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Indulgences: Spreading the Wealth
Homiletic & Pastoral Review ^ | November 2000 | Dermott J. Mullan

Posted on 01/17/2006 3:55:48 PM PST by annalex

An indulgence is an action of the Church which spreads her treasure of merits to the suffering members of the family of God.

Indulgences: Spreading the wealth

By Dermott J. Mullan

I. Introduction

Indulgences have to do with how God handles evil and good. To God, sin is always horrible, but humans do not always think so. The Church’s teaching on indulgences is meant to impress on us some of God’s horror of sin. The Church says sin is never an isolated event: rather, each sin has after-effects, not only in the person who sins but also in other parts of creation. Some of these after-effects are long-lived, and cannot be removed merely by going to Confession. But another side of the Church’s teaching on indulgences is that good deeds also have after-effects. And God deals with the after-effects of evil and the after-effects of good in different ways: the after-effects of good are much longer lived than the effects of sin. These aspects of the Church’s teaching are meant to open our minds to the wonder of belonging to the growing family of God.

II. The Family of God: who are our siblings?

At a baby’s baptism, the priest invites all present to pray the Our Father together so that the child will one day learn the highest duty of the baptized, to “call on God as Father in the midst of the Church.” This phrase reminds us that all baptized people share the same Father, and we remember this most vividly at Mass. Everyone we see around us at Mass calls the same person Father: He is not just “my” Father, but “our” Father. We are all part of one family, the family of God.

Now a family is a place where we feel most at home. On major celebrations, it is Natural to come back home, to gather with parents, brothers and sisters. At times, there may also be members of other generations of the family, such as cousins, aunts, uncles, and grandparents.

The family of God also has its celebrations: every Sunday is meant to be one. But in the family of God, there are no cousins, aunts, uncles, or grandparents: as the saying goes: “God has no grand-children.” We are all are called to be brothers and sisters. We first learn this from the other people we can see at Mass. But there are also many others who are truly our brothers and sisters: they live in the next parish, the next town, etc.

However, an unusual aspect of God’s family is this: we also have brothers and sisters whom we cannot see with our natural eyes. Some are centuries older than we are. Among our older siblings, some are a lot better children of our Father than we are. On the other hand, some of our older siblings are in a lot of pain, and have been suffering for a very long time.

Admittedly, it takes a lot more thought to recognize these invisible folk as siblings than it does for the people we see at Mass in our parish Church. It is not easy for human nature to grasp that someone who died centuries ago, such as St. Thomas Aquinas or St. Catherine of Siena, can really be considered as an older brother or sister. Yet that is what they are: they really do call on God as their Father in the midst of the same Church as we do. Compared with Thomas or Catherine, we who are alive today are mere babies in the family of God (no matter how sophisticated we may feel at times.)

III. Youngsters in the family

Children who happen to be at the end of a large family know how special it can be to have older siblings. This is especially true at Christmas or on a birthday. The older sibling may be earning amounts of money which to a child seem stupendous. And whereas the child may be able to spend only a few pennies on a present for the older sibling, the latter can provide expensive presents that set the child’s eyes agog. Family life is strengthened when all members buy presents for on another, each contributing what he or she can afford.

The same thing is true in God’s family. In God’s family, it also happens that some of our siblings are fabulously wealthy in the world of grace: but others of our siblings have gotten themselves into trouble, and have been tormented by serious pain in purgatory ever since they died. Indulgences are ways that our mother the Church has devised to enable her wealthiest children to share their fortune with the younger members of God’s Family (such as we), and for us (poor though we are) to share what we can with our older suffering siblings.

Why does it matter that we have older siblings in the family of God? Because of the sins we commit. In order o understand how valuable it is to have rich older siblings, we need to think about sin and its effects.

IV. Sin and its after-effects: 3 or 4 generations

Sin is a deliberate breaking of God’s law. Pope Paul VI, in his Apostolic Constitution on the Revision of Indulgences (1967), writes: “The truth has been divinely revealed that sins are followed by punishments. God’s holiness and justice inflict them. Sins must be expiated. This must be done on this earth through the sorrows, miseries, and trials of this life and above all through death. Otherwise the expiation must be made in the next life through fire and torments or purifying punishments . . . . The reasons [for punishments] are that our souls need to be purified, the holiness of the moral order needs to be strengthened, and God’s glory must be restored to its full majesty . . . every sin upsets the universal order which God has established. Further, every sin does immense harm to the sinner himself and to the community of men.”

