II.- BEING SORRY FOR OUR SINS AND SEEKING RECONCILIATION
1.- The guilt
feeling.
Doing something wrong creates a disorder, an impurity, a break, a
mistake or an infidelity and therefore provokes a bad feeling and the
desire to straighten the wrong. The guilt feeling is a logical and
natural consequence of a wrong doing, like the pain or the fever in a
body’s dysfunction. It motivates us to seek remedy and healing.
Rejecting guilt feelings would deprive us from a beneficial signal
towards inner straightening.
Nonetheless, guilt
feelings can be excessive and harmful. Behind all guilt feelings there
is anxiety and fear of losing something precious, of being punished.
What makes us suffer is not the wrong we have done but the ill
consequences which derive from it. Since guilt feelings are
something almost mechanical, purification too is obtained as an effect
of an scrupulously-well-done rite rather than by the willful intent.
Guilt feelings are proportional to the moral gravity of the
wrong-doing and reconciliation is also achieved in a magical way, by
cathartic and purifying rites which put to silence, more or less
successfully, the bad feeling. Since pardon is automatically obtained
by the magic power of that action what maters is the careful
performance of some prescribed ritual.
Guilt feelings can
also be caused by narcissism, when the wrong action destroys the ideal
image we have of ourselves. We might have invested long and painful
efforts in order to build our self-image. Confronted with our
“unbecoming” behavior we feel disgusted and ashamed. We judge
ourselves harder than others do. We are deeply frustrated by our
inability to achieve the goals we have hoped for, and to behave up to
the trust and expectations of our family and friends. Therefore, at
the root of our guilt feelings there is a selfishness, fostered by the
wishful traits of our self-ideal. Failure is painful not because the
welfare of many is at risk, but simply because our self-image has been
damaged, our self-esteem humiliated. The inner thrust is sterile when
our energy is invested in achieving a “perfection” which, by the way,
is poor in Christian meaning because is not oriented to service and
gift of self.
Furthermore, in this case religious practice is
inspired by the same narcissism. God is like a means to achieve the
goals which are out of our reach. Thus the careful assessment of
progress or regression and the sad feeling of discouragement when our
efforts prove to be useless. Or even worse, a pharisaic feeling of
contentment if we think to have finally reached our programmed
perfection. In both cases, the reason for sadness or joy is a
narcissistic perfectionism. What really matters is our own self-image
and reputation.
However, the price for this selfish outlook is always
high: a “guilt feeling”, because we are never fully satisfied by our
achievements. Remorse is a constant companion: wishing that some
wrong-doings had never happened, hoping to be different, suffering
because of some past events nobody can erase. Remorse is a useless cry
without comfort because what has happen is irremediable. Remorse is a
request for help lost in the night, because there is no hope. The
future is caught in the past, like a wall. The circle is closed around
the person worried only about herself.
2.- The Christian
meaning of repentance and conversion.
The Christian grace of repentance presupposes some degree of
psychological maturity. Our wrong-doing is seen as hurting our
relationship with God and with our brothers and sisters. We see evil
in relationship to “the other”. We see evil as it is, without excuses
or condemnations. There has been a hurt, personal and communal, and we
feel sad about it.
When we repent for
the evil we have done we do not pretend to suppress all the negative
feelings that will evidently appear, or try to recover the peace of a
good conscience. We don’t even look, first of all, for a new
beginning, a renewed behavior. Our only desire is restoring the broken
friendship, renewing the commitment, mending the damage we have
caused. We do not suffer for our own imperfection, though it hurts
being confronted with it. What matters is the breaking of our
relationship with the Lord and the damage brought to our friends and
brothers. Forgiveness is precious, not for the evils we are spared off
– punishment, shame, condemnation –, but because of the renewed
friendship and communion.
Thus, a true
awareness of sin does not look backwards, as the guilt feelings do, to
make sure we have performed everything needed to be pardoned. We are
sure that we have been forgiven, because we have offered to God, to
the Church and to our brothers a sincere word of repentance. From now
on a new future of hope and glory is open in front of us. We do not
pretend that the past has not happened. Repentance and conversion look
towards the future; our whole life is readjusted, including a
deplorable past, toward a new future.
3.- False images of God and wrong religious emphasis
Even the most
balanced and mature Christian is not exempt from some false images of
God and wrong spiritual emphasis;
§
seeing
God as a judge always attentive to even the smallest wrong
doing in thought, word or action. Nobody can get away from His
control. Some persons can become obsessed by God eyes day and night
upon them,
§
using
too much fear in religious and pastoral formation. Some persons
may interiorize these threats and become spiritually fearful, in
little conformity with John’s: “There is no fear in love; perfect
love drives out all fear” (1 Jn 4,18),
§
some
images of eternal punishment in hell do little to encourage a loving
and trusting relationship with God. (“Holy fear” is different, because
it comes out of love. Perfect love brings holy fear to perfection).
§
we may
have emphasize too much personal salvation and some devotions – with a
certain magical connotation – whose main aim is to assure eternal
salvation,
§
even
prayer could become an utilitarian gesture aimed at obtaining God’s
protection and favor in our personal plans.
As a consequence, no
few Christians suffer from spiritual anxiety, for instance:
§
they
emphasize careful examination of conscience and feel satisfied with
themselves if they see progress or become depressed when they do not,
§
the
cross and self-imposed suffering may be seen as the only way to
placate God’s anger,
§
they
may think that natural disasters are a punishment from God because of
our wrong doings,
§
they
may approach the sacramental confession as a means to get rid of
remorse and gain inner peace,
§
many
devotions, which often have a deep spiritual value, may be performed
mainly to overcome our fears.
