Confession? I’ll tell you my experience. When I came back to the Church after a long absence I found myself checking my actions all the time because I would remember that I would have to go to confession and many, many times I changed direction and stopped myself from committing sin precisely because of Confession. When we go to confession we confess to God in the presence of the Priest who will counsel us and give us absolution when we tell him of our sorrow and regret for our sins and when we express our desire never to commit them again. If we are not repentent the absolution won’t be effective because God knows our hearts.
Thank you for your post. This is good to hear.
So yes, the Holy Spirit continues to guide the Church into infallibility because it is Christ’s Church. And indeed, a tiny error will mean that the gates of hell has prevailed.
I suppose I tend to look at this from a military perspective. If an Army loses a battle, it does not immediately declare the war to be lost. It continues to fight and work toward victory. For example, the Allies in World War II suffered many setbacks, but one cannot say that the Axis Powers prevailed against them.
Perhaps the Church is always infallible in everything that it teaches, free from error and confusion. However, if, for a time, it was to teach something that was not fully correct, I do not think this means the Church has been defeated.
Prior to, say, Vatican I, I am sure that many within the Church taught that papal infallibility was not true. The Church today would say that they were teaching falsehood, though innocently. Despite 1800 years of allowing error on this matter, the Church did survive, pronounced its doctrine, and is still here today.
Some may say that the Church was not infallibly speaking against papal infallibility prior to Vatican I, and that, therefore, the authoritative teaching office of the Church was not in error. I understand that. I am simply saying that, from a Catholic perspective, error did exist within the Church, and the Church was not destroyed.
Hi Pen. I think you’ve got us all wrong.
Say for example a council makes a decree about some doctrinal matter or other. If it’s false, that doesn’t mean that the Church is wrong; rather it means that that council is a local council, not an ecumenical council, and hence can’t be said to represent the Church.
How would one know if the council’s decision was false, thereby rendering it the decision of a local, rather than ecumenical, council?
So, tell me…just for the sake of arugment, like there isn’t anything else better to do…

what kind of a distinction are you making so that some error is OK for God to allow but the line is drawn at “dangerous error”?
I don’t presume to tell God what He may or may not allow. People are in error all the time, about a great number of things, and God allows this. I don’t think this means He has abandoned us and doesn’t care.
And, in your enthusiasm for answering that question, please give a reference that would allow for the All Perfect God to allow imperfection in the teachings of His Chruch (and, that would be the Catholic Church).
Perhaps one example would be allowing doctrine to develop, rather than be fully perfected and detailed at the time of Christ. The Church teaches things now that it did not teach one thousand years ago or two thousand years ago. Error was present in the past, and, as time has gone by, this error has been identified and dogmatic pronouncements have been made to clarify the matter. People at the time of Christ did not have a perfect understanding of papal infallibility, the immaculate conception, purgatory, etc., and God allowed this.
Do you think people just start out with dangerous error? Look at Martin Luther as a classic example. He had a valid point about the error some had created by violating CC doctrine and engaging in the sale of indulgences.
As this error was committed by others, what was Martin Luther’s initial error? Martin Luther may have committed a number of errors. Personally, I certainly think he did. However, I do not think his opposition to those selling indulgences was one of them.
God bless you too!
