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buckr02
Guest
I was driving somewhere a few days ago and I suddenly started thinking about mortal sin and some questions I had regarding “full consent.” I just read over the catechism, but am still a bit unsure.1857 For a sin to be mortal, three conditions must together be met: “Mortal sin is sin whose object is grave matter and which is also committed with full knowledge and deliberate consent.”
My question is, if someone hears that a certain action is “grave matter” but they do not believe this is true and commit the sin, is it still mortal sin? So for example (this is a really big exaggeration only meant to demonstrate what I mean), if someone does not think killing someone is a big deal and they still do it, is it a mortal sin? They know from others that it is a mortal sin, but for some reason they genuinely do not think it is, as opposed to just denying that it is.
Another situation I thought of was what if the person has heard from some people that an action is a mortal sin and from others he/she has heard it is not. They know that it MIGHT be, but are unsure. Or perhaps if they know the Catholic Churches position but have heard from a priest or someone they trust that it’s not true. Here is where an example like masturbation works well, I think. I myself know it is a mortal sin, but what if someone is in one of the above situations and are unsure for whatever reason and commit the sin?
These were just scenarios I had thought of. They seemed interesting enough to ask here (and no, I’m not just trying to find loopholes