So I was thinking of starting a separate thread on the Orthodox vs Catholic views on original sin, but it seems as if we’re already talking about that somewhat here, at least as related to Mary’s conception.
When I Google the Orthodox view on original sin, every article that comes up states that what Orthodox reject is the belief that we not only inherit the consequences of the sin of Adam and Eve, but that we also inherit the guilt of the sin. They say that Catholics teach that we inherit the consequences and the guilt. I found the OrthodoxWiki to give a more moderate understanding of the Catholic view, or, it implies that the Catholic view on original sin has evolved/changed:
**-Orthodox Christians have usually understood Roman Catholicism as professing St. Augustine’s teaching that everyone bears not only the consequence, but also the guilt, of Adam’s sin. This teaching appears to have been confirmed by multiple councils, the first of them being the Council of Orange in 529.
-This difference between the two Churches in their understanding of the original sin was one of the doctrinal reasons underlying the Catholic Church’s declaration of its dogma of the Immaculate Conception in the 19th century, a dogma that is rejected by the Orthodox Church. However, contemporary Roman Catholic teaching is best explicated in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which includes this sentence: "“original sin does not have the character of a personal fault in any of Adam’s descendants. It is a deprivation of original holiness and justice, but human nature has not been totally corrupted” (§405).
-The Roman Catholic doctrine of Ancestral or Original Sin is harder to pin down because of the development and pendulum swings of its development. It is clear from the Vatican’s own documents that Ancestral or Original Sin did include both the imputation of the guilt of Adam and Eve’s sin and a widespread and deep-seated damage to the imagio dei, at least during a good part of its history. Thus the infant is worthy of punishment in hell according to both Saint Augustine and St. Gregory the Dialogist. In the medievalists, this is ameliorated to a deprivation of the beatific vision, which is still considered a punishment, though the infant will only experience happiness. At the time of the Enlightenment, there is a return to a more Augustinian and Gregorian definition of Ancestral or Original Sin. But, by the time of Vatican Council I, the change is in full swing, and Ancestral or Original Sin begins to be seen as the deprivation of original holiness. This change in the definition of Ancestral or Original Sin is found in documents such as the aforecited Catechism of the Catholic Church and in the Hope of Salvation document. **
orthodoxwiki.org/Original_sin
Other articles seem to just make the distinction between the Catholic and Orthodox views as one accepting only the consequences of the original sin (Orthodox), while the other accepts the consequences and the guilt as being inherited (Catholic), and seem to imply (in contrast to OrthodoxWiki) that this view is still held today:
-The non-Orthodox teach that Original Sin is the Personal sin and guilt of Adam transmitted from him to all mankind.
theorthodoxchurch.info/blog/ocrc/2009/06/original-sin/
-Concerning the original—or “first”—sin, that commited by Adam and Eve, Orthodoxy believes that, while everyone bears the consequences of the first sin, the foremost of which is death, only Adam and Eve are guilty of that sin. Roman Catholicism teaches that everyone bears not only the consequence, but also the guilt, of that sin.
oca.org/questions/teaching/original-sin
-And here is where there is an important difference between the Romans and the Protestants, on the one hand, and the Eastern Orthodox, on the other. The latter subscribe to Original Sin but not to Original Guilt. Timothy Ware: “Men (Orthodox usually teach) automatically inherit Adam’s corruption and mortality, but not his guilt: they are only guilty in so far as by their own free choice they imitate Adam.” (229)
maverickphilosopher.typepad.com/maverick_philosopher/2011/08/original-sin-and-eastern-orthodoxy.html
-In the West, however, the concept of original sin is tied up with and all too often even confused with an equally Western concept of “original guilt.”
orthodoxresearchinstitute.org/articles/dogmatics/golubov_rags_of_mortality.htm
Etc.
So, the question then becomes, does the Catholic Church really teach that we not only inherit the consequences of the original sin, but also the
guilt? Are we guilty of someone else’s sin? If not, then what is the difference between the Catholic and Orthodox understandings?
Also, why do the Orthodox baptize infants? What is the understanding of “remission of sins” that occurs at baptism?
If this requires a separate thread, I’ll gladly start it!