Anyone who has been taught to make their first communion (if that teaching was accurate) has been taught that missing mass on Sunday is a mortal sin.
I wasn’t taught that, I was given the teaching about Sunday obligations and mortal sin as written in the Catechism.
You are begging the question here. You can’t say “if that teaching was accurate” because the accurate teaching has already been demonstrated in the Catechism and it does not support what you are saying here. Mortal sin is dependent on three factors 1) seriousness (graveness) 2) full knowledge and 3) deliberate consent. Not everyone who misses mass meets all three of these qualifications for mortal sin (probably very few do).
You are basicly arguing that if somebody doesn’t believe a teaching of the church, they are not guilty of mortal sin if they break that teaching. Church history proves you wrong. The protestants that broke from the Catholic faith did so because they did not believe church teaching. Did the church declare them to be free of sin? No! Many of them were excommunicated.
This is another straw man fallacy. I am not arguing this at all. I am arguing that missing mass is not necessarily a mortal sin. Your counter argument is not relevant to the point of the discussion.
I wasn’t given a flock to shepard and I am not misrepresenting any church teaching. Even my daughter’s second grade religion book cleary states that missing mass on Sunday is a mortal sin. And, it has a bishop’s imprint which states that there is nothing in it that is contrary to church teaching.
Present your evidence. What is the name of the book, who is the author, what bishop signed it, what were the exact words written by the bishop, and what is the direct quote you are referring to, in regards to missing mass being a mortal sin.
"ignorance does not excuse from guilt, but seems, rather, to aggravate it: for it shows that a man is so strongly attached to sin that he wishes to incur ignorance lest he avoid sinning" … one is REQUIRED to know and BELIEVE what their faith teaches.
These assertions are again a strawman fallacy. I’m not arguing that people shouldn’t know what the Catholic church teaches. This is all irrelevant to the question “Is missing mass on Sunday necessarily a mortal sin?”
While we’re at it, notice the the CCC does not even call abortion a “mortal” sin but a “grave” offense. Are you going to argue that abortion is not a MORTAL sin because the CCC does not specifically call it a “mortal” sin?
Yes, our Catechism doesn’t call abortion a mortal sin, because this type of sin depends on three factors, which are not always going to be met, even in cases of abortion! Of course, abortion, birth control, euthanasia, rape, incest, etc, etc, etc are all terrible sins that drive anyone who commits them away from God, as all sin does. But you cannot say of any one sin that it is necessarily a mortal sin, because you don’t know the circumstance. I will say this much, certain sins, like murder, are likely to be mortal sins in most circumstances, because they go so far against the nature of God, of whom we are in the image and likeness of that it would seem unlikely to not have full knowledge of the sin. Are you willing to concede that you are wrong in asserting that certain sins are necessarily mortal, like missing mass on Sunday? You apparently recognize that the Catechism does not even do this, since you pointed it out in your abortion example.