VC, I was speaking in general, not referring to you.
Thank you Ron, I appreciate it.
I think I’ve led us a bit afield by bringing up the confession of sins. My interest was in the number of sins involved and not, necessarily, the directive to confess in number and kind. I will state, however, that I disagree with you in that I tend to think the directive to confess in number and kind is a bit more stringent then you seem to indicate. Emergency situations, lack of knowledge, forgetfulness, etc. can
excuse from the obligation but I believe the basic obligation is clear. You mentioned Trent already, and to that we can add its codification in Can. 988 §1. “A member of the Christian faithful is obliged to confess in kind and number all grave sins committed after baptism and not yet remitted directly through the keys of the Church nor acknowledged in individual confession, of which the person has knowledge after diligent examination of conscience.” Again, I am not speaking of extraordinary circumstances, but rather what is normative – number and kind.
Actually, I thought my prior post similar to a post of yours on another
thread (emphasis mine):
Ron Conte:
If you enter the confessional not in a state of grace, due to actual mortal sin,
you do not leave in a state of grace unless you confess and are repentant from each and every actual mortal sin, however,
if you are entirely repentant from all mortal sins,
but can’t remember, or unintentionally omit some of them,
you are still forgiven from all your mortal sins.
and therefore I didn’t anticipate a discussion on the obligation of “number and kind.” I inadvertently took us off track.
Leaving that aside, the real purpose of my query was regarding the actual number of sins. I’m curious about the concept that the woman who procures an abortion commits four numerically distinct mortal sins
de facto. My training in moral theology leads me to think otherwise. My understanding of the issue is that when numbering sins, aside from species (each species is a distinct sin), the number of sins within the same species can be identified (among other ways) by complete acts of the will, not an act of the will which refers to another act of the will as a part to a whole.
The unity of the acts of the will I am speaking of is a moral unity and not a physical unity. If the person wills a component of a physical act for its own sake this could be an indicator of the components not being a moral unity, but sometimes if an act of the will can be referred to another act of the will as a part of whole then there aren’t two sins but rather one.* Also this moral unity can be disrupted by changing the will back and forth, the so called “moral interruption”.
As an illustration, my understanding is that an internal action of, say, deciding to murder someone and the external action of physically murdering someone are not two numerically distinct formal sins but rather one formal sin – the external act completes the external act. Though the external act does indeed add to the malice of the sin by completing it. And in some cases another sin may be generated as well, such as scandal.
Another illustration might be stabbing someone twice in succession in order to murder them. The stabbings normally would be a component of the sin of murder – one sin, not three. This could change, though, if the perpetrator willed to maim and then willed to murder. Those are two distinct moral acts. Or if the perpetrator stabs someone in order to kill, changes their mind, and then changes it back and stabs again in order to kill. This would be a classic case of a “moral interruption” as I understand it, and thus two sins.
So in the case of the woman who a)decides to get an abortion b)makes and appointment c)drives there and d)procures the abortion I am finding it difficult to identify 4 numerically distinct formal sins, unless there is a moral interruption or some other ancillary sins generated by each action (such as scandal).
It is quite possible that I am misunderstanding you, or that I am mistaken, or that we are mis-communicating. Perhaps it would be helpful if you could point out another source that might support your contention that there are 4 mortal sins in this case? Please note that I am
not saying that unless you can point to another source to corroborate your position then your position is erroneous. I have noticed that recently you have been quite concerned about people demanding Church documents, Catechism passages, etc before assenting to a theological principle. What I am asking is if you can direct me towards any treatises on moral theology, writing of the Saints, etc that could support your position, and thus help me to understand it. As you know, good theology, while it can stand on its own, can often also adduce examples from Saint’s writings or other theological works.
Thank you for your time. I look forward to your response.
VC
*Please note that this can get a bit complicated, and I’ve simplified it (or perhaps over-simplified it). Each case is different. I would appreciate it if we could limit our discussion only to the case at hand:
a)deciding to get an abortion
b)scheduling it
c)traveling to it
d)submitting to it