In the last sentence of the above quote, the Pope says that when I sin, there are two kinds of after-effects: (a) in myself, and (b) in the world around me. First, sin destroys grace in my soul, and will condemn me to eternal punishment (if the sin is mortal), and leaves me in a spiritually weakened state. Secondly, my sin creates, as it were, some real damage in God’s world: my sin creates something like a broken window in the edifice of human history which was never meant to be there. This weakness in myself, and the damage in creation, are two important after-effects of sin.

How far does the damage done by my sin spread out through creation? In the case of certain sins, the answer is obvious: drunkenness or infidelity or excessive gambling by a parent often lead to great suffering for innocent members of a family. But what about sins which have less obvious effects: how far do their effects go? God provides an answer, in startling terms: “I, the LORD, your God, am a jealous God, inflicting punishment for their father’s wickedness on the children of those who hate me, down to the third and fourth generation” (Exod. 20:5). This remarkable statement leaves no doubt as to how serious sin is in God’s eyes. God’s answer applies to all sins, even sins which seem to have no obvious effects on the innocent members of the family. It is a chilling thought that when I commit a sin, I may be condemning my children and (if I ever have any) my grand-children to serious consequences.

To remove sin and its after-effects requires several things. First, friendship with God must be restored, and amends must be made for offending his wisdom and goodness: this is done by a sincere conversion of mind in a good confession to a priest. Confession removes the guilt of sin, and also removes any condemnation to eternal punishment (if mortal sin was committed).

But what about the weakness in my soul, and the damage I did to God’s creation? How are they to be removed? Confession does not do it. Pope Paul teaches that there are two ways:

“The first is by freely making reparation, which involves punishment. The second is by accepting the punishments God’s wisdom has appointed. . . . The very fact that punishment for sin exists, and that it is so severe, make it possible for us to understand how foolish and malicious sin is, and how harmful its consequences are.”

The souls who are now in purgatory are those “who died in the charity of God, were truly repentant, but who had not made satisfaction with adequate penance for their sins and omissions.”

V. Goodness and its after-effects: 1000 generations

The necessity of doing penance for sins is apparent from the words of Our Lord:

“Unless you do penance, you shall all likewise perish” (Luke 13: 3). But how do I know when I have done adequate penance for my sins? There is no obvious measuring stick to use: could it be that God is a taskmaster who is never satisfied? If this were true, it would be a heavy burden indeed. But there is good news for us precisely because we are members of God’s family. The fact is, some of our older siblings were so aware of how their sins had offended God, whom they loved, that they willingly suffered severe penances in order to repair the damage which they had done to God’s world. The Church teaches that these saints, by means of their penances, more than compensated for the damage their own sins had done.

This has a remarkable effect on us. We have already seen how God reacts to sin, and to people who hate Him. Now we ask: how does God react to people who love Him? God’s answer to this question is clear, startling and specific: “I, the LORD, your God . . . bestow mercy down to the thousandth generation on the children of those who love me and keep my commandments” (Exod. 20:6).

This must be regarded as one of the most remarkable statements in all of Scripture.

It says with clarity that God responds to love of him very differently from the way in which he responds to sin: although sin is by no means allowed to go unpunished, nevertheless, the punishments are felt for “only” three or four generations, whereas the effects of good last “for a thousand generations,” or essentially forever. In human terms, we may say that God rewards good deeds more than he punishes sin. God never forgets a good deed done by a person who loves him. The effects of sins peter out after a few generations (or as Psalm 1 says: “the way of the wicked vanishes” ), but God does not allow the effects of good deeds ever to fade away.

Now, some of our older siblings performed good deeds during their lives. In view of Exod. 20:6, we now recognize that God is still blessing those good deeds to this very day. Far from diminishing with the passing of the years, the amount of blessings has continued to swell as God’s family expands. The older the family of God becomes, the more loving deeds are performed, and the more the blessings accumulate. it is as if a tidal wave of blessings has been growing over time, getting larger and larger with each passing generation.

VI. The family of God comes of age

Pope Paul describes the “treasury of the Church” as including “the infinite value which Our Lord’s merits have in the eyes of God our Father, as well as the prayers and good works of the Blessed Virgin Mary . . . . In the treasury too are the prayers and good works of all the saints . . . they attained their own salvation and at the same time cooperated in saving their brothers in the unity of the Mystical Body.”

Pope Paul admits that indulgences were not a widespread idea in the primitive Church. It took time for the doctrine to grow. The idea that pastors could set someone free of the after-effects of sin by applying the merits of Christ and of the saints grew up gradually in the Church over the centuries. The Church took time to realize that the after-effects of good deeds were building up as the years went on, growing like some sort of tidal wave of ever-increasing size.

