P
phil19034
Guest
How do you know that you know everything about what you are doing? There is more to knowing sin than knowing that “it is a sin”. There is knowing why it is a sin, for example. Now this might make your mind go to “wait a minute, this is making excuses!”, which is very natural, but that voice coming from within is a roadblock in itself, it shuts off the mind to a deeper understanding. The focus here is on understanding, not condemnation or condonation.
but only enough to know to know it’s sinful or against the natural law
Ok, this is not my opinion. I’m regurgitating teachings of St Thomas and other Saints, and the teaching of the Church.Yes, there it is! “It is only enough” means “only enough to condemn”. But the focus, again, is not on blame, the focus here is on understanding. The blame comes from the conscience (a good conscience).
The following is from the CATHOLICISM for Dummies website:
Three conditions are necessary for mortal sin to exist:
Grave Matter: The act itself is intrinsically evil and >immoral. For example, murder, rape, incest, >perjury, adultery, and so on are grave matter.
Full Knowledge: The person must know that what >they’re doing or planning to do is evil and immoral. >For example, someone steals a postage stamp, >thinking that it’s only worth 50 cents. She knows >that it’s sinful, but if she’s unaware that the stamp >is rare and actually worth a $1,000, she’s not guilty >of mortal sin but of venial sin.
Deliberate Consent: The person must freely >choose to commit the act or plan to do it. Someone >forced against her will doesn’t commit a mortal sin. >For example, a woman told she’s giving a minor >shock to another person who in fact is >administering tortuous electrical jolts is not guilty of >a mortal sin (although she may feel guilty if she >finds out the truth).
No where does it say that we must understand WHY a sin is a grave matter. We just have to know that it is.
Again, in the case of the Jewish leaders who killed Christ, they knew they were killing an innocent man (and would have been guilty of that in the eyes of God). But they didn’t know they were killing God Incarnate. They didn’t know they were killing the Sin of God. That is the sin Christ asked God to forgive them off (plus those in the Crowd who thought they were heckling a blasphemer).
BTW - when you know a sin is a grave matter, then you know there is a condemnation for it.
God Bless
Last edited: