F
fix
Guest
I said the Church states certain factors minimize culpability. She does not say it is no longer not evil. Certain acts are intrinsically wrong as the CCC says about this act. It is never licit, never. Subjective culpability varies. That distinction is critical.Dear Fix,
In your latest post in sighting the caveats of the church you leave off two very important portions. You say…
The Church says much more than this. It also says “conditions of anxiety, or other psychological or social factors that can lessen, if not even reduce to a minimum, moral culpability.” These anxiety conditions and psychological factors can be significant.
That is your opinion but not stated in Church teaching. Regardless of the reason one is suffering the moral law cannot be dispensed with. It seems you are trying to set up a situation where one would be justified before God by masturbating? Intrinsically evil acts are always wrong. One may be less quilty or not quilty at all, but the act itself is still evil.And, I believe the anxiety refers to the build up of sexual energy to such an extent that it has a damaging affect on ones well being and damages ones ability to be loving with self, other and God.
Your initial posting did contain the full caveat of the Catechism, yet your next paragraph says…
Note my words carefully. I said always objectively mortal. I use the traditional moral theology use of those terms. It is always an objective mortal sin. A mortal sin on the books so to speak even if it is not always a subjective mortal sin.“Always?” really? To me the Catechism is clearly saying this is not always a mortal sin.
The CCC used the terms grave matter.
No, there is nothing here that obviates what She always teaches on mortal sin. If one is in a habit, or addiction, one may not be able to give full consent. That is nothing new.And, that the conditions of anxiety may reduce to a minimum moral culpability, even IF the person is fully aware of the long standing teaching of the church that it is a gravely disordered act. In other words this is above and beyond the standard criteria of mortal sin: 1. The matter must be grave. 2. The sin must be committed with full knowledge. 3. The sin must be committed deliberately. I believe the church is saying in it’s caveat that even with the full knowledge of the first portion of the Catechism there are times when this action may still have minimum moral culpability.