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frjohnmorris
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My problem with your explanations is that such works as McBrien’s Catholicism and Rahner and Vorgimter’s Dictionary of Theology use terms like “satisfaction for sins” and “punishment” to describe what happens in purgatory. How do you reconcile your view of purgatory with the view described in these sources as a place where we undergo punishment for our sins before we can enter into Heaven?Hi Father Morris: In reading your reply to dvdjs, I see that you are beginning to at least see that there are many things between Catholic and Orthodox thinking that could be understood if the choice of words used were, gave a better understanding of what is believed. I remember the Baltimore Catechism as it was the book I learned from, However, I maybe wrong about it but I think that it is no longer used or not used much these days, as there are much better catechism books out there that explain much better than the old Baltimore catechism did.
I understand that you think us Catholic’s use too much legalistic terms in trying to describe the mysteries of our faith and that might be true, but I had not looked at it that way before since I tend to look at the mysteries in a more spiritual manor, but that’s just me.
As for purgatory, I see it more as a means of perfecting one rather than some place where one is punished for one’s sins. If one can offer up prayers, and you say that prayers help them then it would seem to me that what we offer call them indulgences is just another way to offering what graces we are given to them. I like to think that grace is love, God’s LOVE offered to us through the Church. I do not see the deposit as some treasury of merit, but more a deposit of faith given to the Church that was handed down from the Apostles and all who believed in what they taught. I think this way as no one can merit, earn or deserve anything from God, What God gives is pure gifts that are freely accepted, I like to think we can freely give what God gives to us t others especially those who have died. In the end no one can ever earn merit or deserve heaven as no one gets in unless God wills it.
I also have a problem with the concept of the “Beatific Vision,” as “an intuitive vision of God’s essence.” Dictionary, p. 42. According to Orthodox theology we experience God’s energies which are fully divine and flow directly from His essence, but never experience God’s essence which remains hidden to us creatures. The energies of God can be compared to the warmth and light that flows from the sun. This is what we call Palamite theology which is named after the teachings of St. Gregory Palamas (1296-1359). St. Gregory’s teaching was declared official Orthodox dogma at several councils in 1341, 1344, 1347 and 1351. He is so important to Orthodox theology that the Second Sunday of Great Lent is always dedicated to his memory. Thus according to Eastern Orthodox theology grace is an energy of God that is fully divine and uncreated. Therefore we believe that grace is not something added or infused but is the direct transforming Communion with God. Because of the divine nature of grace, Orthodox speak of salvation as deification, being made by grace what God is by nature. As a result we become “partakers of the divine nature.” I Peter 2:4.
Fr. John W. Morris