ORIGINAL SIN
                        by Fr. William Most

The Decree on Ecumenism of Vatican II, in #7 says: ". . . if any
things -- whether in morals or in ecclesiastical discipline, or even
in the way of expressing doctrine-- to be carefully distinguished
from the deposit of faith- have been kept less accurately, at the
suitable time they should be restored in the right order and form."
Paul VII followed up with Mysterium Fidei, of Sept 3, 1965: "The rule
of speaking which the Church in the course of long ages, not without
the protection of the Holy Spirit, has introduced.
. . must be kept sacred, and no one at his own whim or pretext of new 
knowledge may presume to change them.
 
In brief: Let us improve the language and presentation where needed,
without saying the content was erroneous.
 
This is especially the case with original sin. The older way of
speaking, especially under Augustinian influence, have spoken of a
stain of sin - though a spirit cannot take on any stain - have said
our nature was wounded, our mind darkened, and our will weakened. And
it was said it was transmitted by inheritance. 
 
Pope John Paul II has done remarkably in improving that language. In
a General Audience of Oct 1, 1986: "In context, it is evident that
original sin in Adam's descendants has not the character of personal
guilt. It is the privation of sanctifying grace. . . . It is a 'sin
of nature' only analogically comparable to 'personal sin.'" Then in
Audience of Oct 8: ". . .  according to Church's teaching, it is a
case of a relative and not an absolute deterioration, not intrinsic
to the human faculties. . . . not of a loss of their essential
capacities even in relation to the knowledge and love of God." 
 
Adam and Eve had three kinds of gifts: 1 basic humanity, which
included many drives in both body and spirit, none of them evil in
itself, but able to get out of line since each operated independently
of the others, without regard for needs of other drives. So without
mortification to tame them, they could get out of order. 2) God gave
them a gift to make it easy to keep them in order, a coordinating
gift, sometimes called the gift of integrity. We see this after the
fall, when God called: Adam where are you?--I hid myself, for I was
naked-- How did you find that out if you did not eat the forbidden
fruit?" That is, before the fall he wore nothing, and the same after.
But before it did not bother him, for he had the coordinating gift.
After losing it, he saw his lower nature becoming rambunctious,
getting out of line, so he hid himself. 3) the gift of grace. 
 
By sin, Adam and Eve threw away the 2nd and 3rd kinds. So we could
not inherit what they no longer had. But those extras were not owed
to us, nor needed for final salvation; so it is like a parent who
might lose a million on horse racing. He could not transmit it. But
the children could not say: We are robbed. No, just that father was
foolish.
 
So since original sin in us is just a privation, not anything
positive, it would be more accurate to say about heredity that there
is a non-transmission of grace and coordinating gift. 
 
Is our nature wounded etc?. Not at all said John Paul II. It is only
a relative loss, not an absolute loss. An absolute loss would mean as
it were a piece taken out of our powers. But there is no piece taken
out. It is only relative, relative to what we might have had. 
 
Without that coordinating gift, the lower drives can get out of
order, and will, if we do not use mortification. If they are out of
order, the emotions tend to cloud our minds - and so it is
"darkened"- and that tends to pull on our will, from the mental lack
of perception.
 
Could God have sent the whole race to hell for just original sin? By
no means, that would be blasphemy to say it. Pius IX in Quanto
conficiamur moerore of August 10, 1863: "God in His supreme goodness
and clemency, by no means allows anyone to be punished with eternal
punishments who does not have the guilt of voluntary fault." But
original sin in us is not voluntary - so no hell for original sin
alone. What of the text of the Council of Florence which said (DS
1306, DB 693): "The souls of those who depart in actual mortal sin,
or in original sin only, descend into the realm of the dead
(infernum) however they are to be punished with different penalties."
 
Latin poena need not mean infliction of pain: can mean lack of
something. If an unbaptized infant dies in original sin - good
question: does it happen? more on this later -- then it has a penalty
in not getting the vision of God. But it has no suffering. Cf. the
words of Pius IX above, and St. Thomas, De malo, q. 5 a 3 ad 4: "The
infants are separated from God perpetually, in regard to the loss of
glory, which they do not know about, but not in regard to
participation in natural goods, which they do know. . .
. That which they have through nature, they possess without pain." 
 
