D
dove51
Guest
…inside the mind, in the words that we speak, or in our actions?
I think most of my sins come from my thoughts. What about you?
I think most of my sins come from my thoughts. What about you?
I am the same.…inside the mind, in the words that we speak, or in our actions?
I think most of my sins come from my thoughts. What about you?
How we think has a subtle effect on our behaviour, though, too, even when we’re not directly acting out our thoughts.Thoughts, but I do believe that there is a difference between thought and action. I wouldn’t know how to explain it though. It’s really hard to overcome a lifetime of sinful thoughts that just keep poking their way inside.
I also don’t understand why just thinking about it is a sin as well. It seems to me that acting on those thoughts have more visible consequences than just thinking about it.
When you realize how little control you actually have over ‘physical’ actions you will understand this better. God can prevent you from having the ‘potential’ to actualize your will from affecting others physically. The truest source of evil comes from a man’s heart.I also don’t understand why just thinking about it is a sin as well. It seems to me that acting on those thoughts have more visible consequences than just thinking about it.
I went to confession once to confess some awful thoughts I had had at one time. I was told by the priest that thoughts are not sins. It’s actions that are sins. Since I did not act on my thoughts but did what I was expected to do instead, then there was no sin.…inside the mind, in the words that we speak, or in our actions?
I think most of my sins come from my thoughts. What about you?
It really depends on exactly what was meant. If it was just a thought beyond you willing it, then you did not act on it and the advice was sound. But the second you will (in favor) of a tempting thought, you are sinning. In other words, when you will any evil thoughts or desires, either to indulge in or continue them, you are acting on them. The difference is just mental action versus physical. If he was advocating the latter as sinless, then the advice was very bad. I would give him the benefit of the doubt, but just know that willing a sinful thought or desire is a sin.Now I realize that conflicts with the “Lust for a woman is committing adultery in your heart” statement, so was I given bad advice from my confessor? Or is “thinking sin”, over played?
I dunno. When we go to Mass we confess, “I have sinned through my own fault in my thoughts, in my words, in what I have done, and in what I have failed to do.”I went to confession once to confess some awful thoughts I had had at one time. I was told by the priest that thoughts are not sins. It’s actions that are sins. Since I did not act on my thoughts but did what I was expected to do instead, then there was no sin.
Now I realize that conflicts with the “Lust for a woman is committing adultery in your heart” statement, so was I given bad advice from my confessor? Or is “thinking sin”, over played?
I was very specific with my description. It does sound as if he gave it a wrong diagnosis. Yes, I have learned that what priest says and what the CCC says sometimes can be very different.It really depends on exactly what was meant. If it was just a thought beyond you willing it, then you did not act on it and the advice was sound. But the second you will (in favor) of a tempting thought, you are sinning. In other words, when you will any evil thoughts or desires, either to indulge in or continue them, you are acting on them. The difference is just mental action versus physical. If he was advocating the latter as sinless, then the advice was very bad. I would give him the benefit of the doubt, but just know that willing a sinful thought or desire is a sin.
One can sin in thought, word, and deed, what is done and what is left undone. From the CCC (my emphasis added):
"1853 Sins can be distinguished according to their objects, as can every human act; or according to the virtues they oppose, by excess or defect; or according to the commandments they violate. They can also be classed according to whether they concern God, neighbor, or oneself; they can be divided into spiritual and carnal sins, or again as sins in thought, word, deed, or omission. The root of sin is in the heart of man, in his free will, according to the teaching of the Lord: “For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, fornication, theft, false witness, slander. These are what defile a man.”[128] But in the heart also resides charity, the source of the good and pure works, which sin wounds. "
It actually wasn’t thought about an action on my part. It certainly could be considered inaction. It was thoughts of hatred. Hard to explain without the details but this is nothing I’d want to share the specifics with others.I dunno. When we go to Mass we confess, “I have sinned through my own fault in my thoughts, in my words, in what I have done, and in what I have failed to do.”
The distinction would be in whether you allowed those thoughts to take hold, if you raised them to the level of a scenario, if you took pleasure in the contemplation of a sinful act, if you WANTED to commit the sin.
Don’tcha love it when you think something through and come up with a reasonable conclusion? In this case, I would think, the “heart” and the “mind” are one thing.I was very specific with my description. It does sound as if he gave it a wrong diagnosis. Yes, I have learned that what priest says and what the CCC says sometimes can be very different.
It actually wasn’t thought about an action on my part. It certainly could be considered inaction. It was thoughts of hatred. Hard to explain without the details but this is nothing I’d want to share the specifics with others.
In Mass, we can confess venial sins… and, I would suspect we all have those, to some degree, through everyday living. My sin was way past “normal, everyday, human condition”.
So then, given the proper responses about heart and mind… is it true-er to say you sinned in your heart or in your mind? If it is true that all sins are sins of the heart, then I guess we’ve discovered our answer.
Not that I am implying you think otherwise at all, but we should always remember that an act can be something that occurs exclusively in the mind without a physical movement (well maybe the brain ‘moves’ but that is getting picky).“While I contemplated committing this sin (details), even though I did not act upon it, the motivation to do it was very strong at the very least participates in the nature of sin.”
That is pretty much what I mean. But some confessors think that if you didn’t DO something it ISN’T a sin. But that is quite contrary to the teaching of Our Lord. So it sometimes pays to set up your confession in a way that indicates your understanding that some people do not recognize “sins of thought”. Keeps you from getting a lecture about your “scrupulosity.”Not that I am implying you think otherwise at all, but we should always remember that an act can be something that occurs exclusively in the mind without a physical movement (well maybe the brain ‘moves’ but that is getting picky).
I disagree. There is thought, and there is commitment to thought. You can think the Eucharist is the body and blood in your mind or you can believe in your heart… A different level of “thought”.Don’tcha love it when you think something through and come up with a reasonable conclusion? In this case, I would think, the “heart” and the “mind” are one thing.
The emphasis is that sins can be thoughts, but it is what is in your heart (belief, way of acting, etc.) that is key. I think it is one thing to think something, it is the next step to plan it or to gain pleasure in imagining taking it to an end.1853 Sins can be distinguished according to their objects, as can every human act; or according to the virtues they oppose, by excess or defect; or according to the commandments they violate. They can also be classed according to whether they concern God, neighbor, or oneself; they can be divided into spiritual and carnal sins, or again as sins in thought, word, deed, or omission. The root of sin is in the heart of man, in his free will, according to the teaching of the Lord: “For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, fornication, theft, false witness, slander. These are what defile a man.”[128] But in the heart also resides charity, the source of the good and pure works, which sin wounds.
Just remember that its can still take place in the mind without a will to act on it externally. Internally is enough. Willing to induldge in hate, lust, envy, despair, pride, and those sort of things can be removed from an external plan to bring them into another action outside the mind and still be a sin. The initial thoughts being unwilled, no, but the consenting will and knowledge to the thoughts, yes.The emphasis is that sins can be thoughts, but it is what is in your heart (belief, way of acting, etc.) that is key. I think it is one thing to think something, it is the next step to plan it or to gain pleasure in imagining taking it to an end.
Say I see a bag of money fall from a treasury truck… I may imagine how neat it would be to have that money for my own. But did I ever believe I really SHOULD take it for my own? If “no” then no sin. If I tried to figure out a way to make it mine, to believe I was, somehow justified in taking it, then yes, it is a sin. Even if I pick it up and give it to the delivery people.