Why do Catholics believe in Purgatory?

  • Thread starter Thread starter IGotQuestions
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Ok.i prefer purgatory .Abraham’s Bosom is too fixed for me,easir to understand .
No; the two notions are completely different.
No where do we see any suffering there [in Abraham’s Bosom].
That’s correct! That’s because Abraham’s Bosom isn’t about ‘suffering’! Rather, it’s about the fact that, no matter how good a life we lead, we can’t get ourselves into heaven – only Jesus and His sacrifice is capable of opening the gates of heaven to us!
Maybe the CC means it was vacated with Jesus taking them to heaven
Yes, you’re doing good so far – that’s exactly right!
Maybe the CC means it was vacated with Jesus taking them to heaven , and God turned it into purgatory, borrowed some of the fires" from hell/gehenna ?
No, that’s not it at all. Abraham’s Bosom is about the fact that we can’t earn our way into heaven on our own merits; purgatory is about the fact that none of us is perfect, and we must undergo a process of purification prior to entering heaven. The two are completely different ideas, and so, these two ‘states’ (or ‘places’, if that metaphor helps you think about them) aren’t related. Keep them separate in your mind; it’ll help you understand them better! 👍
 
No, that’s not it at all. Abraham’s Bosom is about the fact that we can’t earn our way into heaven on our own merits; purgatory is about the fact that none of us is perfect, and we must undergo a process of purification prior to entering heaven. The two are completely different ideas, and so, these two ‘states’ (or ‘places’, if that metaphor helps you think about them) aren’t related. Keep them separate in your mind; it’ll help you understand them better! 👍
Maybe the CC means it was vacated with Jesus taking them to heaven , and God turned it into purgatory, borrowed some of the fires" from hell/gehenna ?

I think he’s kinda right, remember Abraham and the rich man were so close that they could talk to each other.
 
I think he’s kinda right, remember Abraham and the rich man were so close that they could talk to each other.
It would’ve been a really ineffective story if the rich man and Abraham couldn’t talk to one another. 😉

The point of the story wasn’t that they could talk – it was that the rich man (being punished for eternity) and Abraham (in ‘Paradise’, awaiting his Savior) couldn’t cross over to the other in order to offer comfort to those in hell.

And remember – the rich man was in ‘hell’, not ‘purgatory’. Hell is about punishment; purgatory is about purification. Big difference in terms of what the ‘suffering’ in each place entails.
 
The Bible proclaims there is only Heaven and Hell.
Thank you all for your answers. 👍
Why do Catholics believe in Purgatory? Because Jews believe in Purgatory. The Bible has gaps which need to be filled in or more finely interpreted by Oral Law and Tradition. Both Catholicism and Judaism have such an Oral Tradition. The latter is not a luxury; it is a necessity for a more profound understanding of certain passages in the Bible.
 
Since the time when the person was invincibly ignorant.
You misunderstand, I said “refusal to believe in Christ”, not ignorant of Christ, there is a difference. I was referring to someone who has basically fallen away after having known Christ. “Knowing” or “believing in Christ”, in my definition, is abiding in Christ and His Word, not just hearing of Jesus’ name in passing.
 
It would’ve been a really ineffective story if the rich man and Abraham couldn’t talk to one another. 😉

The point of the story wasn’t that they could talk – it was that the rich man (being punished for eternity) and Abraham (in ‘Paradise’, awaiting his Savior) couldn’t cross over to the other in order to offer comfort to those in hell.

And remember – the rich man was in ‘hell’, not ‘purgatory’. Hell is about punishment; purgatory is about purification. Big difference in terms of what the ‘suffering’ in each place entails.
I agree with what you said, I think he means the upper part up sheol is now a purgatory, but the lower part will always be Hell.
 
