In a thread I recently left, I was challenged about Purgatory and about God and things unclean. I will attempt to offer my own poor answer that may be unacceptable and I might get quote bombed for it ( which is fine. I think the work is unnecessary, but I appreciate the passion people put into it).
Sometimes the argument can be quite heated up. To me that is alright. What I feel strongly against is for someone, especially if one supports it be academic credential, to impute something that is not in the Catholic teaching. That is misleading, and if it is done intentionally, it is dishonest and downright prejudicial.
So do not worry and I think you come out with an issue which is important to Catholics and equally too for Protestants who do not believe in it. Healthy discussion is good for knowledge. At least if we should be against something, it is against what it truly is and not what we wrongly believe it is.
Okay. I believe that Christ died for my sins. Personally, as if I were the only person in the world, He came to die for me. And I put Him to death, I mocked Him, I flogged Him, I declared my unwavering loyalty to Him just to deny Him three times. I kissed His cheek to identify Him to a blood thirsty mob. I nailed Him to the Cross. Since my Baptism, God looks at me and sees Jesus.He cleansed me from my sin nearly 2000 years ago. " It is finished!" He cried.
This is Catholic belief too and you say it very well for us. I always try to encourage Protestants not to be shy about saying the truth and which we Catholics may be unable to articulate that well.
But I may add to what you said, to clarify.
Problem with many Christians is saying that Christ died for their sins and stop there. Very often this invites ridicule;
it should be Christ died for my sins, and if I repent of them, his death would wash them away clean. It is as if I have never sinned. If I do not repent but merely believe that story and teaching that he died for us, it will do nothing for my sins.
So the forgiveness of my sin depends entirely on me, the degree that I reject it; not on Christ (who would forgive me if I truly repent).
There is no need for Purgatory because, as stinking a bag of **** and worms that I am, He cleansed me.
Yes, sir. (If my repentance is true and sincere).
David was forgiven but he fasted and put on sack cloth for a period of time. One may say that was because Jesus had not died then. That would be missing the point – the point was true repentance by David. Yet despite that he suffered the consequence of his wrongdoing when he lost his first born.
At my Baptism, every time I approach the Altar to partake of His Body and Blood, quite simply, I am forgiven! Every time I approach my minister, privately and as part of the Divine Service congregation and I am absolved from my sins, again, I am forgiven! That’s how the faith produces the love that is expressed in following the Law and doing good works! I’m not the one who does them. He Who began a good work in me will bring it to completion on the Day of Christ Jesus.
This may sound like a Catholic belief at first glance but there is a thin line that separates us here; and that is why we cannot accept it because different doctrine necessitate different belief altogether.
I am
not forgiven of my serious sin by partaking in the Body and Blood of the Lord. They are food for my soul so that when I am fed I should be strong enough not to scourge for food on the streets (sins from the Evil One).
My sins are forgiven when I confess them in the Sacrament of Penance. After that I take the Lord’s Body and Blood to strengthen me. Of course, the Lord’s presence in me does to some extent, wipes away those less serious sins but out of respect for Him, I would never receive him if I am in a state of serious sin, for the Lord can never be present in the impure, the unclean. (Please be careful on the last sentence; if you respond to it, please do not misconstrue it).
Just like the Centurion, I can only say, Lord I am not worthy that you should come into my house, but just say the word and I will be healed.
How do I take the Sacrament in a worthy fashion? Simply to believe that Jesus meant what He said when he said that " this is My Body" and " this is My Blood." Simply to share the Confession of the Congregation.
And that is insufficient. You are not worthy of the divinity of the Lord if you are in sin; as you are the temple of the Holy Spirit, you should not be defiled. When we eat his true Body and true Blood, we become part of Him. His true substance ingested by us, becomes part of our body.
Protestants cannot accept this is not out of anything; for how Christ’s substance could be digested and He infused into our body, bodily and divinely? But that is what happened to us in the Holy Eucharist.
Innovation or not, perhaps Purgatory does exist, if that means that the Holy Spirit is constantly at work purging the old Adam out of Christ’s people. Innovations are not necessarily false, perhaps a revelation put to a comprehensive form, like sola fide. Aye, indeed, I see no problem with certain ideas of purification, as in a very real sense, we are all purified in the eyes of God through Christ!
Purgatory exists and is believed by ancient Christians that are still living today – Catholics and the Orthodox. Yes, granted that some may not call it purgatory, Catholics use the term perhaps for want of word, but there is indeed a place or state of purification after life before one can enter heaven which nothing unclean can go in.
God bless.
Reuben