Posted on 08/10/2005 2:44:36 PM PDT by Rosary
SIN, is a deliberate act against the laws of God.Sin affects each individual's soul and every person is born with a soul. The soul,the piece of each human that at death will never die,it is immortal. It- as the individual will, be judged before God,at the end of their life for both the good and the bad they have done and merit either,heaven a place of eternal happiness- or hell,a place of eternal punishment and misery for the SINS or Sins committed..without repentance and amendment of life. Confession,cleanses away the sin. That why the Catholic Church has Confession. Christ died to save mankind from their sins.Look at the crucifix,see how ugly the wounds of Christ! What pain SIN causes Jesus.
Up to my old tricks???? Is there something in Augustine's writings on Predestination you disagree with? I thought I would be applauded for posting a early Church father's writing. ;O)
Here is the RCC stance on election from newadvent:
Quite different from Augustine's view. My how times have change. If the RCC cannot understand the meaning of election, then I don't see how they can understand the meaning of sin. Augustine didn't seem to have a problem.
And truly, with all due respect, I don't need to have someone tell me what Augustine believed as your author tries to do. I can read his writings myself.
"If the RCC cannot understand the meaning of election, then I don't see how they can understand the meaning of sin. Augustine didn't seem to have a problem."
I don't think the issue is so simple. It really revolves around grace and free will. How much of each is present in man?
Luther said man has no free will to do good. Man is like a horse who is either "ridden by God or the devil". Calvin said that original sin annihilated free will and that the Redemption did not restore it. Of course, Trent opposed this by saying that man has moral freedom in spite of original sin, while also saying that freedom worked with grace. In actuality, there are several Catholic 'systems' of grace : Thomism and Molinism are two. In other words, there is still work among theologians on the particulars of the relationship between grace and free will.
by the way, earlier I had stated that Augustinianism was refuted by the Church. I would like to state that I was mistaken, I was thinking the extreme forms of predestination that Pelagians took up. Sorry for the confusion.
Regards
"I have never heard a sermon preached against the Protestant Faith in a Catholic Church. It is my distinct impression, on the other hand, that anti-Catholicism is a fundamental point of faith for many protestant traditions. Given that Protestantism depends upon Catholicism for its legitimacy, this is a dysfunctional situation."
There are several reasons behind this, I think. First, if you vilify the Church, you can justify leaving it, even though you are aware that it WAS (according to some) the Church of Christ.
Second, nothing like a simple message for the people. Why is Islam so popular? It is a simple message. Protestantism is based on faith, almost to the exclusion of reason. Theologically, it stands on two axioms that are found nowhere in the Scripture or Traditions of Christianity for 1500 years.
Which leads to another point. Some that I have met here have an aversion to rational thought, as if it demeans their faith in Christ. We also see this in Fundamentalism that refuses to see that science does not have to disagree with religion (like the creation of the world)
I think much of it also must be blamed on ignorance of Catholics. Part of this is "our" fault, as most Catholics don't know their own faith. How can they witness to others then?
And finally, as you mention, they often have a skewed idea of history - from 100 AD to 1500 AD was the Dark Ages of Catholicism, where people were under the thumb of a huge heirarchy of a church that loaded people with burdens of rituals, rather than the freedom of a relationship with Christ. Of course, all stereotypes and false, but this is difficult to show them, especially when the bible is the only book that has any authority for them. Other history books are meaningless.
It is paramount that we, as Catholics, heed the words of Christ, to love our neighbor and to show others that we are in Christ through our love of others. If we come across as arrogant or triumphant, it is not difficult to see why a Protestant would just turn and leave our presence. We are judged by our fruits, not by how many Masses we go to or books that we read or rosaries that we recite.
Take care
This is part of John Calvin's statement on Eph 2:8-9 in regards to man's free will...
If God took the trouble to save you, will He not also keep you? That is what election is all about.
