Odë:hgöd
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2020
- Messages
- 1,538
- Age
- 80
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
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One of the Church's earliest official proclamations regarding a purgatory was Pope
Leo X's Bull of Exsurge Domine. In the year 1520 he stated, along with some other
things, that death is the termination not of nature but of sin, and this inability to sin
makes [purgatorial souls] secure of final happiness.
In other words: according to Leo X, the occupants of a purgatory are unable to sin;
consequently they won't commit any new sins while undergoing discipline and
purification.
It's essential that souls in a purgatory to be incapable of sinning, because if they
weren't, then Rome’s promise in CCC 1030 of an assured eternal salvation for
purgatorians would be a tenuous guarantee indeed since each new sin committed
while interred there would add time to the penitent’s original sentence; with the
very real possibility of potentially snow-balling to the point where they would never
be released.
If Pope Leo X's Bull of Exsurge Domine is correct as regards the absence of sin in
purgatory then I would have to conclude that it's a very peaceful place seeing as
how everyone in residence there would be complying with the entire Sermon On
The Mount including all the Beatitudes.
Most Catholics regard purgatory as a safety net whence they will be taken in the
event they fail to sufficiently measure up to God's standards. However, purgatory is
not all that easy to attain. According to CCC 1035, Catholics are always just inches
from the worst.
Should it happen that they leave this life with just one un-absolved mortal sin on
the books, just one, they go directly to Hell; no stop-over in a half-way house. No,
their trip is a direct flight. Even if they've been a faithful Catholic for 49 years, they
will miss the boat just as if they had been a Hindu, or a Muslim, or an atheist. All
their years as a faithful Catholic will be stricken from the record and count for
naught.
_
One of the Church's earliest official proclamations regarding a purgatory was Pope
Leo X's Bull of Exsurge Domine. In the year 1520 he stated, along with some other
things, that death is the termination not of nature but of sin, and this inability to sin
makes [purgatorial souls] secure of final happiness.
In other words: according to Leo X, the occupants of a purgatory are unable to sin;
consequently they won't commit any new sins while undergoing discipline and
purification.
It's essential that souls in a purgatory to be incapable of sinning, because if they
weren't, then Rome’s promise in CCC 1030 of an assured eternal salvation for
purgatorians would be a tenuous guarantee indeed since each new sin committed
while interred there would add time to the penitent’s original sentence; with the
very real possibility of potentially snow-balling to the point where they would never
be released.
If Pope Leo X's Bull of Exsurge Domine is correct as regards the absence of sin in
purgatory then I would have to conclude that it's a very peaceful place seeing as
how everyone in residence there would be complying with the entire Sermon On
The Mount including all the Beatitudes.
Most Catholics regard purgatory as a safety net whence they will be taken in the
event they fail to sufficiently measure up to God's standards. However, purgatory is
not all that easy to attain. According to CCC 1035, Catholics are always just inches
from the worst.
Should it happen that they leave this life with just one un-absolved mortal sin on
the books, just one, they go directly to Hell; no stop-over in a half-way house. No,
their trip is a direct flight. Even if they've been a faithful Catholic for 49 years, they
will miss the boat just as if they had been a Hindu, or a Muslim, or an atheist. All
their years as a faithful Catholic will be stricken from the record and count for
naught.
_
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