4.- A biblical understanding of sin and conversion
In the Bible, God
has the initiative in creating the human family at His own image and
likeness. God wants to share the fullness of His Trinitarian life with
us, humans. This is God’s desire. Yet very soon, we humans turned away
from Him. The human family sinned and was unable to communicate again
with God. However, God promised a savior. A long wait for the coming
of the Savior characterizes the mission of God’ people, despite its
infidelities and treasons. From God’s side, we see an unwavering
fidelity. When God’s hour comes, Christ’s Death and Resurrection frees
the human family from sin and reconciles us with the Father.
How does the Bible
present the mystery of sin?
a) The first
approach: as a stain, impurity, uncleanness (in Greek “kakos”
as the opposite of “agazos”). This view may seem superficial, but
is not less true and meaningful. All evil has a dimension of dirt
and impurity: any person who touches it is contaminated. A sinful
action changes in depth the quality of a person. Doing an evil
action, a person becomes unclean and impure. It is not simply a
blame at the eyes of those who know about it, but something that
affects the very depth of his/her personality. Jesus says: “it is
not what goes into a person’s mouth that makes him unclean; rather,
what comes out of it makes him unclean” (Mt 1511). Saint Thomas
says: “The soul is not made unclean by the contact with external
things, by their impact, as if they could affect the soul; but
rather on the contrary, the soul is made unclean by inner choices,
attaching herself to them in an inordinate manner, acting against
the promptings of the reason and of the divine law” (S.Th.I-II,
86-1, ad 1).
b) Sin can be
seen as “transgression”, going beyond the established
boundaries, trespassing the others’ rights. These boundaries and
rights have been articulated and brought to us in the laws we are
supposed to obey. Many of them are God’s commandment too. By
breaking God’s commandments we not only commit a legal disobedience,
but we upset God’s plans and step into forbidden ground. By not
observing the commandments we are disobedient to God and violate
justice disregarding God’s and the other’s rights.
c) Choosing the
wrong way: going astray. A person who undertakes a wrong way
will not reach the right destination. It is very frustrating to
invest our lives on false goals or wrong ways. To sin is to err,
abandoning the ways that lead to God, taking rather the roads which
lead to failure. Its outcome cannot be but negative, because we fail
to reach the goal and, at the same time, we turn away from God, who
wants to walk along with us and is Himself our final goal.
Evidently, if choosing the wrong way were only an error, a mistake,
we will consider it a regretful accident, but not a sin. It is a
sin when the error was freely chosen, the mistake made in bad faith.
In real life we seldom act with this accurate degree
of perversion. We do what is wrong because its ugly face is not
fully visible. It may even look good and beautiful. When we do it we
try to convince ourselves that, after all, we are looking for
something good; that what we do doesn’t seem as negative and bad as
they say. “I hurt nobody!”, “We just want to have some fun!”, “We
love each other!”. It is like a game and some cheating is done
under the table. We use half truths and manipulate the data in our
favor so that we may win the game with a good conscience. In the
book of Genesis we read a classic account of this kind of
self-justification which allows Adam and Eve to do what they should
not (Gen 3, 1-24).
d) Being seduced by created values.
S.Augustine defines sin as “drifting away from God, choosing the
creatures”. This approach is more theological. The evil action
is not “loving too much some creatures”, which are always precious
and worthy, but putting them above the Creator; making idols out of
them and putting them in God’s place. That is why sin is an
offense to God.
Perhaps the best way to describe our unfaithfulness
to God is adultery. God Himself has used the symbol of marriage
to demonstrate how much He loves His people. Even when we are
unfaithful God will always be faithful to us. “I will honor the
covenant I made with you when you were young, and I will make a
covenant with you that will last forever” (Ez 16,60). Sin is,
therefore, an act of unfaithfulness, which hurts God, not because He
feels abandoned or frustrated with us humans, but because it hurts Him
to see the wrong decisions which bring disgrace to us.
5.- Mortal and
Venial sin.
It is in the context of these last observations that mortal sin can be
better understood. It is very difficult to measure the gravity of a
wrong doing in terms of the law. It is easier in terms of friendship
and marital vows. A couple knows when an offense is just a weakness, a
selfish action, an unloving decision, and when the covenant between
them has been broken.
In our covenant with God, we commit a mortal sin
when we create a definite act according to our deepest and more
authentic desire; when we make a decision which comprehends our past
and our future, expressing and defining the final truth of our lives,
and that truth is: “I’ll not obey God’s will but mine”; when we make
up our mind and, willingly and knowingly, we choose a creature
rather than the Creator; when we prefer our will to His; when we seek
our interest, glory and love rather than His.
It is “mortal” because it brings spiritual
death to us and to others; because by turning away from God we
separate ourselves from Him. Our Father-child relationship is no more.
While in “venial sin” we drift away and distance ourselves from
God, but we do not turn our backs on Him.
Venial sin
is not, therefore, a separation though the distance can, eventually,
bring us to it. When we commit a venial sin we put in danger
our union of heart and mind with God. Venial sin is not about our
shortcomings but about giving in to selfishness and about complicity
with the seven capital sins,
despite the fact that God is the very center of our lives. Venial sin
is about being inconsistent and unloving.
|