We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Joy is love exalted; peace is love in repose; long-suffering is love enduring; gentleness is love in society; goodness is love in action; faith is love on the battlefield; meekness is love in school; and temperance is love in training.
D.L. Moody

The supreme test of goodness is not in the greater but in the smaller incidents of our character and practice; not what we are when standing in the searchlight of public scrutiny, but when we reach the firelight flicker of our homes; not what we are when some clarion-call rings through the air, summoning us to fight for life and liberty, but our attitude when we are called to sentry-duty in the gray morning, when the watch-fire is burning low. It is impossible to be our best at the supreme moment if character is corroded and eaten into by daily inconsistency, unfaithfulness, and besetting sin.
F.B. Meyer

Mortal Sin

Mortal Sin

MORTAL SIN

BASIC R.C. BELIEF A serious offense against the law of God, called mortal because it renders the soul dead to sanctifying grace and makes it subject to the eternal punishment of Hell. The conditions that must be present for this sin to be mortal are: serious matter, sufficient reflection, full consent of the will.

Venial sin is a minor offense, and by committing it one does not lose sanctifying Grace, but will go to Purgatory because of unforgiven venial sin.

From THE SINS ARE FORGIVEN, by Francis Connell, C.SS.R., Imp. Francis Spellman. p. 28, “One who remains in sanctifying grace for any length of time … amasses an abundance of supernatural treasure. … But even one mortal sin suffices to deprive a person of this treasure.”

From FATHER SMITH INSTRUCTS JACKSON, page 77. “Father Smith: In closing this instruction I might note that by mortal sin we relinquish all past merit, but when the mortal sin is forgiven through the Sacrament of Penance, merit revives in proportion to the sincere and loving sorrow with which the sinner receives the Sacrament.”

POST VATICAN II The conditions necessary for mortal sin are causing some modern theologians to wonder if a person can commit a mortal sin, for if he reflected sufficiently, he would know the sin could send him to Hell, and he could never give full consent of his will. Therefore the conditions could not be met.