T
TiggerS
Guest
Muddling around in the quicksand!
:
A potential situation: If I suddenly become aware that I am in an “occasion of sin” and being tempted to sin and later do so. Then the guilt is still mine. I have given in to temptation when The Church teaches us that God always grants sufficient Grace to overcome temptation.
Whether persons involved in that situation that became an “occasion of sin” for me have any guilt is an entirely different matter. Even if they have guilt, I still succumbed to temptation when we are never tempted beyond our means (Grace) to resist temptation.
Certainly, I now have a moral obligation to avoid that “occasion of sin” if possible in the future. And it becomes a moral wrong in itself to enter into that “occasion of sin” again if I am able to avoid doing so. If I am not able to avoid doing so for some reason, then I need spiritual advice if I find myself unable to make my own decision.
“Forced” and “tempted” are two different moral matters. My mother used to say : No such thing as “must” or “have to”. Down the line, I realized that she was quite correct. In every situation in life, we have a choice. If our freedom of choice, to make a choice freely, is affected by exterior or interior force of some kind, then moral culpability is lessened or may be absent altogether. The CCC sets this out for us.
Minefield - quicksand - drowning!
Possible a form of denial - sort of “the devil made me do it” type of situation. I do not admit my own guilt rather project it elsewhere, attempt to deflect it from myself.Just my own limited opinion, but I wonder if why some disagree so adamantly about certain terminology particular to this thread might be because they believe that saying someone is an “occasion of sin” is the same as saying someone is the “cause of sin” ? Of course, they aren’t the same thing. That’s why my focus has been on the sin originating in the person who goes to see the stripper - not the stripper. And it does appear to fall in line with what that same Catholic Encyclopedia article has to offer next:
A potential situation: If I suddenly become aware that I am in an “occasion of sin” and being tempted to sin and later do so. Then the guilt is still mine. I have given in to temptation when The Church teaches us that God always grants sufficient Grace to overcome temptation.
Whether persons involved in that situation that became an “occasion of sin” for me have any guilt is an entirely different matter. Even if they have guilt, I still succumbed to temptation when we are never tempted beyond our means (Grace) to resist temptation.
Certainly, I now have a moral obligation to avoid that “occasion of sin” if possible in the future. And it becomes a moral wrong in itself to enter into that “occasion of sin” again if I am able to avoid doing so. If I am not able to avoid doing so for some reason, then I need spiritual advice if I find myself unable to make my own decision.
“Forced” and “tempted” are two different moral matters. My mother used to say : No such thing as “must” or “have to”. Down the line, I realized that she was quite correct. In every situation in life, we have a choice. If our freedom of choice, to make a choice freely, is affected by exterior or interior force of some kind, then moral culpability is lessened or may be absent altogether. The CCC sets this out for us.
Minefield - quicksand - drowning!