If we can return to the analogy of the family, we see that this development makes sense. In a family, it takes some time before the parents can call on the older siblings to start to contribute to family life. For example, when a child reaches age 7-10, he/she can begin to help with raising the younger members and doing chores. And when he/she reaches age 15-20, financial contributions to the family become possible. Once enough time has passed, it seems natural to have the older siblings help out with the younger ones. So it was with the Church after the first few centuries went by: the blessings that God was showering on the great saints long after they themselves were dead gradually became available to the younger members of the Church.

Eventually the Popes decreed that certain works which were suitable for promoting the common good of the Church could replace all penitential practices. Then the faithful who were genuinely sorry for their sins, and had confessed them, and had done such works, were granted by God’s mercy, and trusting in His apostles’ power, the most complete forgiveness possible for their sins (Pope Paul VI).

VII. Indulgences: what and why?

Eternal punishment for mortal sin cannot be removed by indulgences: only the infinite power of Christ can do that in the soul of someone who is truly contrite. It is the non-eternal punishment that is the subject of indulgences, and here, even the non-infinite contributions of our older siblings can contribute.

An “indulgence” means taking away the after-effects of sin when the guilt is already forgiven. An indulgence is an action on the part of the Church to spread the treasury amassed by Christ and by our older siblings to the less fortunate members of the family of God.

Why does the Church want us to gain indulgences? First, they help us to expiate our sins. Second, they encourage us to do works of piety, penitence, and charity. Third, when we gain an indulgence, we are admitting that by our own power, we cannot adequately remedy the harm we have done to ourselves or to God’s world by our sins. Finally, indulgences remind us of the enormous liberality which God gives to those who love him: we can honestly say that we are taking advantage of blessings which God is still pouring out on people who loved him centuries ago. Indulgences make me truly feel like a member of the Church.

VIII. Pennies from the youngsters: the holy souls.

Indulgences show how closely knit we are as the family of God. They remind us of the good lives which our older siblings lived. And although these older siblings are much richer than we will ever be, nevertheless, the doctrine of indulgences does not by any means sneer at the little we can contribute. What we have to offer may seem like pennies compared with what the giants of the Church have contributed. Just as in a human family, the youngest members cannot come u with much spending money when they want to but Christmas presents: but family spirit is built up when even these youngest members contribute what they can. So it is in the Church: we who are alive today, the youngsters in the family of God, can gain indulgences to help the holy souls, our suffering brothers in purgatory. When we do this, we are practicing charity in what Pope Paul calls “an outstanding way.”

IX. Plenary and partial indulgences

Certain pious exercises carry with them indulgences which have the effect that ALL of the after-effects of sin are removed. These are called plenary (or complete) indulgences. Other indulgences remove only some of the after-effects: these are called partial indulgences. In older prayer books, you may see a period of time attached to certain prayers: this meant that the indulgence was only partial. The time period meant that if I say that prayer, the after-effects of my sin are removed to the same extent and they would have been if I had endured one of the penances of the early Church for that length of time. However, Pope Paul in 1967, in his role as chief dispenser of the treasury of the Church, decreed that no time intervals would any longer be assigned to partial indulgences.

Plenary indulgences can be gained in several ways. For example, by spending at least one half-hour in adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, or in reading the Scriptures with the veneration due the Divine Word; reciting the Rosary in a church with pious meditation on the mysteries; praying the Stations of the Cross. These indulgences are available at all times of the year. Certain practices carry plenary indulgences only at certain times of the year. For example, each day from November 1 to November 8, a plenary indulgence applicable only to the souls in Purgatory is granted to the faithful who devoutly visit a cemetery and pray for the dead. On All Souls Day, a plenary indulgence, also applicable only to the souls in purgatory, is granted to the faithful who piously visit a Church and recite one Our Father and the Creed. Other feasts of the Church on which plenary indulgences can be obtained include the Sacred Heart, Christ the King, Pentecost, Lenten Fridays, and the Easter Vigil.

X. Conditions for gaining indulgences

While it is true that indulgences are gifts to those of us who are members of Christ’s Catholic Church, there are certain conditions for gaining them. To gain a plenary indulgence, the indulgenced practice must be performed, and the following conditions must be fulfilled: (i) sacramental confession; (ii) Eucharistic communion; (iii) prayer for the Pope’s intentions (Our Father and one Hail Mary). Further, it is necessary to be free from all attachment to any sin at all, even venial sin.

