:twocents:
Conscience involves more than merely talking to oneself; it is part of the dialogue between the person and God. This being the case, using the example of Abraham, we can understand that one must follow one’s conscience. I believe a rabbinic story has Abraham fasting for forty days and nights on the way to Mount Horeb*. Similarly, we struggle within our relationship with God, to find the truth in the midst of self-deception, to make Him primary in our lives, despite what the world values. Conscience must be educated through an understanding of revealed truth, guided by the Holy Spirit in prayer, reinforced through participation in the mass and sacraments, and by the completion of good works. Our relationship with God, our journey on the Way, our becoming more Christ-like and more loving, is a work in progress.
*Abraham and Issac understood that justice required a sacrifice if humanity was to be saved. They were prepared to carry out that mission and we find Isaac carrying the wood on his shoulders up the mount, prefiguring the revelation of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, the sacrificial lamb provided by God to redeem humanity