Hi, Breton,
If it’s OK with you, I’ll reply to your post in two
separate posts, so it doesn’t get complicated.
quote: Breton
I was wondering if you could provide more of your thoughts on this “conscience” that is being formed/freed?
I’ve most often heard conscience described as a guide; if one is faced with a fork in the road, your conscience helps one choose which path to travel. But what is it that conscience is guiding us toward? I believe it is guiding us toward the objective truth of God; our Creator and the source of our joy.
It’s been put forward that God created ALL humankind to seek out joy – namely Him – but because of the sin of Adam and Eve, our vision (guide, conscience) has been distorted as such that we seek joy in all the wrong places. I don’t care for the characterization that we are “totally depraved”; surely we can become that if we silence our conscience and allow ourselves to be totally consumed by any perceived joy short of God. I prefer to think of humankind as merely blinded to the joy imprinted on the hearts of all humanity and which we all instinctively seek.
OK, here goes:
-my understanding is, that, for a Catholic, a well-formed
conscience = knowing and understanding what the
Church teaches, in terms of the moral principles that
should guide our lives. This would cover issues like
abortion, cloning, end of life concerns, the laws pertaining
to the marriage contract etc.
The Church holds that she teaches infallibly - on matters of faith
and morals -under certain conditions.
quote: Breton
I don’t care for the characterization that we are “totally depraved”;
The CC does not teach that men and women are
“totally depraved,” O.K.? That concept comes from some
other Christian sources, but is not held by the Church.
The Church teaches that men and women are “wounded”
in their natures - in short, that they are more *inclined *to
choose evil - than was the case, before the fall of Adam and Eve.
scborromeo.org/ccc/para/405.htm
This, of course, is what is referred to as Original Sin,
and the effects of same.
[You might be aware, that the word “conscience”
comes from the Latin *con scio =‘with knowledge’]
So, the question becomes: Where do we obtain the
knowledge - by which - we can know, that what we
choose is either good, or evil?
Are you following this, or is it too much information at once?
reen12