Difference between revisions of "Sin"

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:"Our great dignity is that of all the creatures and living things on this planet, we alone are free. God sets before us each and every day life and death. We can chose the life of His Light. Or we can chose the death of our many false gods and self gods." -- Rebecca Hamilton, Christianity: The Religion of Life, Patheos.com, August 25, 2014, [http://www.patheos.com/blogs/publiccatholic/2014/08/christianity-the-religion-of-life/]
 
:"Our great dignity is that of all the creatures and living things on this planet, we alone are free. God sets before us each and every day life and death. We can chose the life of His Light. Or we can chose the death of our many false gods and self gods." -- Rebecca Hamilton, Christianity: The Religion of Life, Patheos.com, August 25, 2014, [http://www.patheos.com/blogs/publiccatholic/2014/08/christianity-the-religion-of-life/]
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===Evil Thoughts===
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:"'Out of the heart,' [Jesus said], 'come evil thoughts.' Therefore the soul or principle of action is not in the brain according to Plato but in the heart according to Christ. On this point, those who believe that thoughts are introduced by the devil and do not originate from our own will are to be repudiated. The devil can aid and abet evil thoughts but he cannot originate them, even though, ever lying in wait, he kindles a small spark of our thoughts with his tinder. We must not hold the opinion that the devil can also probe the depths of our heart. However, he can judge from our demeanor and gestures what we are thinking about. For example, if he sees us gazing often at a beautiful woman, he surmises that our heart has been wounded with the dart of love." -- St. Jerome

Revision as of 14:08, 24 April 2015

What is Sin?

"[S]in ultimately means the misuse of our energies resulting in alienation from God, from others and, sometimes, from our own selves." -- Archbishop Lazar Puhalo, Neurobiology of Sin.


Sin as a Sickness

"...alas for the soul that is unaware of its wounds and that in its endless sinfulness and obduracy does not think it has anything evil within it: the good doctor will not visit it or heal it, since it does not seek Him out or have any concern for its wounds, because it thinks it is well and in good health. As the Lord said: 'It is not the healthy that need a doctor, but the sick' (Mt. 9:12)." -- St. Makarios of Egypt


Darkness, Freedom

"That is our darkness. It is the darkness of freedom that runs so frantic that it becomes a prison. We are, and we have always been, free. We are not spiders who spin the same web from one generation of spiders to the next. We are free. We can create. We can destroy. We can reject this Other, this God Who calls us but will not force us to love Him. We can even create alter-gods of our own devising, bastardized versions of the real God in whom we attempt to deify our deepest darkness." -- Rebecca Hamilton, Christianity: The Religion of Life, Patheos.com, August 25, 2014, [1]
"Our great dignity is that of all the creatures and living things on this planet, we alone are free. God sets before us each and every day life and death. We can chose the life of His Light. Or we can chose the death of our many false gods and self gods." -- Rebecca Hamilton, Christianity: The Religion of Life, Patheos.com, August 25, 2014, [2]


Evil Thoughts

"'Out of the heart,' [Jesus said], 'come evil thoughts.' Therefore the soul or principle of action is not in the brain according to Plato but in the heart according to Christ. On this point, those who believe that thoughts are introduced by the devil and do not originate from our own will are to be repudiated. The devil can aid and abet evil thoughts but he cannot originate them, even though, ever lying in wait, he kindles a small spark of our thoughts with his tinder. We must not hold the opinion that the devil can also probe the depths of our heart. However, he can judge from our demeanor and gestures what we are thinking about. For example, if he sees us gazing often at a beautiful woman, he surmises that our heart has been wounded with the dart of love." -- St. Jerome