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Millie123
Guest
I don’t think that this is exactly true for everyone. In fact I think the opposite is true, I think that many people convince themselves that their sins aren’t really “that bad.” I was once talking with my confessor about scrupulosity. He said that the opposite of scrupulosity is a lax conscience, which can be very dangerous. People loose the sense of how disordered their sinful actions really are, convincing themselves that their sins are not sins, or maybe even their mortal sins are just venial sins.For me…if I know it’s a mortal sin…then I sure as heck ain’t going to do it!
Saint Pope John Paul II states:
“When the conscience is weakened the sense of God is also obscured, and as a result, with the loss of this decisive inner point of reference, the sense of sin is lost. This explains why my Predecessor Pius XII one day declared, in words that have almost become proverbial, that ‘the sin of the century is the loss of the sense of sin.’”
I find this to be very true for many people, how many times here have you read posts like:
“Is my habitual masturbation truly sinful? Who am I really hurting?”
Or
“My husband and I are planning on using birth control on our wedding night, we know the church teaches against it, but we really want to consummate our marriage, afterwards we’ll use NFP” (Yes, I’ve actually seen a post like this)
Anyways, I tend to lean more towards scrupulosity. But, for the amount of time that I’ve been here, I think I’ve seen Catholics with lax consciences…Not convinced that their sinful actions are really sinful, or that their sin really wasn’t “that bad”… “it was probably just a venial sin”…and then what happens in the confessional? Probably not a very good confession. And then they’ll go and receive the Blessed Sacrament.