When Paul wrote
1 Cor 3: 13 each man’s work will become manifest; for the Day**(“1 - - Bible Gateway Corinthians+3&version=RSVCE#fen-RSVCE-32582b”)] will disclose it, because it will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test what sort of work each one has done. 14 If the work which any man has built on the foundation survives, he will receive a reward. 15 If any man’s work is burned up, he will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire.
This shows Jesus taught of purification after death but before heaven. Catholics call that purgatory

BTW, That process only happens for one judged as saved.
Hi steve,

Their is no indication that this happens before heaven. My understanding is that day,the great day of judgement seat of Christ. Rev 22 suggests it is at end times:" behold I come quickly and my reward is with me…"

But yes this is a purification that we all agree on. Just do not see it as purgatory perr CC practice.
Re: the rich man and hell, that’s true. It’s useless to pray for those in hell
That particular story didn’t include any purification process. So that’s not the story I would use for understanding purgatory
Well right can not use it for it is not mentioned . But can use it as an evidence against it.(not proof,just evidence).
Bp Sheen does not deny that when we die we are immediately judged. We don’t have to wait for the final judgment to know where we will spend eternity.
right. He says there are two judgements ,one immediate, to heaven hell,purgatory ,the other at end times and public,refining our works and rewarding accordingly for belivers only…
that shows the soul who is judged to be saved but goes through purification. The soul who is damned goes straight to hell
Yes but when ? Sheen admits the second one purifies , rewards works also .Hence the question is there two purificationss of sorts per CC ?
are the temple spoken of there [3.16](1 - - Bible Gateway Corinthians+3&version=RSVCE#en-RSVCE-32585) ]

Rev: is clear. the unclean won’t enter heaven.
Agree. We differ on the efficacy of baptism, The blood of Christ for sin covering and what happens to our carnal nature when we die. You are uggesting it tries to go to heaven.
The soul is immortal from conception. It does not die, it doesn’t sleep, It lives forever. The question is for everyone, where will they be at the instant of their death of the body.
But what soul ,of the old man or the new man in Christ ? The carnal man soul or the spiritual man soul ? I say the carnal dies at baptism positionally and fully at death, in the grave,as suggested in baptism of water.
 
The quote from Corinthians talks only of the one who is judged to be saved and goes through purification. It does NOT talk of the one who is damned
Correct.It is the judgement seat of Christ,or so called by Paul twice. “Day” is also mentioned several times as a future event at end times,as when he returns or when we resurrect or are judged all at end times.(The Lord’s day ,that great day etc.0
It most certainly takes place before heaven
Understand . We just differ.The judgement seat of Christ that you say is purification, and has rewards to me is same as Rev 22 where at end times Christ still has not given out rewards, they are with HIm. Again are there two reward ceremonies, two purifications ?
Blessings in return.

Blessings
 
Do you believe you go to Heaven (and/or your resurrected body) exactly as you are, flaws and all? Are you still going to be envious? Jealous? Prone to lust? Are you still going to suffer from concupiscence? Or will some change be affected after death but before Heaven?
 
No; the two notions are completely different.

That’s correct! That’s because Abraham’s Bosom isn’t about ‘suffering’! Rather, it’s about the fact that, no matter how good a life we lead, we can’t get ourselves into heaven – only Jesus and His sacrifice is capable of opening the gates of heaven to us!

Yes, you’re doing good so far – that’s exactly right!

No, that’s not it at all. Abraham’s Bosom is about the fact that we can’t earn our way into heaven on our own merits; purgatory is about the fact that none of us is perfect, and we must undergo a process of purification prior to entering heaven. The two are completely different ideas, and so, these two ‘states’ (or ‘places’, if that metaphor helps you think about them) aren’t related. Keep them separate in your mind; it’ll help you understand them better! 👍
OK got it OT was calling them the same but i see you corrected him.Thank you for the rest also. We are set.

Blessings
 
Hi steve
their is no indication that this happens before heaven.
:tiphat:howdy

if you would, have another look with the Greek included

(all links operational, all emphasis mine)

1 Cor 3: 13 each man’s work will become manifest φανερὸν]; for the Day**(“1 Corinthians 3 RSVCE - On Divisions in the Corinthian Church - Bible Gateway”)] will disclose δηλώσει, ] it, because it will be revealed ἀποκαλύπτεται· = I uncover] with fire, and the fire will test δοκιμάσει.=I prove, I examine**…** ] what sort of work each one has done. (The “I” there is Jesus. He makes all that happen on the Day we die )14 If the work which any man has built on the foundation survives, he will receive a reward. 15 If any man’s work is burned up, he will suffer loss ζημιωθήσεται, = I inflict loss, I punish**.**…], though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire.(that describes Jesus putting the individual through the process of purification, for only those He judged saved, ending in heaven for THEM. I have to say purgatory doesn’t look like it’s necessarily pleasant.)

