the translator renders it). Although he does not use the word “absolve” as such, he certainly intends the meaning of the word.
I do understand your point, that St Thomas came along after 1200 years of Christianity; however when we look at the history of confession in the early Church, and the writings of the Church Fathers, it’s quite obvious that they understood the fact that a penitent needed to be reconciled to both God and the Church. Even though they might not have used 2 different words, there’s no doubt that the concept was there.
Look to the early Church canons (especially the Councils) who put so much effort into describing the “stages” of reconciliation----the categories of the “hearers” and “kneelers” and “standers” and it becomes quite clear that they saw a need for the penitent to be brought back into the community of the Church.
Remember: St Thomas is not inventing the categories, he’s merely articulating them.
As for your last paragraph: I agree 100%.