B
Black_Jaque
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Mine too. It’s in the Catechism if you care to look it up. We are obliged to follow laws made by appropriate authority.For what it’s worth, that’s my understanding, as well
“Give to Ceasar what is Ceasar’s.”
Mine too. It’s in the Catechism if you care to look it up. We are obliged to follow laws made by appropriate authority.For what it’s worth, that’s my understanding, as well
Law is a rule of conduct enacted by competent authority for the sake of the common good. The moral law presupposes the rational order, established among creatures for their good and to serve their final end, by the power, wisdom, and goodness of the Creator. All law finds its first and ultimate truth in the eternal law. Law is declared and established by reason as a participation in the providence of the living God, Creator and Redeemer of all. “Such an ordinance of reason is what one calls law.”1951
I’m “astonished” at how quickly you judge one of your fellow men of being guilty of sinful pride and being arrogant. Aren’t you being prideful and arrogant in suggesting that others are sinfully prideful and arrogant? (“I’m not full of pride like those people!”)I’m astonished at how quickly we can justify our own sins.
Which is sinful pride? To think that you are so good that you deserve heaven? Naw, nobody is that blatantly arogant. But what if you think that you’re not bad enough for hell? Now there’s lots of Americans who think this way. “I know Uncle Ed never went to Church, but he wasn’t Hitler either…”
WOW. You may want to check that attitude at the door next time.Mine too. It’s in the Catechism if you care to look it up. We are obliged to follow laws made by appropriate authority.
“Give to Ceasar what is Ceasar’s.”
fix said:**
All just laws should be obeyed. How culpable we each are would depend on several factors, but intentionally breaking any just civil law is a sin.**
All just laws are not equal. Some are misdemeanors. Some are felonies. Some are selectively enforced. Some are on the books to be enforced if the police need a legal reason to take action…
Speed limits may or may not be rigorously enforced… they may or may not be treated with a 10 mph “grace” limit. If the officer has a quota and it’s the end of the month, the limits might be more rigorously enforced. If it’s between shifts, the speed limits may not be rigorously enforced.
There are so many laws on the books that most probably there is no way of obeying all of them…
A no-parking sign may be selectively enforced.
If you are parked in a no-parking area, the police may or may not ask you to move unless… there is a fire and the fire engines need the space, for example.
If you are parked in a no-parking area and nothing happens, no biggie. If you are parked in a no-parking area and a police officer asks you to move to make room so an ambulance can pick up a heart attack victim and you refuse and pick a fight and because of your refusal, the victim dies… then maybe it’s a mortal sin.
Do the best you can and don’t make yourself crazy.
I was speaking to the morality of the issue, not how these laws are enforced. I am not saying it is always a mortal sin. I am saying that to intentionally break a just civil law is a sin, perhaps venial, perhaps mortal, depending on factors.All just laws are not equal. Some are misdemeanors. Some are felonies. Some are selectively enforced. Some are on the books to be enforced if the police need a legal reason to take action…
Speed limits may or may not be rigorously enforced… they may or may not be treated with a 10 mph “grace” limit. If the officer has a quota and it’s the end of the month, the limits might be more rigorously enforced. If it’s between shifts, the speed limits may not be rigorously enforced.
There are so many laws on the books that most probably there is no way of obeying all of them…
A no-parking sign may be selectively enforced.
If you are parked in a no-parking area, the police may or may not ask you to move unless… there is a fire and the fire engines need the space, for example.
If you are parked in a no-parking area and nothing happens, no biggie. If you are parked in a no-parking area and a police officer asks you to move to make room so an ambulance can pick up a heart attack victim and you refuse and pick a fight and because of your refusal, the victim dies… then maybe it’s a mortal sin.
Do the best you can and don’t make yourself crazy.
If you really believe this, then I think you really need to do some studying… mortal sin or venial sin not withstanding… the definition of sin needs to be understood:I was speaking to the morality of the issue, not how these laws are enforced. I am not saying it is always a mortal sin. I am saying that to intentionally break a just civil law is a sin, perhaps venial, perhaps mortal, depending on factors.
Take speeding as one example. That many do it, or that the police look the other way, does not mean one is not committing a sin when they know they are speeding.
It has nothing to do with scrupulosity.If you really believe this, then I think you really need to do some studying… mortal sin or venial sin not withstanding… the definition of sin needs to be understood:
Get the newsletter from Scrupulous Anonymous.
Drop a note to “Scrupulous Anonymous”, Liguori, MO 63057-9999 and include a few dollars to defray printing and postage.
Also visit the Web site:
mission.liguori.org/newsletters/scrupanon.htm
mission.liguori.org/newsletters/scrupulosity.htm
Also buy a copy of “Understanding Scrupulosity” by Fr. Thomas M. Santa, same address.
liguori.org/index.asp?Pa…PROD&ProdID=725
Also, “Why Am I Scrupulous?”:
liguori.org/index.asp?Pa…WPROD&ProdID=87
With respect to the speed limit, for example… if the speed limit is 55 and you are driving at 55… but everyone else is driving 70… and if your legal but slower speed interferes with the free flow of traffic and if you cause an accident, then your concern with not committing a “venial” sin may result in your committing a “mortal” sin.
