C
coachdennis
Guest
Get off your butt and do what your parents tell you to do, period.
Get off your butt and do what your parents tell you to do, period.
Doing housework (especially housework assigned by your parents) does NOT mean you would be receiving the Eucharist unworthily.Yes, I did.
I just donāt like committing sins of presumption, but I canāt think of another way out of this.
And I wanna go to Mass tonight, Iād very much like to, but Iām not going to receive the Eucharist unworthily.
Exactly what is being presumed here? This is what I really donāt understand.Uh yeah, there is NO way my parents would let me not clean the house today⦠I donāt think āexplaining it nicelyā is going to help.
They donāt even like the fact that I choose not to work a job on Sundays.
I did already receive communion yesterday; I know itās a sin of presumption, but would it be better to just follow their wishes, not go to church tonight (since I went yesterday evening) and then confess it?
A fast reply would be nice, all.
Well, letās put it this way: If you donāt do the cleaning, you might want to consider not receiving.My parents want me to do some housecleaning today- scrubbing the bathroom and whatnot. I try to make it a point not to work on Sundays (I did all my homework yesterday) but I know youāre supposed to honor your parents, and honestly, I donāt want to deal with that kind of an argument right now. Iām going to Mass tonight; can I obey my parentsā wishes and still receive Communion?
Housework is exhausting and you do need to get some rest.
Unless one is on medical rest, household chores are hardly exhausting.
Thank you for giving this person a sincere answer to a sincere question. Some people seem to think that now the law has been re-phrased we can basically do what we like on a Sunday and force others to work under specious pretexts, but it seems to me that the new law forbids work that is not servile if that is what the person has been doing all week, in addition to forbidding servile work. Do you know where any trustworthy/authoritative explanations of what this law means in practice can be found?Yes it does. Unnecessary servile work is not permitted on Sundays. It is a day of rest. Obviously dishes have to be done after eating, but unless there is a good reason why cleaning the bathroom floor canāt wait until Monday (ie: toilet backed up, someone vomited on it before they got to the toilet) servile work like that is a sin against the third commandment.
There is a hierarchy that puts honoring God above honoring our neighbors including parents. If we are asked to do something sinful (which unnecesry servile work on Sundays is), we are not to obey.
I would tell my parents respectfully and kindly that I would be happy to scrub the bathroom floors on Monday, but today is Sunday, the Lordās Day, which we are commanded to keep this day holy and spend it honoring God and rest from unnecessary servile work.
They might get mad the first time, but you must stand your ground. I would suggest doing an extra household chore thatās particularly unpleasant or demanding that your parents would do, so they also benefit from you not doing servile work on Sunday. Then you also do a greater act of charity towards your parents.
Very rude and condescending. That attitude is scandalous.Get off your butt and do what your parents tell you to do, period.
Having spoken with far too many priests about this question, your sense of moral theology is more than just a little bit off track. The parents are not commanding sin, and telling a teenager that before one has had the complete story (and by that, I mean not only the teenagerās side but also the parentās side) is completely out of line.Very rude and condescending. That attitude is scandalous.
We do not worship our parents, we worship God. Parents are beneath the laws of God, Church and State, not above them. The question is āis it against the law of the Church to do unnecessary housework on a Sunday, and is cleaning the bathroom unnecessary, as it does not need doing every day and could easily be done on another?ā
If the answer to this question is āyesā, then the parents are commanding sin, and ought to be disobeyed, no matter how much they might unjustly resent it.
That depends.turtle18;12660214:
and you do need to get some rest.Housework is exhausting
Unless one is on medical rest, household chores are hardly exhausting.
Boring? Oh yeahā¦
Seemingly needless? Yep.
Join the Army and clean out a latrine with a toothbrush, and you will achieve a different perspective on the āchoresā your parents made you do
turtle18;12660214:
and you do need to get some rest.Housework is exhausting
Unless one is on medical rest, household chores are hardly exhausting.Boring? Oh yeahā¦Seemingly needless? Yep.I am a grown woman. I can do a cardio workout for 60 minutes and feel good and be energized the rest of the day. I can do 60 minutes of housework and be non-functional and completely wiped out the rest of the day.Join the Army and clean out a latrine with a toothbrush, and you will achieve a different perspective on the āchoresā your parents made you do
So, cleaning the dishes after eating is ok but cleaning the bathroom is not? If the bathroom can wait, then why canāt the dishes?Obviously dishes have to be done after eating, but unless there is a good reason why cleaning the bathroom floor canāt wait until Monday⦠servile work like that is a sin against the third commandment.