Why should we pray for the Pope’s intentions? Because we have access to indulgences through the generosity of the Church, of which the Pope is the visible head on earth.

The three conditions may be fulfilled several days before or after the indulgenced work has been performed. One sacramental confession suffices to gain several plenary indulgences. But for each plenary indulgence, communion must be received, and prayers for the Pope’s intentions must be said.

No more than one plenary indulgence can be gained in one day, except on the day of death.


Dr. Dermott J. Mullan is a Professor at the University of Delaware where he does research on magnetic fields in stars. Born and raised in Northern Ireland, he first came to the USA to study for his Ph. D. He met his wife at the Newman Center at the University of Maryland. They now have ten children, ranging in age from 10 to 29. This is his first article in HPR.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Ecumenism; Theology
KEYWORDS: atonement; communion; communionofsaints; error; indulgences; manmade; merit; mistakes; reformation; saints; treasureofmerits
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To: F16Fighter


Go to bed...lol.


41 posted on 01/18/2006 8:36:54 PM PST by onyx (Merry Christmas everybody.)
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To: PetroniusMaximus
"Purgatory translates into a "second chance" for Catholics who think that if they don't pursue holiness and righteousness in this world they can deal with it in the next."

Totally contrived, but the reasons why are clear.

42 posted on 01/18/2006 8:37:45 PM PST by F16Fighter
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To: onyx

Hey Yooooo!


43 posted on 01/18/2006 8:38:30 PM PST by F16Fighter
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To: F16Fighter

:)

Right back atcha. Happy New Year.

44 posted on 01/18/2006 8:39:37 PM PST by onyx (Merry Christmas everybody.)
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To: PetroniusMaximus
"Why are you trying to pay for somethiong that is freely offered???"

OUCH. That's gonna leave a mark.

45 posted on 01/18/2006 8:40:24 PM PST by F16Fighter
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To: PetroniusMaximus
Why are you trying to pay for somethiong that is freely offered???

You are really making noise when you could have read the article and figured all that for yourself, if you are so inclined. It is not that difficult. Look for passages that explain the difference between forgiveness of sin (atoned by Christ) and removal of after-effects of sin (not done by Christ).

Then reflect on Matthew 18:21-34 where payment for after-effects of sin is commanded.

46 posted on 01/18/2006 9:21:15 PM PST by annalex
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To: F16Fighter
Just how do you think they amassed this priceless fortune?

Generosity from the faithful and great patrons. In a lot of places, churches and schools were built incurring great monetary debts that took decades to pay off. And then there is the maintenance. The parish that I belong to happens to be the cathedral of my archdiocese. Cleaning the ceiling - a series of masterpiece mosiacs installed over 61 years - costs about $500K to clean. Fortunately, that doesn't have to happen very often, but soot from candles does have to be cleaned off.

Where does the cash come from? We all write checks. we have a development department (incidentally the current practices in the world of development were formulated by one Joseph Cardinal Ritter) that raises money constantly for these purposes.

Incidentally, there was a recent article posted here on the Vatican archives and told of all the letters from the great Renaissance masters who were working on St. Peter's and in other places in the Vatican to the wealthy patrons asking for cash to keep projects going. All of those collections are kept in trust for future generations to be inspired and see what great passion gives the world.

47 posted on 01/19/2006 5:31:38 AM PST by Desdemona (Music Librarian and provider of cucumber sandwiches, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary. Hats required.)
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To: F16Fighter
Now if you could only share in Cathenglish the secret "authentic" source of such a revelation.

A Jewish book which is in the Catholic Bible called Maccabbees. These are the people who give our Jewish friends Channakah.

BTW, if you know Handel's Messiah, the seventh movement "He Shall Purify" speaks to it, as well as the alto air about the refiner's fire.

48 posted on 01/19/2006 5:35:28 AM PST by Desdemona (Music Librarian and provider of cucumber sandwiches, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary. Hats required.)
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To: F16Fighter; PetroniusMaximus
Other things not mentioned in the bible: trinity, salvation by faith alone, revelation only contained in Scripture, denominationalism, etc.

Purgatory is clearly illuminated in Scripture as are indulgences. Your unwillingness or inability to see what is present is more a function of your Protestant perspective than scriptural content.

49 posted on 01/19/2006 6:00:26 AM PST by conservonator (Pray for those suffering)
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To: PetroniusMaximus
Purgatory translates into a "second chance" for Catholics who think that if they don't pursue holiness and righteousness in this world they can deal with it in the next. In reality these people are more than likely lost - i.e. spiritually unconverted and Purgatory is they lie that lulls them into a waiting hell.

