Request:
Please feel free to provide a counterexample, and we can discuss it.
Reply:
My counterexample is Divine Revelation as properly defined and duly proclaimed by the Catholic Church. (CCC, 66-67; CCC, 84-85; CCC, 94-95; Chapter 14 of the Gospel of John)
Okay, my assertion was that ignorance and blindness are necessary ingredients of All sin, and I asked for a counterexample. The CCC’s above refer to “private revelation”. Is my making sense of the creation story as a metaphor for God giving us a conscience a “private revelation”? If you are saying this is so, is it sin? And if this is indeed sin, is it a counterexample to my assertion that “blindness and ignorance are necessary ingredients of all sin”? Indeed not, if my speculation is sin (and is it, really?) it would most certainly involve my own blindness and ignorance, which I certainly can not rule out. So, so far you haven’t come up with a counterexample, unless you can attribute what you may see as my sin to another cause. Do you? Notice my willingness to discuss personal stuff, I wish you were as open to such questions.
Perhaps it may be easier to work on another counterexample. I think we can all agree that Judas sinned. Would you like to investigate his case? Was blindness and/or ignorance involved?
As a clarification, this is the sentence which contains “popular speculation”. It is in my post 291 above.
“One of the most interesting things about the fluff surrounding Original Sin, conscience, and forgiveness is the popular speculation that the first human was minus intellect and will.”
It is understandable that many people are not aware of the current Popular Speculation that “the first human was minus intellect and will” and its versions. Here on CAF, one can learn about this speculation(s) in various descriptions in a variety of threads. When one gets to the nitty-gritty of “intellect and will”, one finds the spiritual rational soul.
It is because of Adam’s spiritual rational soul that it is possible to connect Original Sin to modern spirituality.
I never stated that Adam was lacking in intellect or will. Adam was indeed lacking in awareness, and he was certainly blinded by his desire for the fruit. He certainly had free will, as a gift from God, but his will is only as “free” as it is informed, as has been stated many times on this thread. Was Adam omniscient? If not, he had limited free will.
The word “fluff” gives a hint of resentment toward views that appear different than your own. Can you forgive such difference? Is the truth in our hearts, or in the doctrine? It’s rather both, isn’t it?
From the Holy Father under “Build Bridges, not Walls”:
“A Christian,” said Pope Francis, “must proclaim Jesus Christ in such a way that He be accepted: received, not refused – and Paul knows that he has to sow the Gospel message. He knows that the proclamation of Jesus Christ is not easy, but that it does not depend on him. He must do everything possible, but the proclamation of Jesus Christ, the proclamation of the truth, depends on the Holy Spirit. Jesus tells us in today’s Gospel: ‘When He shall come, the Spirit of truth, shall guide you into all the truth.’ Paul does not say to the Athenians: ‘This is the encyclopedia of truth. Study this and you have the truth, the truth.’ No! The truth does not enter into an encyclopedia. The truth is an encounter - it is a meeting with Supreme Truth: Jesus, the great truth. No one owns the truth. The we receive the truth when we meet [it].
Text from page
en.radiovaticana.va/news/2013/05/08/pope_francis_at_wednesday_mass:_build_bridges,_not_walls/en1-690203
of the Vatican Radio website
That “truth”, for me, begins with the revelation of Jesus’ unconditional love and forgiveness. Jesus showed us our genuine “Abba”, not the clouded view that our consciences deliver. If this is not part of your “truth”, then so be it. The Catholic Church has very big arms with which to hold the faithful.