(CCC1868) Sin is a personal act. Moreover, we have a responsibility for the sins committed by others when we cooperate in them:
…
- by ordering, advising, praising, or approving them;
Inasmuch as you encourage others to reject the Church’s teachings when they cannot personally agree with them you contribute to the sins they may commit, and for this you bear responsibility.
Yes, this is it exactly. Thank you Ender for including the CCC. We are not saying (at least I’m not), that one should leave the church if one is willing to accept, that to dissent knowingly and willfully, is to sin. And one is called by God, as a Catholic, to “sin no more.” So, if you are going to insist that you are Catholic, then you must seek to “sin no more” in what ever way you can. That may mean more education, that may mean frequent confession and prayer, that may mean just doing or thinking something different, even though it may go against your internal grain, to do or to think so. The behavior drags the feeling (Dr. Laura Schlessinger). Many times if we behave (or even think) in a certain way, out of moral obligation, then the feeling comes along at a latter time and we can behave and think in a certain way, at that time, because
we feel like it.
So to Spirit Meadow who thinks the church has it wrong on homosexuality. You, and other’s who share your mindset, you all should state that this or that is a teaching you struggle with. You should not state that the Catholic Church is wrong on any definitive teaching. She is not. Rather you struggle with the truth.
The onus is on you, if you are going to continue to claim your Catholicity (and if you wish to be taken seriously, and not bring scandal on the Church), to study, to pray, to go to confession frequently, to do everything you can do, to reconcile your thought process to church teaching, which we can trust, is true. If you trust in Christ. If you are truly Catholic then this is what you will do.
To insist that you believe the Church is wrong, is to lead others into your sin of dissent. That too is sinful and you merely succeed in compounding and increasing the gravity of your own state of sinfulness. When you present yourself for holy Communion in this state, then you commit a very grave sin indeed which is to fail, “to discern the body of Christ.” (Can someone offer the scripture verse for this? I don’t have time to look it up. It has to do with not receiving unworthily. Corinthians, I think.)
At any rate, our salvation, as Catholics, is a process. It is not a done deal as long as we willfully persist in our sinfulness. (Otherwise why would Christ have said, “…sin no more.”?
For most of us, this means our whole life on this planet and, no doubt, some stint in pergatory, is spent in this process. We struggle with that which we don’t yet believe, about either Christ or His Body, which is the true Church.
I have always found frequent confession and the reception of the Eucharist followed by the prayer,
“Dear Lord I believe, help me with my unbelief. I beg your mercy as I am a sinner, if you will, Father, grant me the Grace of fortitude and discernment in my struggle.” to be very effective. You may name the struggle directly or just rely on God’s knowledge of you, as HIS child. He knows what our struggles are. Spirit Meadow and others who share her mindset, may do well to try it. I for one, as a Catholic sister in Christ, would appreciate it, if she/they would.