This is a good point. Of course I do the dishes on Sundays. And I cook. And do laundry. All of this is definitely housework. I see nothing wrong with taking a feather duster to a table on the Lordās Day.So, cleaning the dishes after eating is ok but cleaning the bathroom is not? If the bathroom can wait, then why canāt the dishes?
Of the things you have listed, buying food on a Sunday was almost certainly a sin, unless you genuinely couldnāt get to the shops or get someone else to go for you on another day. The reason for this is that we must make a good effort to encourage the Lordās Day to be kept holy by society in general, and to avoid causing others to work. Watching two football matches is debatable.Today, (Sunday) My wife and I have:
1 Changed 4 Diapers.
2 Folded 2 loads of laundry.
3 Done 2 loads of Dishes Breakfast and Lunch for the 6 people who are in our family.
4 Wiped 2 bottoms (separate from the diapers)
5 Bought dinner and Lunch from the store after Mass.
6 Picked up the floor (toys ad trash and such)
7 Took the trash to the curb (early monday morning pickup)
8 Watching 2 football games
9 Day aint over yet, we still have dinner and baths and Family Adoration and Benediction.
Now, here is where scrupulosity just does not make sense to me. By asking your question you are condemning others, including myself as committing grave matter and being unworthy of the Eucharist. You are calling me a desecrator.
It is my belief that many times scrupulocity is on par with OCD. But it can also be a form of pridefulness and boasting.
And like OCD many times employing logic can help with the problem. Do you think the God of our faith. Jesus Christ Himself would condemn you to hell for helping the household when your parents ask? Man, that makes absolutely no sense, and rather than breaking the command of keeping Sunday a Holy day, you are dangerously close to breaking the command to honor your parentsā¦
I feel you so hardWow. This got out of hand fast.
To those of you who got offended (and yeah, Iām looking at the guy who called me lazy and told me to āget off my butt,ā as well as the other one who said Iād called him a desecrator), you need to calm down, 'kay? Do you think Iād be asking this question if I were trying to be disrespectful to my parents? Or if I were being lazy? And do you think that I think I have any right to judge you? That line of reasoning sounds pretty judgmental to me.
So I told them I couldnāt do it on Sundays, ācause frankly I wasnāt sure if it were a mortal sin or not, and offered to get up at 5:30 Monday morning. They got mad, but did the right thing and told me to ask my confessor, which really I should have done in the first place because clearly none of you are any help. I was super helpful all the rest of the week to make up for it, did my folksā laundry, dusted the whole house, and helped with the rest of the housework. So no, Iām not lazy, I love my parents, and Iām not accusing anyone else of ANYTHING- thatās your job, not mine.
Goodness gracious.
You seem to have rashly judged all āteenagersā as being of ill-will, and to believe that good will is something that is acquired with age. Perhaps āthe teenagerā was being sincere? You do know that children have been canonized?Having spoken with far too many priests about this question, your sense of moral theology is more than just a little bit off track. The parents are not commanding sin, and telling a teenager that before one has had the complete story (and by that, I mean not only the teenagerās side but also the parentās side) is completely out of line.
You might be scandalized by the matter, but that is exactly what I would have told the teenager, were they mine and they came back with āItās Sundayā routine.
And to top that off, there would have been some consequences not of their liking, for failure to get moving and get the job done.
From the Catholic Catechism: 2185 On Sundays and other holy days of obligation, the faithful are to refrain from engaging in work or activities that hinder the worship owed to God, the joy proper to the Lordās Day, the performance of the works of mercy, and the appropriate relaxation of mind and body. Family needs or important social service can legitimately excuse from the obligation of Sunday rest. The faithful should see to it that legitimate excuses do not lead to habits prejudicial to religion, family life, and health.
Emphasis mine.
I would not accuse the OP of telling a skewed story; but having raised teenagers (and actually having been one myself (even thought that is ancient history), I would not be shocked out of my mind to find out that there was a whole lot to this story that we have not heard.
Could the bathroom been cleaned on a different day? Absolutely. The question then is, why wasnāt it? Oh, there is more to this story. Ohhhhhhhhh.
But parents sinning? Not according to the CCC. Nor, according to any priest I have ever spoken with.