See the language there?
  • I uncover
  • I prove, I examine
  • I inflict loss, I punish
That is NOT heavenDoes that sound like heaven?

this happens after death but before heaven. Afterall, what is described there in those passages is not heaven nor does it take place in heaven. Open the links.
bh:
My understanding is that day,the great day of judgement seat of Christ. Rev 22 suggests it is at end times:" behold I come quickly and my reward is with me…" But yes this is a purification that we all agree on. Just do not see it as purgatory perr CC practice.
Technically the end of time is when we all die. For US, there is no more time when we die. We are now outside of time. It’s the eternal now. Just because the body dies, our soul which is immortal lives forever. It has memory intellect and will fully functional forever. At death, the soul leaves the body. It’s not sitting around someplace snoozing till the 2nd comming. The soul doen’t snooze. It is judged immediately. If one is saved, they either go to heaven with most likely purgatory first, or straight to hell.
bh:
Well right can not use it for it is not mentioned . But can use it as an evidence against it.(not proof,just evidence).
Jesus describes the rich man is in hell. There is no getting out. No crossing over from where he is to a better place. Therefore, that doesn’t describe purgatory
bh:
Yes but when? Sheen admits the second one purifies , rewards works also .Hence the question is there two purificationss of sorts per CC ?
Those still living at the 2nd coming, they will go through THEIR judgement and purification if necessary as well. Since this marks the overall the end of time, there will be no more births or deaths after that, there will be no more judgement, no more purgatory as a reult. All that remains is heaven and hell… forever

all the bodies that ever lived will be in their resurrected state. Body and soul are reunited. If the soul is in heaven, souls are now reunited with their resurrected body in heaven. The same for those in hell. Purgatory ceases to exist
bh:
[Agree. We differ on the efficacy of baptism, The blood of Christ for sin covering and what happens to our carnal nature when we die. You are uggesting it tries to go to heaven.[/COLOR]

It’s not about the efficacy of baptism. All those warnings in scripture, they are for everyone. No one is excluded. Baptism doesn’t automatically forgive sins looking forward. A person still must do everything required for the forgiveness of sins. If a baptized person dies in mortal sin they go to hell.
bh:
But what soul ,of the old man or the new man in Christ ? The carnal man soul or the spiritual man soul ? I say the carnal dies at baptism positionally and fully at death, in the grave,as suggested in baptism of water.
A baptized person, if they die in mortal sin they go to hell.
 
A baptized person, if they die in mortal sin they go to hell.
Would that include Roman Catholics who are using contraceptives? Or would they be able to get some sort of a pass because so many Roman Catholics do not believe in the teaching on contraception, at least according to many polls.
 
Technically the end of time is when we all die. For US, there is no more time when we die. We are now outside of time. It’s the eternal now. Just because the body dies, our soul which is immortal lives forever. It has memory intellect and will fully functional forever. At death, the soul leaves the body. It’s not sitting around someplace snoozing till the 2nd comming. The soul doen’t snooze. It is judged immediately. If one is saved, they either go to heaven with most likely purgatory first, or straight to hell.
Hi steve,

OK. I understand your take. Is that Catholic position, there is only one judgement which is before the before the resurrection, for the believer ? That would make Bishop Sheen’s assessment incorrect.

Your Greek gives no bearing on just when the “day” is, and is an assumption it is at our death. Again, no one is suggesting souls sleep. Even Sheen says we have an immediate, private judgement of sorts when we die and placed in one of the three places.

Again when we faithful die there is still a "timeline’’. That is, we do not go there and immediately enter into eternal state, with a, resurrected glorified body, and with rewards, and eternal assignments in the Kingdom set up on earth, etc., etc… Still an order of events, which signifies “time” of some sort. Even the saints before the throne in heaven (Revelations) are asking the Lord, “how long before your setting things straight on earth ?”

That is the suggestion, that we go to heaven in spirit and soul.Then the next step is resurrection of our body, at the end of time.Then we have that second public judgement of our works in Christ, and suffer loss of rewards or gain them, receiving our assignments in the newly established kingdom on Earth.

