Vames, I want to leave the thread today with post 639 because I stand in awe. That entry would suffice to be the last on this thread. None of our efforts are going to convince granny that God loves and forgives unconditionally, because it is only her experience that will show her. Granny herself will have to love and forgive someone unconditionally in order to understand what we are talking about. Granny will have to find that diary from her mother, as was your experience.
And it is sad that granny is in the position of using the CCC and argument to prove that God does not love us as much as Jesus showed us from the cross, as He forgave the crowd unconditionally. In addition, granny is equating forgiveness with approval, which is an equating of God with our conscience. Granny is trying to give the Catholic point of view, but she cannot understand the position of the prodigal son’s father.
From reading other posts, I observe that OneSheep speaks personally from his heart; therefore, I do not take any offense from his words in post 644.
Nonetheless, for the benefit of readers interested in Catholicism, I have the responsibility to clarify some of the untrue items.
For the record, I assume that the following sentence was written in haste.
“And it is sad that granny is in the position of using the CCC and argument to prove that God does not love us as much as Jesus showed us from the cross, as He forgave the crowd unconditionally.”
Obviously, this is not like the popular subtle attacks on Christ’s divinity which have been around for ages. I remember one of the first “adult books” I read about the life of Jesus. The chapter on the multiplication of loaves and fishes was all about how Jesus inspired the people to share whatever little food they had with each other. The chapter was full of details about loving one’s neighbor while neglecting the fact that the Divine Jesus had worked a major miracle. In John 6: 25 -27, we read an interesting comment by Jesus about people looking for human food and not considering the sign of the miracle. From this, we can get a small understanding why later in John, Chapter 6, some people did not recognize the greater miracle of the Eucharist as food for the soul.
The difference between this good neighbor example, which downgrades Jesus’s divine power, and post 644 comment quoted above, which refers to my beliefs about God and His forgiveness, is the subtle implication, most likely not intended, that I have separated God from Jesus, Who, according to OneSheep, forgave the crowd unconditionally.
In the words of post 644, I am in " the position of using the CCC and argument to prove that God does not love us as much as Jesus showed us from the cross, as He forgave the crowd unconditionally." The obvious ancient question is – Is the person Jesus on His cross God or not?
Is post 644 implying that because I
allegedly consider God as not loving us as much as Jesus showed us, I am presenting God and Jesus as unequal persons? With Jesus being a better person than my *alleged *conception of God.
When I re-read the above quote from OneSheep’s post 644, I realized that it accidentally became the key to the misapplication of these words said by Jesus on His cross. Luke 23: 34a "Then Jesus said, “Father, forgive them, they know not what they do.” This misapplication leaves out the essentials of God’s forgiveness. Since there is only one God, it should follow that there would be only one “God’s forgiveness.”
Following His resurrection, Jesus instructed His disciples. "Peace be with you. As the Father has sent Me, so I send you … Receive the Holy Spirit. Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you retain are retained. John 20: 19-23.
In this passage we see the Father, Jesus Christ, and Holy Spirit as One. With the grace of the Trinity, the Catholic Church has made explicit Divine Revelation regarding human’s free will relationship with our Creator so that we understand the
human conditions for forgiveness. This power to forgive or retain is based on
human conditions which begin with the human person freely choosing to seek forgiveness. The basic conditions pertain to the person as a single individual and not to a general crowd. Catholicism teaches that the Creator has a personal relationship with each individual. This is because God created the human being as a rational being, conferring on her and him the dignity of a person who can initiate and control their actions.
(CCC, 1730) Note that Jesus Christ as True God continued to have a personal relationship with each individual in the crowd while He was hanging bloody on His chosen cross.
Within the Catholic Sacrament of Reconciliation, as one seeks God’s forgiveness for mortal sins, the individual should
- personally confess and acknowledge the seriousness of the mortal sin,
- detest the mortal sin for what it is,
- express sorrow for the mortal sin because it is against God (destruction of Sanctifying Grace) Whom we love above all else,
- resolve not to sin again which is our change of heart or our “conversion” to God,
- pray what is known as the “Act of Contrition” or a similar form of prayer and
- perform a “penance” as the sign of sincere repentance.
(CCC, 1440-1460; CCC, Glossary, Mortal Sin, page 889; CCC, Glossary, Sanctifying Grace, page 898)
Links
scborromeo.org/ccc.htm
origin.usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/what-we-believe/catechism/catechism-of-the-catholic-church/