Buckeyejoe:
When a Priest deliberately avoids mentioning any mortal sins by name (Which is the case at my Parish 99% of the time), side stepping issues like abortion, gay marriage, homosexuality, pornography, divorce…Usually becasue they do not want to offend someone, and they want to be liked by the Parishoners… because of the Spiritual position given to them by God, to preach and teach the truth…When our priests do this (which is almost every Sunday at my Parish) are they commiting mortal sin?
JMJ
No one can say that another has committed a mortal sin, because we cannot see into their soul, but we can often know and observe the commission of an act (or failure to act) as objectively being a grave sin. From pope to priest, their two
primary purposes are to bring the Blessed Sacrament to the world and to teach those things necessary to do and not to do which will gain eternal salvation. That teaching is an
absolute reponsibility. Every failure in that responsibility can bring the loss of each soul thereby upon the soul of that priest, bishop, or pope. That is why the responsibility upon the priesthood is so awesome. They are personally responsible to God for any soul lost because of their failure to teach.
Concerning the priest who wants to be liked, or doesn’t want to offend someone, or worries about the young and children hearing his sermon, he has absolutely no excuse there. When teaching about immoral acts, it is not necessary to go into details. It cannot harm children to hear that fornication, adultery, abortion, interference with procreation, etc., are mortal sins. In fact they should hear this from one-day-old until death. It cannot hurt to hear that voting for a promoter of baby killing or homosexuality is a mortal sin. It canot hurt to hear that missing Mass on Sundays and Holy Days of obligation is a mortal sin. It cannot hurt to hear that receiving Holy Communion with any
unconfessed mortal sin upon the soul
is a mortal sin and a sacrilege. It cannot hurt to hear that all defined dogmas of the Catholic Church must be accepted and professed and that failue to accept is a mortal sin and heresy. And so on, and so on.
Concerning the requirements for a mortal sin; seemingly, under your description, the only possible excuse would be “lack of knowledge” that failure to teach is a mortal sin. In that case, the priests failure to teach
and his lack of knowledge would be the responsibility of those who failed to teach that priest in the seminary, in Church during his youth, and at home by his parents. All the souls this priests loses could be on those souls
who failed to teach him.