Heaven is where the Lord is. Our Judgement is before Him. He does not set up a court just outside the Pearly Gates. What makes a place "holy’’ is His presence so yes we can be judged anywhere, including heaven. As far as the suffering that takes place at the second judgement, which you say can not be heaven because of suffering loss, I say as a believer we suffer with and before the Lord irregardless of place. As an example, Peter was with the Lord yet do you not think Peter suffered loss when Christ rebuked him with the words, “get behind me Satan” ? It is after this second judgement when all tears will be wiped away, and to return nevermore.
Jesus describes the rich man is in hell. There is no getting out. No crossing over from where he is to a better place. Therefore, that doesn’t describe purgatory
Well, Jesus describes the life and death of two men and their destination. The story partly describes Abraham’s Bosom and Gehenna/Hell. Correct, purgatory is not in story, and so of course “not described” .
]It’s not about the efficacy of baptism. All those warnings in scripture, they are for everyone. No one is excluded. Baptism doesn’t automatically forgive sins looking forward. A person still must do everything required for the forgiveness of sins. If a baptized person dies in mortal sin they go to hell.
This does not answer what happens to your old man. Does it die at baptism and finally with the grave ? Does it follow the new man in Christ up to the judgement as a believer ?

Your view of mortal sin makes you no different than any unbeliever, dead in you sin. Paul’s view is that when we sin , and we do, it is the old man, not the new man, that sins. Your suggestion is that mortal sin sends both to hell, or that the new man sins mortally and is dead. Now if that could happen, we would call that the unforgivable sin of blaspheming the Holy Spirit. At best that is a accumulation of many mortal sins, not a lapse where the old man has an occasional or singular win over the new man. It is like you can lose a battle but still be a soldier for Christ, and not be lost and still win in the war. Yes, you are wounded, are in the hospitable awaiting "repair’’ but are not stripped of you uniform or status as a soldier. Your view says that if you lose a battle you are totally stripped of your uniform/status,even an enemy, until you repent or out of hospital. A mortal sin to me is not a deed but an attitude, of rejection of any remediation thru the Blood. Even that is subject to time graciously given for repentance.

A baptized person, if they die in mortal sin they go to hell.Yes , one who has eschewed the grace of forgiveness in Christ goes to hell.

Blessings
 
Would that include Roman Catholics who are using contraceptives? Or would they be able to get some sort of a pass because so many Roman Catholics do not believe in the teaching on contraception, at least according to many polls.
As in all considerations that take into account both the objective nature of sin and its subjective application to individuals who commit sin, the answer is “it depends.” Whether it is a venial sin (which does not imply loss of the state of grace necessary to enter heaven) or a mortal sin (which does imply a loss of the state of grace) depends not only on the objective nature of the sin itself, but also on the person committing the sin: did s/he know it was a grave sin? Did s/he commit the sin with deliberate consent? Was s/he capable of deliberate consent, or is there some factor which mitigates his/her ability to fully consent to the sin as such?

If your question is merely “do those who fully know and deliberately consent to grave sin put their souls in peril?”, then the answer is ‘yes’. If your question is “does a properly-formed and knowledgeable Catholic who disbelieves in the teachings of the Church imperil their salvation?”, then the answer is ‘yes’. If your question, however, is simply, “do all Catholics who contracept, necessarily commit mortal sin?”, then the answer would have to be ‘no’. 😉
 
OK. I understand your take. Is that Catholic position, there is only one judgement which is before the before the resurrection, for the believer ? That would make Bishop Sheen’s assessment incorrect.
There is one ‘particular judgment’, which is ‘immediate’. (I’m tempted to get on my soapbox and talk about the difference between the common connotation of ‘immediate’ (that is, a temporal one, meaning “right now!”) and the connotation which means "not mediated by anything.) At our deaths, when (for us) time stops, we are judged – immediately – by Christ.

There is also the final judgment, spoken of by Christ in the Gospels, in which He will separate the sheep from the goats, and all that has ever been will be made manifest.

