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Holly3278
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Hi everyone. A friend told me that suicide is a sin of pride. Is this true? 

I thought suicide would be deemed as a sin of despair, but in some cases, I think suicide can be construed as a sin of pride as in seppuku.Hi everyone. A friend told me that suicide is a sin of pride. Is this true?![]()
It can be yes.Hi everyone. A friend told me that suicide is a sin of pride. Is this true?![]()
No it’s not. It’s probally a tad harsh, but it is true. People can be scared of change/Help, even change that results in their fear/depression being done away with. Sometimes they think “what will people think of me if I go to a councellor?” and simular prideful thoughts that stop them from actually doing what they should be doing and reaching out. We think too much that we can take care of everything and even fix our own depression.Okay, the original post is an interesting question, one I’ve never thought of before.
But what the hey? People can be proud of their depression?
That’s a bunch of baloney.
Depression and fear go hand in hand and has nothing to do with pride. This is what clouds people to help and making the right decision. That’s just silly.
Your friend sound ill-informed about suicide.Thanks everyone. The way my friend explained it is this. He said that it is a sin of pride because you are telling God that His plan for you is not good enough basically. Does that make any sense?![]()
Research has consistently shown a strong link between suicide and depression, **with 90% **of the people who die by suicide having an existing mental illness or substance abuse problem at the time of their death. The following pages provide general information about depression, other mental illnesses, and how they are connected.
save.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=home.viewPage&page_id=70489B01-CDA6-EC10-E40B95178144A08F
Psychiatric Disorders
At least 90 percent of people who kill themselves have a diagnosable and treatable psychiatric illnesses – such as major depression, bipolar depression, or some other depressive illness, including:
Schizophrenia
Alcohol or drug abuse, particularly when combined with depression
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, or some other anxiety disorder
Bulimia or anorexia nervousa
Personality disorders especially borderline or antisocial
afsp.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=home.viewPage&page_id=05147440-E24E-E376-BDF4BF8BA6444E76
2086 "The first commandment embraces faith, hope, and charity. When we say ‘God’ we confess a constant, unchangeable being, always the same, faithful and just, without any evil. It follows that we must necessarily accept his words and have complete faith in him and acknowledge his authority. He is almighty, merciful, and infinitely beneficent. Who could not place all hope in him? Who could not love him when contemplating the treasures of goodness and love he has poured out on us? Hence the formula God employs in the Scripture at the beginning and end of his commandments: ‘I am the LORD.’"8
Faith
2087 Our moral life has its source in faith in God who reveals his love to us. St. Paul speaks of the "obedience of faith"9 as our first obligation. He shows that “ignorance of God” is the principle and explanation of all moral deviations.10 Our duty toward God is to believe in him and to bear witness to him.
2088 The first commandment requires us to nourish and protect our faith with prudence and vigilance, and to reject everything that is opposed to it. There are various ways of sinning against faith:
Voluntary doubt about the faith disregards or refuses to hold as true what God has revealed and the Church proposes for belief. Involuntary doubt refers to hesitation in believing, difficulty in overcoming objections connected with the faith, or also anxiety aroused by its obscurity. If deliberately cultivated doubt can lead to spiritual blindness.
2089 Incredulity is the neglect of revealed truth or the willful refusal to assent to it. "Heresy is the obstinate post-baptismal denial of some truth which must be believed with divine and catholic faith, or it is likewise an obstinate doubt concerning the same; apostasy is the total repudiation of the Christian faith; schism is the refusal of submission to the Roman Pontiff or of communion with the members of the Church subject to him."11
Hope
2090 When God reveals Himself and calls him, man cannot fully respond to the divine love by his own powers. He must hope that God will give him the capacity to love Him in return and to act in conformity with the commandments of charity. Hope is the confident expectation of divine blessing and the beatific vision of God; it is also the fear of offending God’s love and of incurring punishment.
2091 The first commandment is also concerned with sins against hope, namely, despair and presumption:
By despair, man ceases to hope for his personal salvation from God, for help in attaining it or for the forgiveness of his sins. Despair is contrary to God’s goodness, to his justice - for the Lord is faithful to his promises - and to his mercy.
2092 There are two kinds of presumption. Either man presumes upon his own capacities, (hoping to be able to save himself without help from on high), or he presumes upon God’s almighty power or his mercy (hoping to obtain his forgiveness without conversion and glory without merit).
Charity
2093 Faith in God’s love encompasses the call and the obligation to respond with sincere love to divine charity. the first commandment enjoins us to love God above everything and all creatures for him and because of him.12
2094 One can sin against God’s love in various ways:
- indifference neglects or refuses to reflect on divine charity; it fails to consider its prevenient goodness and denies its power.
- ingratitude fails or refuses to acknowledge divine charity and to return him love for love.
- lukewarmness is hesitation or negligence in responding to divine love; it can imply refusal to give oneself over to the prompting of charity.
- acedia or spiritual sloth goes so far as to refuse the joy that comes from God and to be repelled by divine goodness.
- hatred of God comes from pride. It is contrary to love of God, whose goodness it denies, and whom it presumes to curse as the one who forbids sins and inflicts punishments.
Suicide
2280 Everyone is responsible for his life before God who has given it to him.
It is God who remains the sovereign Master of life.
