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guanophore
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Glad to hear it!Code:I'll probably start a new thread, and just go through the other things that I don't understand about Catholicsm.
Excellent questions! This does deserve it’s own thread. 1 John 5:16-17Pax et Caritas: Okay, so I have got to ask… about the whole mortal/venial sin thing. Going by the same logic, if thinking about sin is a mortal sin, then is not everything a supposed mortal sin? thinking about stealing? thinking about murder? where do you draw the line? is there a line?
16 If any one sees his brother committing what is not a mortal sin, he will ask, and God will give him life for those whose sin is not mortal. There is sin which is mortal; I do not say that one is to pray for that. 17 All wrongdoing is sin, but there is sin which is not mortal."
A mortal sin pushes saving grace out of the soul. “Little” wrongdoings will eventually do the same thing, but there are some sins that will result in rejection of the HS, precluding salvation. Offenses against the 10 commandments, for starters.
For a sin to be classified as mortal, the individual must be educated enough to understand the seriousness of the wrong. Those who are ignorant or impaired cannot be held to the same standard. Catholics don’t pronounce someone saved or unsaved. We understand that it is up to God to decide. We are firm about how a person can gain and lose salvation, but only God can look upon the heart. However, in any case, not asking others to pray for you, while it is like shooting yourself in the foot spiritually, is not a sin of any kind. You are not required to avail yourself of any of the gifts God has for you. His word says “earnestly desire the higher gifts”.Okay, so I have to “knowingly reject Catholic dogma”? so by believing that it is wrong to pray to anyone other than Jesus, (eg. Mary, saints, people in heaven etc) I would be, according to you, going to hell?
In this cse, Jesus decided that He would appoint persons to carry on His work after His ascension. He empowered them to act in His name. The HS works though people.I’m going to drop this whole apostolic succession thing… I don’t really see what the problem is - believing in it or not. I mean, obviously Jesus would appoint leaders to carry on his teachings, but that doesn’t necessarily make them a stand-in for Jesus until he returns, does it? Surely the Holy Spirit would do that job well enough?
John 20:22-23: I don’t see how this tells us to confess sins to a priest. All it says to me is that Jesus ties personal forgiveness of others to our own forgiveness in the Lord’s Prayer.
He only said this to His Apostles in the upper room. Elsewhere, He gives them more instructions about how they are to minister to the flock. It is true that Jesus ties personal forgiveness of others to our own. However, He also wants us to call for the elders of the church for healing and confession.
Absolutely! and these are the prayers that are used before, during ,and after the sacrament of reconciliation.So our prayer probably should be that the Lord continue to fill us, to guide us, to lead us, and to transform us by his Spirit so that we can truly be his agents of redemption, reconciliation, and grace.
the priest, by virtue of his holy orders, is bound by a vow never to reveal what is told in confession. This makes it safer to confess to him than an ordinary lay person.
- Doesn’t this just mean that we should confess and forgive our sins to each other? I maintain that ultimate forgiveness - forgiveness from God comes from God, and praying or confessing to God alone.
Catholics understand that Jesus has made us “partakers in his divine grace” and “ministers of reconciliation”. Jesus shares His divine ministry, and works in, and through the consecrated life.Check out 1Timothy 2:5: “For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Jesus Christ” (not Mary, not saints, not priests, not the pope). How does that work with Catholicism?