M
mardukm
Guest
The Eastern Tradition on Original Sin is not opposed to the Latin Tradition on Original Sin. Many misunderstand what the Latin Church teaches on Original Sin regarding guilt. Like so many things, the source of the misunderstanding is language. When the Latins say that we inherit guilt from Adam, most people think it means that the Latin Church is teaching that we inherit the BLAME for Adam’s sin. But that is completely false. There are two Latins words that are commonly translated as “guilt” in Latin theological language - culpa and reatus. Culpa (aside from its normal translation of “guilt”) means “blame” while “reatus” refers to a certain state. To explain, imagine that a man damages someone else’s property. That man acquires both culpa (personal blame for the action of which he is guilty) and reatus (a state of indebtedness to repay the damage) for that action. Suppose the man dies, yet he has not yet paid off the damage. Imagine that this man has a son who inherits his estate. The son will naturally inherit the reatus (the state of indebtedness to pay off the damage), but the son has certainly not inherited the culpa (the personal blame) for the man’s action.
- So, where do ECs fall on original sin? How does it differ from full-out Orthodoxy? I only yesterday learned how very different the Orthodox understanding of the Fall and its results, and the importance of Baptism, and all of that is, as original sin is absent. It endears me (in part because I just had a miscarriage and it pushed me to really examine how much or little sense I see in the RC position).
Most people think that the Catholic Church’s dogmatic documents on Original Sin use the term culpa when speaking of “guilt.” Thus, there is a misconception that when these documents speak of inheriting the guilt of Adam, they are teaching that that we are inheriting the BLAME for his personal sin. Wrong. The term used by the dogmatic documents is actually reatus. Adam’s sin resulted in a certain state of being for himself and his descendants - i.e., we are born lacking the state of holiness in which Adam and Eve were created, and this state of being in a lack of holiness needs to be satisfied according to the Justice of God. Through the blood of Jesus Christ applied to us at Baptism, we acquire this state of Original Holiness.
Having discussed what “the guilt of Adam” is NOT according to the Latin Catholic teaching, the distinction between the Eastern Tradition on Original Sin (on the one hand), and the Western/Oriental Traditions on Original Sin (on the other) must be admitted. The idea that the Justice of God must be satisfied because of the state of sinfulness (i.e., lack of Original holiness) into which each of us is born is an idea which seems to be missing from the modern Eastern Tradition. It is present in the Eastern Tradition as late as St. Gregory Palamas, but somewhere along the way, it seems to have disappeared or at least diminished to a point that you will find Eastern Orthodox controversialists disparage the Western Tradition on the Justice of God (you’ll hardly find EO talk against the Oriental Orthodox Tradition on the Justice of God, but I think that is because many EO don’t even know that such a teaching is found in the Oriental Orthodox Tradition - many EO think the only difference between EO and OO is Chalcedon). It would be interesting to trace this development of doctrine within Eastern Orthodoxy.