G
grannymh
Guest
I did check St. Anselm of Canterbury. He is listed as a source for CCC 158, “Faith seeks understanding”… page 43. This is a marvelous paragraph worthy of deep attention.CCC 389 is Anselm, I was taught it as a child: God felt infinitely offended by Adam and Eve, so He needed an infinite reparation made by someone with an infinite merit; if you hammer a nail into a wall, you can extract the nail afterwards, but the hole still has to be filled.
Only that nobody explained:
- how a finite man with a finite nail was found guilty of having hammered an infinite hole
- why did God decide not only to feel infinitely offended, but also to demand an infinite reparation (“undoing the damage”, although God is perfect, self-sufficient and can’t be harmed by a creature)
- why this infinite reparation had to take the form of a violent human sacrifice
- why not even this violent human sacrifice, with the death of God the Son, was enough to satisfy God the Father, as long as the relationship between God and man obviously isn’t restored to the standards of Eden. People still die, get sick, earn their living “by the sweat of their brow”, there is pain in childbirth and nature suffers - so the divine curse towards Adam and Eve is intact. Besides, Redemption does not equal Salvation in the afterlife, as we know - it’s only opening the possibility of salvation, as anyone who commits even a single mortal sin before death is deemed worthy of eternal hell
- why do we have to call 2, 3 and 4 FORGIVENESS of the Original Sin.
What truly baffles me is the use of the word infinite in the above points in post 391 . Original Sin was restricted to a specific space and time and therefore it could not be infinite. Perhaps there is an underlying misunderstanding of the historical event at the beginning of human history and the historical event of Christ’s Resurrection.
Since points 1, 2, 3, present a doubt filled scenario of Original Sin, I am beginning to think that point 5 is a straw man or woman.
Another baffling idea (point 4) refers to the restoration of the standards of Eden. Looking through the first three chapters of Genesis, I do not find a reference to the standards of Eden. Aided by St. Paul and the* Catechism of the Catholic Church, Second Edition,* I do find additional information about Adam and humanity’s relationship with divinity.
After all the posts regarding the damage caused by Adam, I am not sure why Original Sin, which damaged a relationship, is so hard to understand. Here is some information. Please note the relationship of the second sentence to the first sentence. Original Sin is directly caused by Adam and the composition of that sin is the shattering of humanity’s relationship with divinity.
In regard to Original Sin, the “composition” of that sin is the drastic shattering of humanity’s relationship with Divinity. The true difficulty, in the case of Original Sin, is that Adam is not supernatural and therefore he cannot undo the damage he directly caused. Hopefully, people will recognize that Adam is not supernatural because he is a creature. This condition necessitates a True Man and True God Redeemer.
Please note that I do understand individual problems with certain Catholic doctrines. From what I have recently learned, there has been a lot of incomplete teaching regarding Original Sin. One poster dated this back to the 1950’s. My own research indicates that the seeds for Original Sin confusion were sown earlier.