D
DL82
Guest
Is there any kind of definitive list of what is or is not grave matter as regards mortal sin? Thoughts can be mortal sin, so gravity isn’t just about consequences. There are things I slip into now that I feel I must go to confession about because I can see how they cut me off from God and from my neighbour, which I would have thought of as harmless fun a few months ago. Then again, some people can take that attitude too far and every tiny thing they do wrong is a mortal sin in their eyes, that’s scrupulosity, and I know I struggle with it. I have heard it said that any wilful sin against the 6th or 9th commandment is mortal, but then that doesn’t include a fleeting glance, even if you do consent to it, even though that’s part of a continuum that leads to degrading women.
Is there any way we can know for sure? Why isn’t the Church clearer on this? Why doesn’t the church just say “if you commit this sin, this sin, and this sin, you can’t receive communion”? It does that for some things, like contraception, where the lines are very clearly drawn, but less so for other things, like lying and vulgar speech, or coveting, for example.
I always think the best way is to take Our Lord at His word, whoever looks at a woman to lust after her has committed adultery, and adultery is a mortal sin, whoever says to his brother ‘you fool’ will be answerable to hell-fire. Only problem is, this is leading me to a kind of pride, where I feel like I can only approach the Blessed Sacrament immediately after confession, and even then spend the whole of mass staring at the floor and biting my tongue for fear I should sin again, and then I find it impossible to believe that the other people in the congregation are holding themselves to such standards of purity when they receive day after day, and that makes me want to judge them. I try to change, try to judge myself instead, but that just leads to more confusion. As St Paul says in 1 Corinthians, it’s not for me to judge myself even, but for God. Why doesn’t God’s Church then judge us by a more objective standard?
Is there any way we can know for sure? Why isn’t the Church clearer on this? Why doesn’t the church just say “if you commit this sin, this sin, and this sin, you can’t receive communion”? It does that for some things, like contraception, where the lines are very clearly drawn, but less so for other things, like lying and vulgar speech, or coveting, for example.
I always think the best way is to take Our Lord at His word, whoever looks at a woman to lust after her has committed adultery, and adultery is a mortal sin, whoever says to his brother ‘you fool’ will be answerable to hell-fire. Only problem is, this is leading me to a kind of pride, where I feel like I can only approach the Blessed Sacrament immediately after confession, and even then spend the whole of mass staring at the floor and biting my tongue for fear I should sin again, and then I find it impossible to believe that the other people in the congregation are holding themselves to such standards of purity when they receive day after day, and that makes me want to judge them. I try to change, try to judge myself instead, but that just leads to more confusion. As St Paul says in 1 Corinthians, it’s not for me to judge myself even, but for God. Why doesn’t God’s Church then judge us by a more objective standard?