This is the Catholic position… and it does not invalidate Sheen’s position. The notion (that you asserted a couple of weeks ago, in post #172) that Sheen is referring to the final judgment as one “by fire” doesn’t work well with the Catholic theology that Sheen was discussing. Your assertion would seem to have it that, after the particular judgment, we are in some sort of ‘holding pattern’ – that the cleansing of purgation and the punishment of hell are held in check until the end of time. That’s not what the Church teaches. Rather, the final judgment is tied up in the notion of the eschaton: when we receive our glorified bodies, there will be the final judgment. The end result of that final judgment is that we will enter into eternity – bodily! – and the final judgment is the particular point at which that delineation between temporal and eternal exists.
Your Greek gives no bearing on just when the “day” is, and is an assumption it is at our death.
That’s a fair enough interpretation. After all, “the day of the Lord” is a phrase that had been used throughout the Old Testament, and has quite a history in theological debate over the millennia.

To be fair, the OT Jewish conception of “the day” is substantially different from the NT Jewish conception – and the Christian concept is even more distinct! For OT Jews, death was permanent: you went to Sheol, and became a ‘shade’ (i.e., a ‘shadow’) and that was where you were forever and evermore. Do not pass Go, do not collect $200. However, they believed that there would be “the day of the Lord”, at which time the destiny of the Jewish nation would be restored, and all the peoples would be at peace, with the Israelites who were alive at that time at their head. No one would mess with them, no one would subjugate them, and God would make it be a ‘paradise on earth’ for His Chosen People. (Under this notion, “the day of the Lord” was necessarily a temporal reference – it would happen on earth at some point in time.)

By the 1st century AD, however, this notion was fraying at the edges. Some Jews asserted that there would be ‘heaven’ – that is, the eternal destiny of the just wasn’t eternal gloom, but eternal joy. For these Jews, then (e.g., the Pharisees), “the day of the Lord” had subtly changed: it wasn’t a temporal reality, it was an eternal reality. So, the notion of ‘timeline’ was significantly different: did one enter “the day of the Lord” – that is, ‘eternity’ – at the end of time, or at the end of one’s life? Jesus’ discussion of Lazarus and the rich man would seem to suggest that there was a contemporary understanding of ‘paradise’ (a.k.a., “Abraham’s Bosom”) that implied the latter rather than the former.

But, we can’t leave the discussion there: Christians, studying Jesus’ words and teaching, developed a theology that differed from all variants of Jewish theology, in a variety of ways. From this discernment of Jesus’ teaching, the Church taught a ‘particular judgment’ (heaven (with, perhaps, a cleansing prior to entry into heaven) or hell) that was immediate, as well as a final judgment at the eschaton, tied to the bodily ‘rising of the dead’.

Now… what of the assertion that “the day of the Lord” implies that ‘the fire’ only happens at the end of time? To be fair, that would force us to abandon Christian understandings of the eschaton and re-adopt a Jewish understanding that was already being rejected in Jesus’ time…
Even Sheen says we have an immediate, private judgement of sorts when we die and placed in one of the three places.
Not “of sorts” – that kind of hedging isn’t what Sheen is suggesting at all. There is, definitively, in Catholic teaching, a ‘particular judgment’. Not “of sorts”.
Again when we faithful die there is still a "timeline’’. That is, we do not go there and immediately enter into eternal state, with a, resurrected glorified body, and with rewards, and eternal assignments in the Kingdom set up on earth, etc., etc… Still an order of events, which signifies “time” of some sort.
Not so much a ‘time’, I would argue (since I would argue for the classical definition of time as being the measure of change of physical things), but certainly a ‘sequence’.
Even the saints before the throne in heaven (Revelations) are asking the Lord, “how long before your setting things straight on earth ?”
And, they could certainly be asking that with respect to the frame of reference of an earthly timeframe, not a heavenly one.
That is the suggestion, that we go to heaven in spirit and soul.Then the next step is resurrection of our body, at the end of time.Then we have that second public judgement of our works in Christ, and suffer loss of rewards or gain them, receiving our assignments in the newly established kingdom on Earth.
I’m with you up until “and suffer loss [at that time]”.
 
Would that include Roman Catholics who are using contraceptives?
artificial birth control of all types is a mortal sin, so yes
T:
Or would they be able to get some sort of a pass because so many Roman Catholics do not believe in the teaching on contraception, at least according to many polls.
Short answer

“Not believing” or “refusing to agree” or “deny the teaching” etc is no escape.

Our faith is not based on polls.
 
