M
Michael19682
Guest
The Priest’s words at confession time refer to “reconciling the world to himself”.
Reconciliation is obviously the most very important sacrament to understand and practice.
Part of my forthcoming questions arises from my a personal attempt to be theologically forward thinking as well as know if reconciliation is one-way or two-way.
Once the Priest begins giving absolution, it seems only reasonable to conclude that like at the “reconciling [of] the world,” a person might not agree with God’s plan for reconciliation, and refuse it. He might not say Amen, or go deeper into hatred than denial.
Would such a stance invalidate the confession’s absolution and/or negate the reconciliation offer/prayer?
Are absolution and reconciliation the same thing?
I’m not personally immobilized on my spiritual journey by the confusion at all,
but nevertheless it is a question whose answer would help me in a personal quagmire.
Reconciliation is obviously the most very important sacrament to understand and practice.
Part of my forthcoming questions arises from my a personal attempt to be theologically forward thinking as well as know if reconciliation is one-way or two-way.
Once the Priest begins giving absolution, it seems only reasonable to conclude that like at the “reconciling [of] the world,” a person might not agree with God’s plan for reconciliation, and refuse it. He might not say Amen, or go deeper into hatred than denial.
Would such a stance invalidate the confession’s absolution and/or negate the reconciliation offer/prayer?
Are absolution and reconciliation the same thing?
I’m not personally immobilized on my spiritual journey by the confusion at all,
but nevertheless it is a question whose answer would help me in a personal quagmire.