If you do these things, you are hurting someone else unnecessarily. Heinlein's assertion holds true. He doesn't make any specific reference to whether something like viewing pornography is sinful or not - what he is saying is that anything can be sinful if it hurts others, nothing is if it doesn't hurt others (or yourself).
Granted, there can still be huge arguments about the definition of "hurting". ;)
Your profession renders you unredeemable. LOL
There is no way possible to confess every sin you have ever committed. On top of that, even ONE sin will keep you from fellowship with God. The ONLY reason we have fellowship with God is because His Son Jesus died for the sins of the world. He was, and is, the only sinless person ever to walk this Earth. Grace is giving us what we don't deserve (eternal life with God) when we shouldn't get it (sinful life).
As far as absolved sin, sin never goes away. You cannot un-sin. You can confess your sins (to God) and you will be forgiven and cleansed of unrighteousness, but your sin is still there. It's simply covered by the Blood of Christ, and therefore ignored by God.
As far as Salvation goes:
"For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast." - Ephesians 2:8-9
"that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved." - Romans 10:9
Salvation is by Grace thorough Faith.
So according to you, what is it I don't understand?
He influenced early Protestant thinkers, yes. If Protestants made sure they read St. Augustine without their own 16-century cultural baggage, without Calvinist desacralizing attitude, and in harmony with other Church Fathers, they probably either would have remained in the Church, just like St. Augustine remains our authority, or they would have veered into heresy similar to Jansenism, and would have recoiled from it in the fullness of time.
Several people already explained how Catholicism understands St. Augistin's teaching on Grace.
If there is a thread now or later dedicated to the issue of irresistible grace, I'd be happy to participate. This thread is dedicated to confession of sins. Discussing a more fundamental protestant errors that lead the Protestant into refusal to recognize yet another sacrament of the Church would be like discussing whether America exists on a thread dedicated to American economy.
Indeed, it is often the case that a penitant could not confess every sin. Forms of absolution exist that recognize and absolve sins that could not be remembered due to limitations of mind. A desire to confess them is, of course, still necessary.
On the other hand, only sins committed with the consciousness of mind and with the knowledge and choice of committing a sin need to be confessed. These are "mortal" sins. Sins that are objective wrongs but are committed due to ignorance or honest error are called "venial", those are absolved generally in the course of the Mass. They don't need to be confessed.
The consequence of sin remains after the confession. For example, if a sin involves a crime, the priest will impose restitution, but if the restitution is not possible, the consequence remains even after the penance is complete. A sinner free from unconfessed sin, we believe (without pre-judging the judgement of Christ, goes to Heaven, but he stops in Purgatory on his way, where his saved soul is purified so that he is able to have the Beatific Vision of God.
Feel free to follow up. Good questions.
"Merit" is a technical term in Catholic theology, meaning to have a claim on a reward. It doesn't mean "to earn," nor does it necessarily mean "to deserve in strict justice"; that's a specific type of "merit" called (incredibly enough) "to merit in strict justice".
Using "merit" in the technical sense, as a claim on a reward, we can say that the blessed most certainly merit heaven through the free gift of saving grace purchased for them at the Cross. If they didn't, they wouldn't go there.
One thing we can't merit at all, however, is the initial grace of conversion.
And if your sin is just covered up and not washed away, you will go to hell, because Rev 22 says nothing unclean can enter heaven.
God doesn't deal in legal fictions, and he can't be fooled into just ignoring evil.
"On the contrary, I think it is entirely that simple. What does it mean to be "elect or choosen" by God? Doesn't the meaning of this then relate back to how God looks at your sin?"
This is a difficult subject, because we are dealing with God, who does not exist within time, but sees all time now. I suppose God is able to see our response to His love, and we would be considered elect if we showed our faith in Him. The interaction of free will and grace is such that I don't think you can separate the two. I know that grace does not overpower nature (Aquinas), so we have our free will intact.
Of course, the question then is...How do you know you are of the elect? I believe we know when we analyze the fruits of our works and our faith in Christ, although we never know the final result, we can know with good certainty what our current state is.