So there is "poena" in a loss, but one that causes no suffering nor
do they even know they have lost it. After the resurrection they
could be with the risen bodies of their parents who would have the
vision of God in their souls, but not in their bodies. The infants
would not have to know what is in the souls of the parents. 
	 
But do they actually die in original sin? We raise this question. The
new catechism says we should have good hope. In 1261 it quotes Jesus:
"let the little children come to me, and do not prevent them" and
adds: "[this] permits us to have hope that there is away to salvation
for infants who die without Baptism." 
 
Many theological attempts have been made in our time to find such a
way.  Let us offer something a bit new here: First, as St. Thomas
said (III. 68.2.c : "His [God's] hands are not tied by [or:to] the
Sacraments".
 
Theologians commonly hold that God provided for the salvation of
those who died before Christ in some way. Girls of course were not
circumcised, cf.  III. 70.4.C: "By circumcision there was given to
boys the power to come to glory." It was enough to belong to the
people of God. In a similar way, St.  Paul says (1 Cor 7:14 that the
unbelieving mate in a marriage of a Christian and a pagan is
consecrated or made holy through union with the Christian who does
come under the Covenant: "Otherwise your children would be unclean,
but as it is, they are holy" So they are holy precisely by belonging
to a family with even one party Christian. Paul does not at this
point mention Baptism as the reason for their status - he speaks of
the mere fact that they belong to a family with one Christian parent.
(The word holy seems to reflect Hebrew qadosh which does not mean
high moral perfection, but coming under the covenant . Similarly the
Jews believed that merely belonging to the People of God insured
their salvation, unless they positively ruled themselves out by the
gravest sins: cf. Genesis Rabbah 48. 7: "In the world to come,
Abraham will sit on the doormat of Gehinnom and will not allow a
circumcised Jew to enter." and Sanhedrin 10. 1:"All Israel has a
share in the age to come." The latter text adds that there are three
groups who do not have a share: those who deny the resurrection,
those who deny the Law is from heaven, and Epicureans (Cf. E.P.
Sanders Paul and Palestinian Judaism pp. 147-82.
 
St. Paul insists in Romans 3:28-20 that if God had not provided for
those who did not know the Law, He would not be their God. So He must
have provided, and He did it through the means of faith. Could we
argue that if God makes no provision for unbaptized infants, He would
not act as their God?  It seems yes. 
 
Further, St. Paul insists many times over (Romans 5:15-17 that the
redemption is superabundant, more so than the fall. But since God did
provide for infants before Christ, if He did not do so after Christ,
the redemption would not be superabundant, it would be a hellish
liability for infants and millions of others. Really, Feeney and
those of his followers who insist that God sends unbaptized babies to
hell - along with countless millions of others who never had a chance
to hear of the Church - they make God incredibly harsh, even a
monster. God is not a monster, a God of that description could not
exist as a God at all. So logically Feenyism calls for atheism. And
in the parable of the talents (Lk 19:22 when the one servant told his
master he hid the talent since he knew the master was harsh, the
Master replied that he would judge the servant according to his own
evidence. Since he thought the master was harsh, He would be harsh. 
 
Also, God shows great concern for the objective moral order (cf. the
appendix on sedaqah in my commentary on St. Paul). There is some
reason to think He has also great concern for the objective physical
order. Thus in the parable of the rich man and Lazarus, Abraham
explains (Lk 16:24): "Remember that you in your lifetime received
good things, and Lazarus in like manner evil things; but now he is
comforted here, and you are in anguish." There was no mention of sins
on the part of the rich man or virtue in the poor man, just the
reversal of the objective physical order. Similarly in the series of
four woes in the Great Discourse (Luke 6:24-16), there is a reversal
for those who were rich, for those who were full, for those who could
laugh, for those who were well spoken of. There is, again, no mention
of moral virtue, just of reversal of the objective physical order.
Also, in the account of the Last Judgement (Mt 25:31-46) the excuse
of those on the left that they did not know they did not help the
Judge is not accepted.
 
So could it be then that God decides: These infants according to my
plan should have had many goods things in life. They were deprived of
all - and in the case of abortion, were cut to pieces savagely - so
now there should be a reversal. 
 
 
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