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Naming Our Sins - How Recognizing the Seven Deadly Vices Can Renew the Sacrament of Reconciliation (Paperback)
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Naming Our Sins - How Recognizing the Seven Deadly Vices Can Renew the Sacrament of Reconciliation (Paperback)
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What would it take to renew our ability to name our sins in a
meaningful and pertinent way? Naming sins is a particularly
important task for Catholic moral theology, but it is one that
often falls back into a paradigm of simple violations of rules.
While laws and commandments are essential, Vatican II's universal
call to holiness and the revival of virtue ethics require moving
further. Yet in part because moral theologians today tend to be lay
people, not priests, there has been a de-emphasis on the confession
of sins. Contemporary questions like poverty, racism, and abortion
are usually connected to questions about sin in some way, but they
are disconnected from the idea of naming specific sins in the
sacrament of penance. Lay moral theologians raise these issues in a
way that makes clear their implications for a parish social justice
committee (or the voting booth), but not their implications for the
naming of sins in the sacrament of reconciliation. Naming Our Sins
proposes to re-make that connection: the moral theologian's task of
helping people name individual sins needs to be restored, though in
ways distinctive from dominant pre-Vatican II notions. In this
volume, editors Jana Bennett and David Cloutier gather some of the
best of the current generation of moral theologians in order to
reflect on the classic tradition of the vices. It is crucial to the
Christian understanding of sin that we recognize (a) we bear at
least some responsibilities for injuries, and (b) God wants us to
participate in the process of healing and conversion. Neither the
sin itself nor the healing simply come from somewhere else; the
task of naming sins enlists us as mature, growing disciples. Each
chapter takes on a different classical vice, describing the vice,
exploring its dimensions in contemporary experience, and moving the
reader toward naming specific sins that arise from the vice. The
concluding chapters from Catholic priests explore two basic
dimensions of the sacrament of penance: liturgical and communal.
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