Really, I expected better of you than this little gem. You know very well that there is no "second chance" after death and if you read scripture you would know that nothing unclean can enter heaven. Purgatory is for the saved and the saved alone, it is made possible only because of the salvific work of the Lord. The damned dream of purgatory.

50 posted on 01/19/2006 6:05:19 AM PST by conservonator (Pray for those suffering)
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To: Desdemona; F16Fighter

"BTW, if you know Handel's Messiah, the seventh movement "He Shall Purify" speaks to it, as well as the alto air about the refiner's fire."

That purification is to occure NOW - in this life!

Matthew 3:11
... he that cometh after me is mightier than I, whose shoes I am not worthy to bear: he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost, and with fire:"

1 Peter 1:7
That the trial of your faith, being much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ:




Knowing God MEANS being put in the fire because if you align with His cause the world will naturally hate you. Additionlly, in the light of His holiness you will soon come to hate yourself!

Hebrews 12:29
For our God is a consuming fire.



Even Paul makes it clear that our suffering is only for the present time!

Romans 8:18
For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.


51 posted on 01/19/2006 6:14:52 AM PST by PetroniusMaximus
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To: PetroniusMaximus

You've made up your mind not to investigate anything we have related. This volleying ends for me here.


52 posted on 01/19/2006 6:18:42 AM PST by Desdemona (Music Librarian and provider of cucumber sandwiches, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary. Hats required.)
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To: conservonator; F16Fighter

Purgatory is poius fiction. It is no where mentioned in the Scripture.

"Heaven" refered to 277 times
"Hell" is refered to 162 times

"Purgatory" is never mentioned. You claim it is alluded to. Why would Jesus and the Apostles only "allude" to something so important - while they clearly taught us of the reality of the existence of Heaven and Hell?


53 posted on 01/19/2006 6:22:55 AM PST by PetroniusMaximus
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To: Desdemona

"You've made up your mind not to investigate anything we have related"

Now how do you know that?

I have researched to verses Catholics claim as basis for their belief and found them to be unconvincing. I am willing to look at more if you have them.


54 posted on 01/19/2006 6:26:50 AM PST by PetroniusMaximus
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To: PetroniusMaximus
"Purgatory" is never mentioned. You claim it is alluded to. Why would Jesus and the Apostles only "allude" to something so important - while they clearly taught us of the reality of the existence of Heaven and Hell?

PM, coming from someone who believes in the pious fiction of sola scriptura, I have to smile and shake my head.

55 posted on 01/19/2006 6:27:52 AM PST by conservonator (Pray for those suffering)
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To: conservonator; F16Fighter

"Other things not mentioned in the bible: trinity,"

Matthew 28:19
Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:



"salvation by faith alone,"

Ephesians 2:8
For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:

Luke 7:50
And he said to the woman, Thy faith hath saved thee; go in peace.


"revelation only contained in Scripture"

We don't contend that.

Psalm 19:1
The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork.



"denominationalism"

I Cor 11
"I hear that there are divisions among you. And I believe it in part, for there must be factions among you in order that those who are genuine among you may be recognized. "


56 posted on 01/19/2006 6:36:47 AM PST by PetroniusMaximus
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To: conservonator

"PM, coming from someone who believes in the pious fiction of sola scriptura, I have to smile and shake my head."

Sola Scriptura, meaning the Scripture contains all that one needs to be saved adn live a life pleasing to God is definitely contained in the Scriptures. Do you want to see?

:)


57 posted on 01/19/2006 6:41:26 AM PST by PetroniusMaximus
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To: PetroniusMaximus
Tremendous postings, PM. Backed up by scripture with NO room for ambiguity.

Indeed "Sola Scriptura" -- ONLY the Word of God can be trusted.

58 posted on 01/19/2006 7:22:15 AM PST by F16Fighter
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To: PetroniusMaximus
PM you're proving my point: explicit references are not required for reality of a dogma, that has been a fact of Christianity since its inception. The word "Trinity" is nowhere found in scripture but the concept the reality of it is. The same can be said of purgatory. Now this begs the question; who's interpretation's right? I think we've been over that ground before ;)
59 posted on 01/19/2006 8:08:08 AM PST by conservonator (Pray for those suffering)
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To: F16Fighter

"by letter or word of mouth" Sola Christian revelation, not sola scriptura.


60 posted on 01/19/2006 8:09:53 AM PST by conservonator (Pray for those suffering)
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