Actually, if I may answer that, though the person might not have been taught, it is possible that he was aware through natural law that there was something wrong about it. I am sure even most non-Catholics would admit there is something that does not feel right about Masturbation. After-all, how many atheist do you know who would tell you ''yea, I masturbate like crazy"?
Therefore I think it is not possible to claim Ignorance to that level of it being
invincible ignorance. The true answer to your question is, only God can judge whether it is a mortal sin in that case.
God Bless
Thanks.
But the point I was trying to make with antihippy is that he was ‘assuming’ that St. Thomas ‘should have known’ that ‘killing people’ was ‘evil’ and that since St. Thomas “never repented” doing this evil, he should never have been 'sainted.
I was trying to make the point that we have absolutely no indication that St. Thomas thought that the laws of the land were ‘unfair.’ In fact, since St. Thomas later went to the block himself over a law that he thought was ‘wrong’, a reasonable deduction to make is that if he HAD felt the law on heresy was unjust, he would have protested. (I cited a passage from the Catholic Encyclopedia earlier which also mentioned that St. Thomas thought the laws on heresy were just).
And that being the case, I brought the further example that IF a person did not think an action was ‘sinful’, then the person could not be guilty of MORTAL sin. (which requires grave matter, full knowledge, and full consent) This is where the ‘man A’ came in as an example.
The point that I keep trying to make is that antihippy has absolutely no basis whatsoever to claim:
A. That St. Thomas More not only ‘knew’ that killing heretics was ‘wrong’ and evil, he did it anyway.
B. He never ‘repented’ of freely doing ‘evil.’
C. Thus, he should not be a saint and anybody who ‘supports’ him is condoning evil.
But antihippy keeps trying to turn this into a ‘you moral relativist’ (which I am not) or to compare St. Thomas to various ‘mass murderers’.
I simply want him to stop and THINK. Where is his PROOF that St. Thomas More not only viewed the capital punishment of heresy as EVIL, engaged in evil anyway, and NEVER REPENTED? How does he get off presenting this as ‘fact’ and in trying to claim that anybody who doesn’t think as he does is some kind of moral villain?
I don’t mind discussing all sorts of historical ‘who-dunits’ (personally I do not think Richard III murdered the boys in the tower, my money is on Henry VII). … but people need to SUPPORT THEIR PREMISES.
I brought in the Catechism and the Encyclopedia (New Advent) to support mine.