Hi steve,

OK. I understand your take. Is that Catholic position, there is only one judgement which is before the resurrection, for the believer ?
:tiphat: howdy benhur

keep reading for an answer to your question
bh:
Your Greek gives no bearing on just when the “day” is, and is an assumption it is at our death.
Every second of every day is judgement day for souls who die. They don’t wait for the 2nd comming .
bh:
Again when we faithful die there is still a "timeline’’.
Peter gave an analogy. A day with the Lord is like a 1000 years and 1000 years is like a day. In reality, since there are no days weeks years eons etc etc in eternity just eternal now, Peter gives an analogy people can get their heads around
bh:
That is, we do not go there and immediately enter into eternal state, with a, resurrected glorified body, and with rewards, and eternal assignments in the Kingdom set up on earth, etc., etc…
Souls can be in heaven, purgatory, and hell, without bodies. At the 2nd coming THEN body and soul are reunited.
bh:
Still an order of events, which signifies “time” of some sort. Even the saints before the throne in heaven (Revelations) are asking the Lord, “how long before your setting things straight on earth ?”
This demonstrates souls in heaven have memory intellect and will fully functional…forever.🙂

Now think of your example in reverse for souls in hell. 1000 years from now earth time, they will be asking when is this going to end? It will never end
bh:
That is the suggestion, that we go to heaven in spirit and soul.
until the 2nd coming, those in heaven will be in spirit. Except of course the Blessed Mother…she’s already in heaven body and soul with her son. :cool:
bh:
Then the next step is resurrection of our body, at the end of time.
true
bh:
Heaven is where the Lord is. Our Judgement is before Him. He does not set up a court just outside the Pearly Gates. What makes a place "holy’’ is His presence so yes we can be judged anywhere, including heaven. As far as the suffering that takes place at the second judgement, which you say can not be heaven because of suffering loss, I say as a believer we suffer with and before the Lord irregardless of place.
Heaven is free of judgement, suffering, and loss. It’s all gain
bh:
As an example, Peter was with the Lord yet do you not think Peter suffered loss when Christ rebuked him with the words, “get behind me Satan” ? It is after this second judgement when all tears will be wiped away, and to return nevermore.
Jesus later explained to Peter and the other apostles that Satan has been allowed to sift THEM like wheat. Satan has been with them and doing that from the beginning when Jesus assembled them. Jesus could see Satan all along. Obviously the apostles couldn’t see him but he was there sifting. lk 22:31

Your example then doesn’t explain what we’re talking about however
bh:
Your view of mortal sin makes you no different than any unbeliever, dead in you sin. Paul’s view is that when we sin , and we do, it is the old man, not the new man, that sins.
Everyone has the same ability to sin. Baptized or not all people sin.
These are mortal sins listed #15
bh:
Your suggestion is that mortal sin sends both to hell, or that the new man sins mortally and is dead. Now if that could happen, we would call that the unforgivable sin of blaspheming the Holy Spirit.
Blaspheming the HS is refusing to accept forgiveness, or thinking one can’t be forgiven.

Mortal sins are committing grave sins and walking around in them having not disposed of them properly (sacramental confession). Since we don’t know the day or the minute of our death we need to always be on guard of our soul. People who die in mortal sin go to hell.
bh:
At best that is a accumulation of many mortal sins, not a lapse where the old man has an occasional or singular win over the new man.
forget the new man / old man analogy. Anybody can commit mortal sin. Dieing in just one mortal sin will send one to hell.
bh:
It is like you can lose a battle but still be a soldier for Christ, and not be lost and still win in the war.
The one who perseveres in obedience of faith to the end,… wins.
bh:
Yes, you are wounded, are in the hospitable awaiting "repair’’ but are not stripped of you uniform or status as a soldier.
That describes venial sin, NOT mortal sin
bh:
Your view says that if you lose a battle you are totally stripped of your uniform/status,even an enemy, until you repent or out of hospital. A mortal sin to me is not a deed but an attitude, of rejection of any remediation thru the Blood. Even that is subject to time graciously given for repentance.
Look at the list

Mortal sin is a deed. And all it takes to commit a mortal sin ( #15 ) is knowledge of the sin being grave, and consent to do any of those gravely sinful acts.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top