P
Petaro
Guest
I can only agree that in any Western Society $10 may well not be a serious enough amount to consider grave matter. The disloyalty of the act against your brother may well make it grievous depending on the trust lost. Offer up a perfect act of contrition and get to confession asap. Silly thing to do. I hope you have learnt a lesson. Learn another about Jesus’s forgiveness asap.I’m not sure that stealing $10 would constitute grave matter. I mean, it’s a slimy thing to do, but unless the loss of that money caused your brother grave harm (or you stole the money with the intention of causing him serious injury), stealing it wouldn’t be grave matter.
Did that $10 keep him from having food for the week? Was he unable to pay his rent/mortgage, or purchase required books/materials for college? Was he unable to buy gas for his car, which kept him from getting to work, which caused him to lose his job? These would be just a few examples of how stealing would be grave matter.
Keep in mind, stealing that money is still a slimy thing to do to your brother. But that doesn’t make it a mortal sin.
Gertie