I don't agree with Calvin's stating that we are saved by faith alone - as even the devil has faith that God exists. I note that Calvin forgets about Eph 2:10, the next verse. I think we also have to include obedience to God. It is clear from the Gospels that we are to obey God. If your definition of faith includes obedience, then we are probably on the same page in this matter.
"The answer is, by faith; and hence he concludes that nothing connected with it is our own" from Calvin
True. But when we are in Christ, we are NOT alone nor doing anything on our own. If Christ is abiding in us, our works are also His works. Paul is clear about this. See esp. Phil 2:12,13.
Regards
"If you do these things, you are hurting someone else unnecessarily. Heinlein's assertion holds true. He doesn't make any specific reference to whether something like viewing pornography is sinful or not - what he is saying is that anything can be sinful if it hurts others, nothing is if it doesn't hurt others (or yourself)."
Humans are a social animal. We don't live in a vacuum. I cannot think of an example of a person doing something that will not, however slightly, will effect others. If we interact with other people, we will carry our attitudes to them, effecting them as well. I do not see Heinlein's assertion holding true in the real world.
Regards
"As far as absolved sin, sin never goes away. You cannot un-sin. You can confess your sins (to God) and you will be forgiven and cleansed of unrighteousness, but your sin is still there. It's simply covered by the Blood of Christ, and therefore ignored by God."
That is not what Scripture says. Paul says we are transformed, we become a new creation. We are not merely "covered" over. When God says we are a new creation and have been internally changed, it has happened. There is no forensic, imputed justification. God's Word is effective and doesn't need to "ignore" sin. "as far as the east is from the west, so far have our sins been removed from us" - Psalm 103:12
You then quoted ..."For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast." - Ephesians 2:8-9
What about ..."For we are his handiwork, created in Christ Jesus for good works that God has prepared in advance, that we should live in them" - Ephesians 2:10
Why didn't you include the next verse? Were you aware of this verse?
Then you quoted ..."that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved." - Romans 10:9
And what about "For the kingdom of God is not a matter of talk but of power" - 1 Cor 4:20
or "Children, let us love not in word or speech, but in deed and truth" - 1 John 3:18
or "Why do you call me 'Lord, Lord', but do not do what I command"? - Luke 6:46
Brother, Romans 10:9,10 is a Baptismal proclamation, comparable to 1 Tim 6:12. We must profess by our words AND actions.
"What good is it, my brother, if someone says he has faith but does not have works"? James 2:14
"According to me", what you don't understand is that we must display works of love, as faith without love is useless (1 Cor 13:1). When Paul is discussing faith vs. works, he is talking about the attitude that one can "work" their way to salvation. Work demands a wage (Rom 4:4). Salvation is gratis. HOWEVER, the "work" itself is still necessary for salvation. Countless times, the Scriptures tell us that we will be judged based on what we DO. Practically every book of the NT has a verse regarding this.
It is the internal attitude that is important, brother.
If I do x and y (even if it is the greatest charitable contribution), it is meaningless if it is considered a work where God is held responsible to pay me back. Even the OT Jews knew this. No one can "buy" salvation.
But, if I love, I do x and y because I love Christ. Our motives when we are in love are different. We do things for our wives and children, for example, because we love them (hopefully), not because we are expecting something in return. We are able to do this because we are "in Christ". When I abide in Christ, we, Christ and I, are doing the action out of love. THIS has worth to God. This is what Paul and James mean. Faith and "works of Love" cannot be separated.
So if you definition of faith includes obedience to God from our love of Christ, then we can agree with "salvation by faith alone". Without this more broad definition, however, we are not following the entire Scripture and teachings of Christ.
Regards
Spontaneously developing a devotion to Mary is a good sign.
"Spontaneously developing a devotion to Mary is a good sign."
:-)
Yes, I am still on that thread, too...
Regards
Amen rdb3!
(thanks for the ping)
Protestants would make the following change:
Spontaneously developing a devotion to Mary Jesus is a good sign.
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