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PJM
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How my friends, if your not a Catholic, are your sins forgiven and on what basis?
Do you mean within the context of the wider Christian tradition?How my friends, if your not a Catholic, are your sins forgiven and on what basis?
1 John 1:9.How my friends, if your not a Catholic, are your sins forgiven and on what basis?
“But if you confess your sins, He is faithful and just to forgive your sins, And cleanse you from all unrighteousness”.How my friends, if your not a Catholic, are your sins forgiven and on what basis?
Through all the Sacraments and prayer and fasting and asking for forgiveness from my brothers and sisters.How my friends, if your not a Catholic, are your sins forgiven and on what basis?
Better answer than mine.I can take your question in several ways. Are you asking ‘how’ in the theological sense, or ‘how’ by what method or tradition?
As a Lutheran, I believe my sins are forgiven by Christ Jesus, on the basis of his suffering and death on the cross.
We Lutherans, being sacramental Christians, receive forgiveness via Confession and Absolution. This is usually done corporately (during the Mass, and using much the same wording spoken at Roman Catholic Mass), but can be done privately (one-on-one with a priest/confessor). Some Lutherans consider Confession and Absolution to be a sacrament on its own, while others consider it to be a continuation of Holy Baptism. In either case, there is a sacramental element to the act.
So to answer your question simply: my sins are forgiven in much the same way as yours.
Either, they do not understand they are sinning, and thus not culpable to mortal sin (thus need no forgiveness), or they make an act of perfect contrition. We must pray that either situation may save them!How my friends, if your not a Catholic, are your sins forgiven and on what basis?
Non-Catholics sins are forgiven the same way Catholics sins are forgiven. By confessing to God with a contrite and repentant heart.How my friends, if your not a Catholic, are your sins forgiven and on what basis?
Steido,I can take your question in several ways. Are you asking ‘how’ in the theological sense, or ‘how’ by what method or tradition?
As a Lutheran, I believe my sins are forgiven by Christ Jesus, on the basis of his suffering and death on the cross.
We Lutherans, being sacramental Christians, receive forgiveness via Confession and Absolution. This is usually done corporately (during the Mass, and using much the same wording spoken at Roman Catholic Mass), but can be done privately (one-on-one with a priest/confessor). Some Lutherans consider Confession and Absolution to be a sacrament on its own, while others consider it to be a continuation of Holy Baptism. In either case, there is a sacramental element to the act.
So to answer your question simply: my sins are forgiven in much the same way as yours.
I think this is an interesting post. But I think we are being mislead when we say that non-religious people don’t have sins that don’t need to be forgiven the way religious people do.Non-religious people don’t have “sins” that need to be “forgiven” in the same way as your religion teaches you.
They love their fellow humans and try to live honestly…and if they make a mistake, they try to learn from their errors and say “I’m sorry” to the person they’ve hurt and ask them if they will forgive them…or if they’ve hurt themselves, they try to forgive themselves and try to do better the next time.
They try to do right by themselves and people they love and their fellow human beings.
There are no “sins”. There are mistakes and there are improvements one can make and learning to be done. But no “sins”.
That’s all.
It’s simple, not complicated, no mystery.
.
Apostolic Succession has been discussed in other threads, and I’ll leave it there (somewhere on page 20-something): forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=783849&page=24[Roman Catholics] are forgiven by the Successors of the Apostles, The Lutherans are not…
Only they the Successors can forgive sins through Jesus Christ.
This being the truth therefore we Catholic know without a doubt, that our sins are forgiven and knowing this therefore for we Catholics truly “go in peace”.
You misinterpret me; I am proud that your Roman Catholic church is almost like the Lutheran church.Above, you seem to take pride that the Lutheran church is almost like the Catholic Church.
I think the point you’re driving at will end up returning to our varying understandings of Apostolic Succession, so I’ll simply agree with the Father Connell’s Confraternity Edition of the New Baltimore Catechism: “No man, by his own power and authority, could possibly forgive sins. Only God can do that because sin is an offence against Him.”Steido, do you believe all Protestant Pastor from different faiths can forgive sins as well?
The first step is repentance and baptism.How my friends, if your not a Catholic, are your sins forgiven and on what basis?
By accepting the perfect sacrifice of the Son of God in faith.How my friends, if your not a Catholic, are your sins forgiven and on what basis?