J
Jennifer132
Guest
Question: and please correct me if I make any wrong statements about the Catholic Church in explaining my question…
As far as I am aware, and in my experience, many Protestants don’t believe in (or have even heard of) mortal sin. The belief surrounding sin that I was raised on is that all our sins are forgiven “past, present, and future”. We ask God forgiveness when we sin because we have grieved him. Those who persist in serious sins like adultery, theft, etc were probably never really saved anyway. I’m not saying this is right teaching, just what I was raised to believe. There are other views to be sure.
So my question is, it is my understanding that if you commit a mortal sin in Catholicism you must go to confession to be forgiven. Protestants don’t have confession, we confess directly to God in our hearts. So does that mean that if a Protestant commits a mortal sin he or she has no way to properly confess and be forgiven in the eyes of the Catholic Church?
Many Protestants use birth control with no second thoughts and do not consider it sinful. Is it still a mortal sin for them since they were not taught that?
If lack of knowledge of certain mortal sins reduces culpability, when a Prostestant converts, how do they know which sins they’ve committed prior to conversion are mortal and which are not? And if, as a Protestant they have already confessed those sins directly to God, must they confess them again in their first confession?
As far as I am aware, and in my experience, many Protestants don’t believe in (or have even heard of) mortal sin. The belief surrounding sin that I was raised on is that all our sins are forgiven “past, present, and future”. We ask God forgiveness when we sin because we have grieved him. Those who persist in serious sins like adultery, theft, etc were probably never really saved anyway. I’m not saying this is right teaching, just what I was raised to believe. There are other views to be sure.
So my question is, it is my understanding that if you commit a mortal sin in Catholicism you must go to confession to be forgiven. Protestants don’t have confession, we confess directly to God in our hearts. So does that mean that if a Protestant commits a mortal sin he or she has no way to properly confess and be forgiven in the eyes of the Catholic Church?
Many Protestants use birth control with no second thoughts and do not consider it sinful. Is it still a mortal sin for them since they were not taught that?
If lack of knowledge of certain mortal sins reduces culpability, when a Prostestant converts, how do they know which sins they’ve committed prior to conversion are mortal and which are not? And if, as a Protestant they have already confessed those sins directly to God, must they confess them again in their first confession?