We are obliged to accept life gratefully and preserve it for his honor and the salvation of our souls.
We are stewards, not owners, of the life God has entrusted to us.
It is not ours to dispose of.
2281 Suicide contradicts the natural inclination of the human being to preserve and perpetuate his life.
It is gravely contrary to the just love of self.
It likewise offends love of neighbor because it unjustly breaks the ties of solidarity with family, nation, and other human societies to which we continue to have obligations.
Suicide is contrary to love for the living God.
2282 If suicide is committed with the intention of setting an example, especially to the young, it also takes on the gravity of scandal.
Voluntary co-operation in suicide is contrary to the moral law.
Grave psychological disturbances, anguish, or grave fear of hardship, suffering, or torture can diminish the responsibility of the one committing suicide.
2283 We should not despair of the eternal salvation of persons who have taken their own lives. By ways known to him alone, God can provide the opportunity for salutary repentance. the Church prays for persons who have taken their own lives.
1784 The education of the conscience is a lifelong task. From the earliest years, it awakens the child to the knowledge and practice of the interior law recognized by conscience. Prudent education teaches virtue; it prevents or cures fear, selfishness and pride, resentment arising from guilt, and feelings of complacency, born of human weakness and faults. The education of the conscience guarantees freedom and engenders peace of heart.
1866 Vices can be classified according to the virtues they oppose, or also be linked to the capital sins which Christian experience has distinguished, following St. John Cassian and St. Gregory the Great. They are called “capital” because they engender other sins, other vices.138 They are pride, avarice, envy, wrath, lust, gluttony, and sloth or acedia.
I’ll repost the links I provided so that you might better educate yourself on the nature of suicide and mental illness.In a way it is, because it’s extremely self-indulgent to wallow in self-pity and shun help, and ignore the effects that suicide would have on the people around you.
Research has consistently shown a strong link between suicide and depression, **with 90% **of the people who die by suicide having an existing mental illness or substance abuse problem at the time of their death. The following pages provide general information about depression, other mental illnesses, and how they are connected.
save.org/index.cfm?fuseac…0B95178144A08F Quote:
Psychiatric Disorders
At least 90 percent of people who kill themselves have a diagnosable and treatable psychiatric illnesses – such as major depression, bipolar depression, or some other depressive illness, including:
Schizophrenia
Alcohol or drug abuse, particularly when combined with depression
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, or some other anxiety disorder
Bulimia or anorexia nervousa
Personality disorders especially borderline or antisocial
afsp.org/index.cfm?fuseac…F4BF8BA6444E76
Your story broke my heart. I understand the extreme pain felt by the family left in the wake of suicide.Suicide can be one or all of the above. Sometimes people’s neurons don’t work properly…that makes it biological, like a person with a learning disability. Do you punish a slow person because they can’t work Calculus? If you do then you need psychiatric help and aren’t fit to have anything to do with children. Unfortunately, schools are filled with “knuckleheads” like that I’m sorry to say…both public and private.
My older brother suceeded in suicide. Can’t say he couldn’t get it right. I watched him grow up. He was 2 years older than me and deeply emotionally scarred from our dysfunctional family. Mom was loathed Catholics, including my dad…which makes you wonder why they even tried. He was conceived before marriage and I can vouch from my own memory that they should have never been together. I knew both of my parents very will and can say without pause that they were both abusive, mostly verbally, some physically, but very emotionally…psychological damage. I still exhibit signs of the same anxiety that drove my older brother who received his first training in God at the age of 16, almost 17. My dad used to say that he, dad that is, was going to burn in hell for the way he raised my older brother. But he intentionally raised me different… Guess what? It worked. Out of 3 I’m the only practicing Christian. My younger brother has attempted suicide twice already while intoxicated. My older brother succeeded while intoxicated.
After contemplating this for year, believing he was burning in hell, I began to revert to Catholicism realizing that only God knows the hearts and minds of each person. I also realize that my brother was so messed up in the ways of the world, because our father raised him that way. I lucked out. I turned repeatedly to God, because my dad taught me to do so and admits that he did not teach my brother to do that early on because my dad was angry at the world for getting such a bad taste of life. Married to a woman who rejected the faith after claiming she would convert. God to Vietnam and returning with American’s hating him for doing it. And ended up divorce against his will. He was angry and hurt and seriously, folkes, mentally distorted. I remember him very well. I heard people would find him crawling through bushes like he was in Vietnam. He slept with a knife under his pillow and gun under the matress. It was very scary. He met with at the door clear across the room a couple of times trying to kill me for startling him out of sleep. Eventually it wore off, but it took years.
I’ve felt like dying many times. But I know it’s severely sinful. My brothers may not realize this since they received very little if any Christian upbringing. I actually have my Protestant faith to credit for my Catholic faith now. When the Church wasn’t doing its part the Protestants tried their best to teach me what they believed to be true. Eventually, I came to understand and so did my wife and we converted/reverted together.
Pride can be part of it, but if you’ve ever suffered extreme anxiety and severe depression, only then would you begin to understand how clouded a mind can get. So please don’t act like a fundamentalist and condemn all because you have a thought. Read and accept, if you can’t understand, what the Church teaches on the subject.
PAX.