Indifferently,
You seem to be laboring under a number of misunderstandings of what the Catholic Church teaches. Please allow me to help you recognize what the Church actually teaches…
Indifferently:
As for the Sacrifice of the Mass, the Roman Church teaches that the offering of the Mass can propitiate God’s wrath against the quick and the dead for their sins.
I appreciate that you’re quoting from Denzinger, but that citation is from a profession of faith; it doesn’t work well if it’s the sum total of your understanding of the Mass. It
is propitiatory – that is, an atoning sacrifice – but to claim that it’s only about ‘wrath’ and ‘sins’ is too naive an outlook. The Mass “is also offered for the faithful departed who ‘have died in Christ but are not yet wholly purified’” (CCC 1371) – so, it takes on the character of working for purification of those whose sins are already forgiven. It is also related to those already in heaven: “to the offering of Christ are united… also those already in the glory of heaven” (CCC 1370). It is also a sacrifice of the Church herself: “the Church which is the Body of Christ participates in the offering of her Head”, through which the Church “herself is offered whole and entire” through which “the lives of the faithful, their praise, sufferings, prayer, and work are united with those of Christ and with his total offering, and so acquire a new value” (CCC 1368). So, it’s much more than you claim here; yet, is it true that the offering of the Mass is for the atonement of sin? Well, yes and no: unforgiven venial sin is absolved through participation in the Mass (cf the quote from Denzinger given at CCC 1366), but unforgiven mortal sin cannot be atoned for by the Mass (cf GIRM #51).
This is in keeping with the whole Roman Catholic soteric system, where “justification” is a process of renewal of the sinner into the image of Christ, which may not be completed in this life and may require temporal punishments in purgatory
This is not a Catholic understanding of ‘justification’. Justification is not a ‘process’, but rather, follows from baptism (cf CCC 1987ff). Perhaps you’re thinking of ‘salvation’, which is a process that is initiated with the reception of God’s grace in baptism, and concludes (hopefully) with our attainment to eternal life in heaven.
the process [of justification]… may not be completed in this life and may require temporal punishments in purgatory to settle the account and finish the subjective process.
Again, no. “All who die in God’s grace and friendship, but still imperfectly purified, are indeed assured of their eternal salvation; but after death they undergo purification, so as to achieve the holiness necessary to enter the joy of heaven. The Church gives the name Purgatory to this final purification of the elect” (CCC 1030, 1031). This is not a ‘settling of the account’ or a ‘finishing of a process’ – subjective or not – but rather, a means of purification of a person bound for heaven.
The word “satisfaction” carries with it precisely the meaning of the settling of an account - the view that our debt due to God for our sins requires that we be sufficiently punished to “satisfy” God’s justice.
Perhaps, in a secular context, it means “settling the account;” however, that’s not the definition we’re utilizing in the context you’re addressing – that is, the teaching of the Catholic Church. Rather, “Absolution takes away sin, but it does not remedy all the disorders sin has caused. Raised up from sin, the sinner must still recover his full spiritual health by doing something more to make amends for the sin: he must “make satisfaction for” or “expiate” his sins” (CCC 1459). Satisfaction, then isn’t primarily about making others whole; it’s about making
ourselves whole from the “injur[ies] and weak[nesses] [of] the sinner himself” and restoring relationships “with God and neighbor” (CCC 1459). This isn’t a satisfaction that’s punishment vis-a-vis God’s justice, but a rehabilitation of the forgiven sinner who wishes to reconcile with God.
Since each sinner requires a different level of purgation, it is obviously subjective (i.e. on a case-by-case basis).
That’s an interesting definition of ‘subjective’; yet, I think I’d respond that each
already-forgiven (don’t forget that essential point!) sinner requires the same level of purgation – that is, perfection. There may be more or less to purge, but the goal is the same for all: perfection in the eyes of God, without which we cannot enter into the Beatific Vision.
No mention in the CCC of purgatory involving “temporal punishment” interestingly, but that is still official Roman Catholic dogma (per the Council of Trent) and thus must be dogmatically held by all the (RC) faithful.
Interesting claim. Wrong, but interesting. CCC 1472 states, “every sin, even venial, entails an unhealthy attachment to creatures, which must be purified either here on earth, or after death in the state called Purgatory. This purification frees one from what is called the ‘temporal punishment’ of sin.”