Speed limits are supposed to be determined by the speed of the 85th percentile of drivers. It’s a tricky statistical point. And it causes a lot of misunderstandings… because human behavior and human ergonomics isn’t black and white.
Similarly, Catholic moral theology isn’t all black and white.
So, I also recommend that folks purchase and read through "Difficult Moral Questions: Vol. 3 (The Way of the Lord Jesus) "by Germain Grisez. It’s available on Amazon.
amazon.com/gp/product/0819909815/qid=1142865435/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/103-8133755-7495805?s=books&v=glance&n=283155
I do not think it is about simply stating all laws are equal, or that breaking a law is always a mortal sin. The distinctions involved are more subtle and the topic you raised goes to a bigger issue. Those issues involve our duty as faithful Catholics to understand what our obligations are and why those obligations exist.And I do agree with the posters about not all laws being equal, how can a murder be equal to not giving your dog a rabies shot.
There is alot of greed in the government these days and many of the laws that are comming out are not always to protect us but to protect thier interests or the people they have to repay for contibutions.![]()
Actually, it is about breaking THIS particular law and mortal sin since that was what my question was titled “Is this a Mortal Sin?” I wasn’t asking about other laws.I do not think it is about simply stating all laws are equal, or that breaking a law is always a mortal sin. .
Well, I was responding to your other post that mentioned some folks asserted all laws are equal. In that post you mentioned that the government was making many laws for reasons other than the common good. I was responding to those points.Actually, it is about breaking THIS particular law and mortal sin since that was what my question was titled “Is this a Mortal Sin?” I wasn’t asking about other laws.
The Priest I spoke with said that it wasn’t a mortal sin when I explained the situation with him. He asked me if I thought that this was an unjust law and if that was why I did not want to obey it. I answered yes and he told me that it was not a mortal sin. My intention in asking this forum this question was to seek advice
until I could speak to a Priest.
I thank you for seeking to answer my question and God Bless You.![]()
What I felt the Priest was determining was if the 3 conditions were present to make this sin mortal. Yes I agree that it would be a terrible thing if we based our own judgements to decide what was moral and what was not to justify which laws to break.As for your particular situation I certainly cannot judge if you are guilty of any sin. What I am a bit curious about is that the priest asked you if you thought the law was unjust intending that if you did it was licit to disobey the law? Do I read that right? I ask because it seems that if we each make a personal determination as to which laws are just or not we can have many conflicting answers and may people breaking the law.
Can you see my point?
Man-made laws are to be obeyed unless they contradict Divine Law. Romans 13 is one of the classic texts, but the Church has been pretty clear throughout the ages that it is immoral to disobey the government unless bound to do so by higher law.Man made laws are to be obeyed if they serve the greater good.
While it’s true that it’s not always mortally sinful to disobey legitimate authority, I’ve never been a fan of the “do you seriously think God would send someone to hell for this” line of reasoning. It’s just emotionalism, and it’s entirely subjective. And some things that appear innocuous without reflection can turn out to be very morally weighty. “Do you really think God would damn you to hell because you slept in instead of going to Mass on Sunday?” Hell yes.No. If you unrepentently drive 31 mph in a 30 mph zone, do you think God is going to damn you to hell for that?
This is another bad moral standard - it’s okay to break the law so long as no one else is harmed by your disobedience. The duty to obey the civil law is, admittedly, based in large part upon the contribution of civil order to the common good, especially protection of persons. But the duty still remains to obey civil law, whether your speeding claims a victim or not, whether or not the neighbors mind that you’re running a business in a residentially zoned area, etc. St. Paul set the standard by which the Church has lived for millenia; the idea that one may do as one pleases so long as disobedience and risky behavior don’t actually result in harm is a new one.A no-parking sign may be selectively enforced.
If you are parked in a no-parking area, the police may or may not ask you to move unless… there is a fire and the fire engines need the space, for example.
If you are parked in a no-parking area and nothing happens, no biggie. If you are parked in a no-parking area and a police officer asks you to move to make room so an ambulance can pick up a heart attack victim and you refuse and pick a fight and because of your refusal, the victim dies… then maybe it’s a mortal sin.
Does Grisez claim we each may disobey a just civil law and not sin? Does he say that the CCC is wrong on this issue? Does he claim we each are to choose which laws we are to obey?One of the things that makes the topic of Moral Theology so challenging is that not everything is black and white. We might like everything to be totally clear cut … but not everything is.
That’s why Father Grisez’s book, “Difficult Moral Questions” is so thick and the discussions so thorough. He devotes 926 pages to 200 issues… none of which, unfortunately, relates to driving 1 mph over the speed limit.