J
JimR-OCDS
Guest
otjm;
The Sacrament of Confession reconciles us with the Church, the body of Christ. However, it doesn’t exclude God’s mercy and forgiveness if we do not get to Confession. To teach this would be heretical.
See the thread where Pope Francis says we’re all children of God, and the gnashing and grinding of teeth over that idea.
When we use the true meaning for sin, i.e. “to miss the mark,” or as an analogy, “like an archer aiming for his target, but missing it,” we get a different perspective of what sin is.
Jim
Just possibly, God had a clue or two about how well we lie to ourselves. Confession means confronting our own sinfulness, and that is far better done using the method God gave us than tempting his justice and mercy by avoiding it
Telling people that they can not go to God directly for forgiveness of their sins, is heretical.Actually, that is incorrect - it is not a heresy; it is the teaching of the Church.
The Sacrament of Confession reconciles us with the Church, the body of Christ. However, it doesn’t exclude God’s mercy and forgiveness if we do not get to Confession. To teach this would be heretical.
Then you haven’t been following the conversation.No one here is saying that priests, instead of God, forgive sins.
Exactly what I’m saying.To put it another way, we are bound by the sacraments, but God is not bound.
Again, what I’ve posted.God is not prevented from forgiving a person of their sins because we have not accessed confession.
It doesn’t require a rare circumstance for God to refuse to forgive a person of their sins, who repents, but has not made it to confession.However, we are bound by confession because God chose to bind us in that way. That does not mean that in rare circumstances, God cannot forgive a person their sins if they could not get to confession.
So, this is placing a limit on God. We can’t presume that he forgives the sin of a repentant sinner who turns to Him and asks for forgiveness. I disagree and so does the Church. Again, the Catechism states, “Only God Forgives Sin.”But neither does that mean that one should presume that God is forgiving one’s sins if one makes a “mental confession”. One is putting themselves at risk in purposely avoiding the means that God gave us for forgiveness.
Correct, God is a God of mercy, not limited by conditions placed by humans.None of that has anything to do with Protestants, or Hindus, or anyone else out there; that is God’s problem, and God is a God of mercy.
God is a God of restorative justice, not retributive justice. When you understand the former over the latter, you begin to understand God’s mercy is to bring us to Himself, not drive us away.He is also a God of justice; and when we refuse to go to confession (and I seriously doubt there are too many Catholics who do not know we have confession), we tempt that justice at our own immortal peril.
There is a division between those Catholics who are as you call it, secularized, and those who are rigid fanatics, who view God and sinners in dualistic notions.The problem is not people knowing about confession. The problem is that all too many Catholics have been secularized, and the secular world doesn’t believe in mortal sin - it believes people make “mistakes”.
See the thread where Pope Francis says we’re all children of God, and the gnashing and grinding of teeth over that idea.
Its one of the conditions for a sin to be mortal, but its not infallible, its a guideline.A sin is a choice; a choice to do evil and/or avoid the good.
When we use the true meaning for sin, i.e. “to miss the mark,” or as an analogy, “like an archer aiming for his target, but missing it,” we get a different perspective of what sin is.
I don’t know where you’re going with this, but mortal sin, needs to be confessed. No argument about this. However, the repentant sinner must first turn to God, for without faith in God, they’re just practicing religion, not growing toward union with God, which is the ultimate goal.And as I said, if one commits adultery, one needs to do a whole lot more than just make a mental apology to one’s spouse. There needs to be a metanoia, a turning around, an acknowledgement of the wrong done, and a rectification.
For Catholics, there needs to be an aural confession - we need to actually stop, and acknowledge our sinful acts, and part of that is actually orally admitting them.
God, allowed repentance of sin long before the Church began private the practice of private confession.Who created us? God. Who knows our psychology, down to the finest detail? God. Who set up confession? God.
Jim
Just possibly, God had a clue or two about how well we lie to ourselves. Confession means confronting our own sinfulness, and that is far better done using the method God gave us than tempting his justice and mercy by avoiding it