Catholic hamartiology is a branch of Catholic thought that studies sin. According to the Catholic Church, sin is an "utterance, deed, or desire,"[1] caused by concupiscence,[2] that offends God, reason, truth, and conscience.[3] The church believes sin is the greatest evil and has the worst consequences for the sinner (original sin and damnation), the world (human misery and environmental destruction), and the Catholic Church itself (Passion of Jesus and wounds to the church's unity).[4] Based on the Bible, the Catholic Church distinguishes between two kinds of sins: mortal sin and venial sin.[5] The Catholic Church also distinguishes between the state of being in original sin and the commission of actual sin.[6]
The reality of sin is one of the arguments of divine revelation, e.g., sin is present in history[7] and divine revelation sheds light on it.[8]
Sin is an "utterance, deed, or desire" that offends God, reason, truth, and conscience. It is caused by concupiscence. Sin is the greatest evil and has the worst consequences for the sinner, the world, and the church.[9]
Without divine revelation, sin can be misconstrued as "a developmental flaw, a psychological weakness, a mistake, or the necessary consequence of an inadequate social structure, etc."[10]
God, in his goodness, only wills good.[11] He permits evil for the sake of a greater good.[12]
This is evidenced by the Paschal mystery: God permitted his Son to suffer and die for the sake of mankind's redemption.[13]
Angels and humans are capable of committing sin because, unlike every other creature, they have free-will.[14]
No creature is predestined to commit sin or go to hell.[15]
The angels and first humans underwent a test of love of God at the beginning of time; some angels sinned and became demons, then tempted the first humans to sin as well.[16]
By falling from heaven, demons gave rise to the existence of hell.[17]
Out of envy, demons tempt humans to commit sin.[18]
Every human who sins is an author and minister of the Passion of Jesus.[19]
The reign or regime of sin in the world is not arbitrary or a conspiracy; rather, it is each person's struggle against his or her own concupiscence.[20]
The regime of sin causes disorder, which can be "more or less overcome according to the circumstances of cultures, eras, and individuals."[21]
Sin's reign is temporary, beginning with the fall of the angels and ending in definitive defeat with the crucifixion of Jesus.[22] Every human can share in Jesus' eternal reign on the wood of the cross via the sacraments.[23] At the end of the world, sin will no longer exist nor be possible ever again, because Jesus' eternal reign will then be absolute:[24] he will be everything to everyone,[25] i.e., fulfill everyone's every desire.[26]
Actual sin is the commitment of a sin. The first actual sin in history caused humanity to lose the state of original holiness, which included sanctifying grace.
After the fall, every human—apart from the Immaculate Conception—is now conceived in the state of original sin.[27]
There are two types of actual sin: mortal and venial.[28]
Mortal sin is a deliberate sin of grave matter, such as murder.[29]
Mortal sin entails eternal punishment since it destroys sanctifying grace.[30]
The church does not have a full list of every possible sin. However, the Catechism of the Catholic Church does list certain offenses against the Ten Commandments that constitute grave matter.[31] They include:
There are five mortal sins that cry to heaven for justice: the blood of Abel, the sin of the Sodomites, the cry of the Jews oppressed in Egypt, injustice to the wage earner, and the cry of the foreigner, widow, and orphan.[42]
Feelings, passions, pathological desires (such as the psychological wounds of child abuse), or external pressures (such as the threat of death) can diminish the voluntary and free character of a mortal sin. Unintentional ignorance, such as not knowing the gospel, can diminish or even remove the imputability of a mortal sin.[43]
Sins committing through malice—or deliberate choice of evil—is the gravest.[44]
The eternal sin—blasphemy against the Holy Spirit—is the mortal sin of final impenitence, e.g., dying unrepentant, which cannot be forgiven precisely because the sinner refuses to accept forgiveness.[45]
Venial sin is a deliberate sin of non-grave matter, such as a white lie, or an accidental sin of grave matter, such as an accidental killing.[46]
Venial sin entails temporary punishment since it weakens the theological virtue of charity.[47]
A vice is when one is in the habit of committing sin. While it does not deprive someone of sanctifying grace, friendship with God, charity, and eternal happiness, it still opposes virtue.
There are seven capital vices, commonly mistakenly referred to as the seven deadly sins. They are called "capital vices" because these vices engender sin: pride, avarice, envy, wrath, lust, gluttony, and acedia.[48]
The catechism condemns "[e]every form of social or cultural discrimination in fundamental personal rights on the grounds of sex, race, color, social conditions, language, or religion."[49]
The church does not see its inability to ordain women as discrimination on the grounds of sex, since Jesus himself only ordained men[50] and since there is no right to holy orders.[51]
Pope John Paul II made many apologies for the church's sins—including against women, Jews, victims of the Inquisition, and Muslims—throughout its history.[52] Pope Benedict XVI apologized for the clerical sex abuse scandal.[53]
Participating in another's sin is grave matter according to the Eighth Commandment. One participates in sin by flattery, adulation, or complaisance;[54] by taking part in the sin; by ordering, advising, or approving of sin; by not disclosing or hindering sin; or by protecting evildoers.[55]
Only God forgives sins[56] because forgiving sins is the height of omnipotence[57] and forgiveness is the greatest of God's deeds.[58]
God is not bound by spacetime or the church, so those who have no access to the sacraments can still receive divine mercy.[59]
The only prerequisite for forgiveness is contrition[60] (also called repentance[61]), however this does not include original sin.[62] While necessary for forgiveness, repentance is nonetheless impossible after death.[63]
The sacrament of baptism forgives all sins and original sin and grants sanctifying grace,[64] the sacrament of confession forgives all sins and restores sanctifying grace,[65] and the sacrament of the Eucharist forgives all venial sins and augments sanctifying grace.[66]
Perfect contrition outside confession grants forgiveness of all sins, so long as one resolves to go to confession as soon as possible[67]—or would have, had one not been ignorant of Jesus and his church.[68]
God hears the prayers of and is close to the contrite,[69] and the church holds sinners to her bosom.[70]
While the souls of Purgatory are undergoing temporary punishment for their sins, Catholics can remit their punishment by obtaining indulgences for them.[71]
Impeccability—to be holy or sinless—is an attribute of God, since he is absolutely perfect.[72] Impeccability is partially shared in by Christians, because they partake of God's nature,[73] and completely shared in by the angels and saints, because they experience the beatific vision.[74]
These beliefs are condemned by the Catholic Church as heresies.
Manichaeism is the belief that good and evil are equal forces and that matter is evil.[75]
Donatism is the belief that sinners should not be reconciled to the church, since only saints belong to the church.[76]
Messalians believe that Christians can do whatever they want.[77]
Pelagianism is the belief that humans can choose good over evil without divine grace.[78]
Jansenism is the belief that imperfect contrition is insufficient for a Christian receiving the Eucharist.[79]
It is commonly believed that Judas Iscariot, who betrayed Jesus before repenting of betrayal and committing suicide, is in hell, since the Bible calls him a "son of perdition."[80] Regarding Judas' suicide, Pope Benedict XVI taught that "it is not up to us to judge his gesture, substituting ourselves for the infinitely merciful and just God."[81]
The seven capital virtues are virtues that are said to oppose the seven capital vices. They include: humility, charity, kindness, patience, chastity, temperance, and diligence.[82]
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