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Gabika50
Guest
Correct, because it is not spiritual direction which would take another forum.
Nope. Scruples and legalism are two major pitfalls for any religious person, but especially for Roman Catholics.we become scrupulous
Exactly!to visit places where the Church is driven under ground and it becomes a question of survival rather than obtuse rigidiity and criticizing the padres fro trivialities such as posture, prayers he uses and vestments.
I’ve heard it said here and elsewhere by Arab/Middle Eastern Christians in particular that this is the case even today after the schisms wherever there is significant persecution of Christians. The Syriacs intercommune with the Latins who in turn intercommune with the Copts, who intercommune with the Melkites, and on with the Assyrians, etc. despite whatever their mother church’s official rules may be. I guess when your people are being systematically murdered the last thing on your mind is the intricacies of the Filioque Controversy, Papal Primacy, how many natures Christ has, or whose names are mentioned in the Canon and where. You begin to have a very literal sense of “compassion” for each other given your shared suffering.Doesn’t it seem odd no major schisms happened in the Church between the years A.D. 30 and A.D. 325? (well, with the exception of Gnostics who were never in the Church to begin with… I mean whole established Catholic Churches and diocese breaking away from the rest of the Church.)
The reason why? During those years the Church was underground and being persecuted.
The first major schisms in the Church happened in 325 and 431, when the Arians went into schism after Nicea and when the Assyrians went into schism after Ephesus.
But isn’t it interesting how all the theological disputes became non issues in time of persecution?
It’s similar to clergy during WWII - it wasn’t uncommon to have Catholic Priests, Orthodox Priests, and Protestant ministers all celebrating liturgies and sharing communion together.
This - nor is God an accountant for that matter (apologies to any accountants on the forum). Some people come to the confessional after years away - in some cases, it’s been so long they don’t even know how long. Especially in such cases - but not exclusively - it can be very difficult for the penitent to know where to begin let alone how to continue. Others may take time to build up to the serious stuff (often out of embarrassment) while others still have a lot they need to get off of their chest and somewhere in all of it is the key to what’s really going on in their life. In other words, it takes as long as it takes and patience, is after all, a virtue - for both confessors and penitents alike! So yes, some people take longer than others, longer than we’d prefer they did but God is at work in their lives, and His work is not something to be rushed; His time is not our time.God is not a legalist.
The Roman Rite requirement the sins are confessed in number as well as kind is so that the Priest can better counsel the penitent, not because God forgot how many times you did something.
If you’re not sure of an exact number, it suffices just fine to say “I did x almost every day for the past 6 months” or “I’ve been occasionally doing x” or “I’ve done x several times” or “I commited x about a dozen times.”
You get the point…