K
KathleenGee
Guest
In my archdiocesan training, we didn’t go through any ‘mid management’ books, but strictly on church documents, and for various classes, we would simply go back to the same books, Vatican II documents and the catechism, the liturgy documents, some encyclicals, and parts of Canon Law…I was there parttime for 5.5 years.
When I go back to the catechism I always see new points of doctrine coming out to me. It makes me reflect that if I get the time, to review and may be even make time to read the Catechism again, doctrine by doctrine.
Our beliefs and worship is pretty holistic…I will never learn everything about my Catholic faith but keeping my unity with others perfects it…so to speak…may be wrong choice of words.
When you go to Mass, Sunday or daily, at the beginning part after the greeting, we all together, as the Lord to forgive us for our sins, as we publicly confess them through the Confiteor. The priest blesses and absolves us of all ordinary sin…but as you know, no matter how hard you try, you fail some times during the day.
Doesn’t the OT state a just man sins 7 times a day? Or S. Paul…the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak?..so we try our best to keep this life as our place of purgation enduring in the cross.
I asked a priest in the confessional one time about going to heaven.
If we embrace the crosses the Lord sends us every day, avoid mortal sin, and love the Lord and our neighbor…the priest replied we would go straight to heaven as we have no inclination to sin…
Thank God He gives us another day…each new day a day of mercy and forgiveness.
Tommy, very pleased with your questions and search for the fullness of Truth…
You may like to read some day the encyclical by John Paul II, ‘Veritatis Splendor’, the ‘Splendor of Truth’. We studied it in Catholic Morality. Here JPII talks about the conscience and detachment in terms of the spiritual life, drawing on the story of the rich young man who was seeking perfection, and how he was told to sell all his possessions and follow the Lord.
Detachment is a discipline in the Church to help free us of false attachments to creatures and draw closer to the Creator…asceticism…Catechism comes to points in going part by part on the Section on Prayer…using the Our Father.
The Church provides alot of help for the penitent.
I would add here, that the saving event of Jesus Christ is the one time event, but in the Catholic/Orthodox faith, this saving, redeeming event is happening in God’s time…the Mass is perpetually being celebrated 24/7 around the world. The Mass provides us directly from Our Lord His ongoing saving and redeeming ministry to us in His Word and Sacrament…so it is also most helpful and strengthening to avoid sin through the Mass where we encounter Jesus in Person – His Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity.
When I go back to the catechism I always see new points of doctrine coming out to me. It makes me reflect that if I get the time, to review and may be even make time to read the Catechism again, doctrine by doctrine.
Our beliefs and worship is pretty holistic…I will never learn everything about my Catholic faith but keeping my unity with others perfects it…so to speak…may be wrong choice of words.
When you go to Mass, Sunday or daily, at the beginning part after the greeting, we all together, as the Lord to forgive us for our sins, as we publicly confess them through the Confiteor. The priest blesses and absolves us of all ordinary sin…but as you know, no matter how hard you try, you fail some times during the day.
Doesn’t the OT state a just man sins 7 times a day? Or S. Paul…the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak?..so we try our best to keep this life as our place of purgation enduring in the cross.
I asked a priest in the confessional one time about going to heaven.
If we embrace the crosses the Lord sends us every day, avoid mortal sin, and love the Lord and our neighbor…the priest replied we would go straight to heaven as we have no inclination to sin…
Thank God He gives us another day…each new day a day of mercy and forgiveness.
Tommy, very pleased with your questions and search for the fullness of Truth…
You may like to read some day the encyclical by John Paul II, ‘Veritatis Splendor’, the ‘Splendor of Truth’. We studied it in Catholic Morality. Here JPII talks about the conscience and detachment in terms of the spiritual life, drawing on the story of the rich young man who was seeking perfection, and how he was told to sell all his possessions and follow the Lord.
Detachment is a discipline in the Church to help free us of false attachments to creatures and draw closer to the Creator…asceticism…Catechism comes to points in going part by part on the Section on Prayer…using the Our Father.
The Church provides alot of help for the penitent.
I would add here, that the saving event of Jesus Christ is the one time event, but in the Catholic/Orthodox faith, this saving, redeeming event is happening in God’s time…the Mass is perpetually being celebrated 24/7 around the world. The Mass provides us directly from Our Lord His ongoing saving and redeeming ministry to us in His Word and Sacrament…so it is also most helpful and strengthening to avoid sin through the Mass where we encounter Jesus in Person – His Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity.