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inocente
Guest
There’s nothing to understand if God judges our performance against our conscience. Isn’t that just more simple and robust, and less divisive than thinking any of us have the inside track on knowing God’s morality?Maybe the problem is a faulty understanding of God and His morality.
I must always seek revenge (Exodus 21:23-25, etc.) while never seeking revenge (Matt 5:38-39). Yikes! Can’t we just try to follow Christ and do our best without all this superstructure?Absolutism is the premise that there are unwavering moral principles, not unwavering opinions on how far those principles extend.
I took “certain” to mean definite, assured, evident, dependable. But if we have to interpret, where’s the absolute?Your conscience can be wrong. To be able to trust your conscience, then, you must form it well in accordance with divine law. Conscience is not a substitute for divine law. Conscience must have divine law at its core to be trustworthy!
Remember, you must always obey the certain judgment of your conscience. Note the qualifier: certain. It seems to me like that qualifies the statement to read that you must have a well-formed conscience.
Unless I can’t spot it, the CCC doesn’t say that a well-formed conscience is one than conforms to any given standard, and can then be tested for conformity, so I can’t see how we’re supposed to know whether our conscience can be trusted. If a well-formed conscience complies with said divine law, I wonder how we can know this law. Either we take someone else’s word, which doesn’t exactly help to build our conscience, or else we work it for ourselves, which means divine law is just another phrase meaning conscience. Sorry, for the life of me I can’t see what purpose these hidden absolutes have for us or for God.