Anointing of the Sick forgives sin only if the person was unable to confess, i.e. in a coma.If I received extreme unction and died a few minutes later would I go straight to Heaven? Does it wash away all guilt of all sins like Baptism? If so, what if I then made a full recovery, does all my guilt return?
Thanks.
Confession if possible. The priest can still grant Absolution even without auricular confession in limited circumstances.Anointing of the Sick forgives sin only if the person was unable to confess, i.e. in a coma.
Otherwise, confession is required first.
Absolved sins do not “come back”. In addition to sanctifying grace from confession and anointing, the apostolic blessing may be given at that time, which is a plenary indulgence removing all temporal punishment. With a plenary indulgence, purgatory is not needed.If I received extreme unction and died a few minutes later would I go straight to Heaven? Does it wash away all guilt of all sins like Baptism? If so, what if I then made a full recovery, does all my guilt return?
Thanks.
Does absolution in these circumstances and immediate death thereafter mean the person would go straight to Heaven or might they go to Purgatory first?Confession if possible. The priest can still grant Absolution even without auricular confession in limited circumstances.
There are other reasons why there might be Absolution without actual confession–quite a few reasons.
Every priest should (I say should) impart Absolution before Anointing, even if that’s the emergency form.
We have to be careful about making statements like that. It’s sometimes too easy to think of sacraments (and even sacramentals) as things/events that “automatically” trigger something* else.Does absolution in these circumstances and immediate death thereafter mean the person would go straight to Heaven or might they go to Purgatory first?
It has been my understanding that should a person die immediately after baptism they go straight to Heaven and do not go to Purgatory first. Is that incorrect?We have to be careful about making statements like that. It’s sometimes too easy to think of sacraments (and even sacramentals) as things/events that “automatically” trigger something* else.
Everyone passes through purgatory on the way to heaven (the only exceptions being our Lord and His Blessed Mother).
Assuming faith and sincere contrition on the part of the dying person, we can be confident that under those circumstances, that person will enter into heaven. We are likewise confident that the means Christ has given us for forgiveness of our sins (baptism, confession, acts of charity, etc.) will lessen our time in purgatory.
We must do everything possible to ensure that a dying person has access to a priest and receives the Last Rites of the Church in faith and sincerity. As for how “time” works in eternity, we leave that to the Almighty.
*by “something” I mean something beyond what the sacraments do impart directly. Baptism does “automatically” make one a member of the Body of Christ, ordination “automatically” makes a man a priest, etc. etc.
CatechismIt has been my understanding that should a person die immediately after baptism they go straight to Heaven and do not go to Purgatory first. Is that incorrect?
I tried to avoid having to write this sentence the first time, but apparently it’s necessary:It has been my understanding that should a person die immediately after baptism they go straight to Heaven and do not go to Purgatory first. Is that incorrect?
I have not suggested the sacraments are magic so I’m disappointed you think I could even think that.I tried to avoid having to write this sentence the first time, but apparently it’s necessary:
The sacraments are not magic, and we should not treat them as if they were. We should not speak of them as if they were magic.
What if a person has a sinful thought after baptism, but before death? That’s a sin. It happens after baptism. Would the time in purgatory be minimal? Surely yes. How much time in purgatory, leave that to God to decide. Further speculation on the matter begins to smack of superstition because it leads to question like “how long does it take to form a sinful thought?”
We should speak with confidence about God’s mercy, especially His mercy manifested in the Sacraments. Absolutely yes.
Vico quoted the catechism. It addresses this issue. Elsewhere, the Catechism addresses the issue of sin.
We should know and understand the fullness of the Church’s truth with regard to sin, mercy, forgiveness, etc. etc.
We can be confident (know with the assurances of faith) that when one has been forgiven & absolved (whether by Baptism, Confession, martyrdom, etc.) that person will go to heaven because the sin and the punishment due to sin has been remitted. Here insert the entire teaching of the Church with regard to the subject matter.]
Leave the rest to God.
As a priest who is new to this forum and whose priesthood is not tied to North America, I confess I am having a real difficulty in coming to understand certain mindsets that are enigmatic to me – both as an older priest but also, I have to think, because of the different cultures.You seem to be implying that even if the time spent in Purgatory is a nano second only EVERYONE nevertheless spends time in Purgatory first. That is not what I have been taught by priests.
I would then like to clarify this so I can go back the priests who have so instructed me with an explanation.
If a baby dies after being baptised and before attaining the use of reason, it being incapable of committing personal sin or incurring subjective moral guilt, there is no theological criteria for that soul being detained in purgatory since it has been washed of original sin and infused with sanctifying grace. What is the journey for the soul and its existential experience of its “journey” as it leaves the body and enters eternity is a topic that is really not an expounded part of the deposit of the faith. Father David’s point remains perfectly valid…one should not be trying to quantify in temporal terms what is, by its very nature, proper to eternity. His expression about the circumstances he was discussing and what we accept with the certitude of faith, and its assent, is theologically solid.However, objectively speaking, are you saying that if a baby dies after being baptised, or if an adult dies immediately after being baptised without any sinful thought or deed they still go to Purgatory first.