lifeissues.net/writers/mcm/mcm_26conscience.html
I really like this discussion of conscience. There is even a section about confusing dissent with conscience and I think that applies in this discussion.
It was a very good article. I recommend everyone read it. There was perhaps a slight obscurity.
Some readers when reading the article might be given the impression that one’s conscience can never conflict with infallible Church teaching. That would only be the case for
those whose consciences told them that papal/Church infallibility was an absolutely certain doctrine. The consciences of non-Catholics probably wouldn’t tell them that and the consciences of Catholics who are not aware of the teaching of papal infallibility wouldn’t tell them that. And there may also be the consciences of Catholics who are aware of the teaching of Vatican I on infallibility but who doubt it – whose consciences don’t tell them that it is absolutely certain. In all these cases (as well as others that one can imagine) there can be a conflict between one’s conscience and an infallible Church teaching. And when there is such a disparity, it is always one’s absolute subjective obligation to follow one’s conscience (even though it happens to be erroneous and even though the absolute
objective obligation to heed infallible Church teaching remains).
Let’s take an example of not the Vicar of God the Son, but God Himself speaking to someone. Let’s say that when God spoke to Moses, Moses was convinced in his conscience that it was not God at all but an evil, powerful, fallen angel that was giving him evil directives – then Moses would be subjectively bound by his conscience
to disobey the direct command of God even while the
objective obligation to heed God’s direct command remains. That’s how “supreme” one’s conscience is.
To violate one’s conscience
is to do something one believes to be morally forbidden or to fail to do something one believes to be morally obligatory – and to do that which one believes to be morally forbidden is always a sin and to fail to do that which one believes to be morally obligatory is always a sin – and thus to violate one’s conscience is always, no matter what the circumstance, a sin.
Most people’s consciences – I would imagine – tell them that they have an obligation to educate their conscience as opposed to just relying on whims, fancies, or feelings. So, at least for most poeple, to not properly educate one’s conscience would be to violate it.
I wasn’t aware that Grisez rejects the traditional Church teaching on the death penalty (that the State has the right, in principle, to administer it in certain cases). Thanks for the link.