F
fineca
Guest
Hello all,
I have two questions:
Emil
I have two questions:
- I sometimes think that the Catholic way of seeing sin and how to get rid of it, how to be saved, is not satisfying…or well, I’m perfectly happy with the teaching of the Church, everything is quite clear, but when it comes to the most important question, how one is saved, the problems start. Ok one is saved by living and dying in the state of grace. That’s ok, but in practice it’s not that clear. One can lose the state of grace by just a single mortal sin. But then there is no final and absolute all-encompassing list of mortal sins. I think the CHurch even says that nobody can know for sure if they’re in the state of grace. The Church is here to tell us how to live and be saved but then it fails to do that in practice. I mean that some examinations of conscience call certain things sins while others don’t and when you go ask a priest he’ll tell you one thing and then another will tell you another thing and there’s no magisterium list of all mortal sins. I’m sure there are better examples but one faithful Catholic theologian I know says smoking is a sin against the 5th commandment, and if chosen freely and consciously knowing the harmful effects it can be mortal. Another faithful theologian says it is no sin at all just like coffee or wine. Then when it comes to dating, you get a different answer everywhere about how sinful this and that is (fornication etc. is obvious but when it comes to kissing, embracing, lying on a bed together, necking, touching it gets tricky…). Also somewhere you’d read that stealing 100 dollars is a mortal sin but one faithful priest told me when I said a friend has never paid his train tickets and thus stolen a looot from the state that everyone in Italy or Spain does that and that it’s not a big deal not to pay the train ticket…sooooo in manymany cases according to other Catholic sources you’d be headed toward hell if u didn’t repent of your practice while others would tell you it’s all fine… isn’t this bothering any other people except me?
- There was a question about dating a divorced man…something similar: a Catholic man is married to a Lutheran. she takes a civil divorce, they don’t have an annulment but the man could get one due to the fact that she obviously didn’t consider marriage indissoluble since she left. This man meets a Catholic woman who has “divorced” her Lutheran husband. The annulment process is on its way. Now can these two Catholic “divorcés” start “seeing” each other in a sincere friendship based on common interests and understanding, go dancing or have dinner together etc.? They wouldn’t have sex of course, but would not be pure “friends” either but rather hold open an option of perhaps getting married in the future if they both get annulments. So are modest hugs, dances, kisses on cheeks and a sense of affection or attraction in this situation sinful?
Emil