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Guest
I’ve always used the phrase “temporal penalties” - as opposed to “temporal punishments” - I wonder if I read that somewhere or simply made the shift myself on an unconscious level? Penalty, to my mind, could more readily be seen as a “natural consequence”. I think we have to remember that everything that happens in this life is allowed by God - even if He doesn’t directly take action - God is sovereign. For this reason, there is a long tradition, starting in the Old Testament, of associating things God allows (eg. the natural consequences of sin) with things God does. That being said, the book of Hebrews does speak of God disciplining His children out of love…which could imply a temporal punishment of sort in the literal sense (but with the intention of that “punishment” drawing us closer to Him along the path of holiness - or of participating in the redemptive work of Christ by sharing in His suffering - as per St. Paul in Col. 1:24).So you are saying that there is no “temporal punishment” on earth, and only in Purgatory?Why do you restrict indulgence to only “purgatorial” purification? Is there a magisterial source that restricts the definition of indulgence in that way?
In the early Church, the “temporal punishment” due to sin was penance. Penances are canonical penalities because they are imposed by the Church. An indulgence remits this penance. It was an act of economy (penances in the early Church were more intensive and extensive than what any of the Churches have today). The Latin Church has developed in its understanding of “temporal punishment,” and hence of “indulgences.” “Temporal punishment” is no longer perfectly equated with penance, but is more of a condition that can still exist in the afterlife (in short, penance has become merely a subset of a more general concept of “temporal punishment”). I am simply adhering to the patristic concept rather than the later Latin development (not that there is anything wrong or heterodox with that development).
The Catechism does not call the suffering of the souls in purgatory a punishment, but a purification. The relevant text from the Catechism was quoted by brother Dcointin.
According to the Catechism, “temporal punishment” is more of a condition that naturally results from having sinned, rather than an outside action done on the Christian. What happens in “Purgatory” is that the soul is purified of this condition, not that the soul is punished.
So I would disagree about calling the suffering of the souls in Purgatory a punishment.
Blessings,
Marduk
Regarding indulgences, they certainly can apply to this life as well. There’s a reason why Laitn priests impose a penance after every single confession…
You are quite correct that indulgences evolved from the early practice of bishops remitting canonical penances. The Church no longer associates specific penances with specific sins, but she knows that there are still natural consequences for sin in both this life and in the next - indulgences remit some of those natural consequences in a way fully understood only by God.