S
Sir_Knight
Guest
No can you name one Bishop who will tell his flock that they can violate Canon Law (1252) without just cause (and being hungry is not just cause unless the person is starving) and not be guilty of a mortal sin! And all it takes is one unrepentant mortal sin to land somebody in hell.Yes, through sin we banished ouselves from paradise until Jesus redeemed us and reconciled us to the Father. But it is we who sinned against God, not the other way around. We removed ourselves from God. God has never removed himself from us.
Christians believe that God still walks with us and guides us through his Holy Spirit and the example of his son, Jesus. God has given us the Church to help us in our journey. We are not denied the privilidge of walking with God. You seem to think the only way God can be fully present to us is if we see him, touch his flesh or physically encounter him in some way. This is a poor understanding of how God interacts with his creation and imprisons God in a base image of presence. For those who have ears to hear and eyes to see, God is very much present.
I agree that disobeying church teaching can be wrong and that obedience to the will of God as presented through his Church is desirable. But again, it is not pure and simple obedience that is of value here, but rather what that obedience brings us to. The Church is aware of the grave responsibility it has to guide and teach Christians according to the Gospels handed down to us from the Disciples. The Gospels accentuate God’s love, mercy and justice in his relationship with humanity, which is why I doubt you can name one Bishop who would tell his flock they are going to hell for eating a ham sandwich on a Friday in Lent. If we consistantly defy Church teaching and fail to repent because we doubt the authority invested in the Church or we are simply obstinate, then yes, we are sinning greatly, but again, the eating of meat on a Friday in Lent is not the sin, pride is.
Recall the passage of the farmer and his two sons. He told both of them to go work in the field. The first one said that he would not but even though he didn’t want to do it, decided to go do the work. The second one said that he would but never went. Jesus commands us to be like the first NOT like the second. When we are lawfully commanded to do something by the Church, Jesus wants us to obey it.