• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

  • Christian Forums is looking to bring on new moderators to the CF Staff Team! If you have been an active member of CF for at least three months with 200 posts during that time, you're eligible to apply! This is a great way to give back to CF and keep the forums running smoothly! If you're interested, you can submit your application here!

What exactly is an “indulgence”?

Michie

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Feb 5, 2002
178,871
64,201
Woods
✟5,630,825.00
Country
United States
Gender
Female
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
Let’s review the topic of indulgences—which are easily misunderstood!

Indulgences are an incredible gift from God, but they are often misunderstood—even by Catholics. In order to properly utilize indulgences and explain them to others, let’s make sure we’ve got a grip on the basics.

Here’s a primer.

Once sins are forgiven, justice must still be met. Sacramental confession removes the guilt of sin and cleanses our souls, but sin has very real consequences, leaving a “spiritual debt” that we have incurred through our sin.

Just as apologizing for breaking someone’s window—and receiving his earnest forgiveness—doesn’t magically fix the broken glass. As a matter of justice, we must still pay for its repair.

This is why we do penance. It’s why even saved souls may still need purgation (i.e., purgatory) prior to their entrance into heaven.

Continued below.
What exactly is an “indulgence”? - Get Fed™
 

Michie

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Feb 5, 2002
178,871
64,201
Woods
✟5,630,825.00
Country
United States
Gender
Female
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
We can gain indulgences for ourselves, but we can—and should—also gain them for the souls in purgatory! Our prayers do so much good to relieve their suffering and speed them on their way to heaven. In Prayers, Promises, and Devotions for Holy Souls in Purgatory, prayer warrior Susan Tassone provides a spiritual toolbox for assisting the Holy Souls, including devotions, meditations, and wisdom from the saints. Join Susan and countless other devoted souls in their mission to “empty purgatory”! Pick up a copy of this book today!
 
Upvote 0

Michie

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Feb 5, 2002
178,871
64,201
Woods
✟5,630,825.00
Country
United States
Gender
Female
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
*Permission to post in full*

Indulgences. The very word stirs up more misconceptions than perhaps any other teaching in Catholic theology. Those who attack the Church for its use of indulgences rely upon—and take advantage of—the ignorance of both Catholics and non-Catholics.

What is an indulgence? The Church explains, “An indulgence is a remission before God of the temporal punishment due to sins whose guilt has already been forgiven, which the faithful Christian who is duly disposed gains under certain defined conditions through the Church’s help when, as a minister of redemption, she dispenses and applies with authority the treasury of the satisfactions won by Christ and the saints” (Indulgentarium Doctrina 1). To see the biblical foundations for indulgences, see the Catholic Answers tract A Primer on Indulgences.

Step number one in explaining indulgences is to know what they are. Step number two is to clarify what they are not. Here are the seven most common myths about indulgences:


Myth 1: A person can buy his way out of hell with indulgences.
Since indulgences remit only temporal penalties, they cannot remit the eternal penalty of hell. Once a person is in hell, no amount of indulgences will ever change that fact. The only way to avoid hell is by appealing to God’s eternal mercy while still alive. After death, one’s eternal fate is set (Heb. 9:27).

Myth 2: A person can buy indulgences for sins not yet committed.
The Church has always taught that indulgences do not apply to sins not yet committed. The Catholic Encyclopedia notes, “[An indulgence] is not a permission to commit sin, nor a pardon of future sin; neither could be granted by any power.”

Myth 3: A person can “buy forgiveness” with indulgences.
The definition of indulgences presupposes that forgiveness has already taken place: “An indulgence is a remission before God of the temporal punishment due to sins whose guilt has already been forgiven” (Indulgentarium Doctrina 1, emphasis added). Indulgences in no way forgive sins. They deal only with punishments left after sins have been forgiven.

Myth 4: Indulgences were invented as a means for the Church to raise money.
Indulgences developed from reflection on the sacrament of reconciliation. They are a way of shortening the penance of sacramental discipline and were in use centuries before money-related problems appeared.

Myth 5: An indulgence will shorten your time in purgatory by a fixed number of days.
The number of days which used to be attached to indulgences were references to the period of penance one might undergo during life on earth. The Catholic Church does not claim to know anything about how long or short purgatory is in general, much less in a specific person’s case.

Myth 6: A person can buy indulgences.
The Council of Trent instituted severe reforms in the practice of granting indulgences, and, because of prior abuses, “in 1567 Pope Pius V canceled all grants of indulgences involving any fees or other financial transactions” (Catholic Encyclopedia).

Myth 7: A person used to be able to buy indulgences.
One never could “buy” indulgences. The financial scandal surrounding indulgences that gave Martin Luther an excuse for his heterodoxy, involved indulgences in which the giving of alms to some charitable fund or foundation was used as the occasion to grant the indulgence. There was no outright selling of indulgences. The Catholic Encyclopedia states: “Among the good works which might be encouraged by being made the condition of an indulgence, almsgiving would naturally hold a conspicuous place. . . . To give money to God or to the poor is a praiseworthy act, and, when it is done from right motives, it will surely not go unrewarded.”

Being able to explain these seven myths will be a large step in helping others to understand indulgences. But, there are still questions to be asked:

“How many of one’s temporal penalties can be remitted?”

Potentially, all of them. The Church recognizes that Christ and the saints are interested in helping penitents deal with the aftermath of their sins, as indicated by the fact they always pray for us (Heb. 7:25, Rev. 5:8). Fulfilling its role in the administration of temporal penalties, the Church draws upon the rich supply of rewards God chose to bestow on the saints, who pleased him, and on his Son, who pleased him most of all.

The rewards on which the Church draws are infinite because Christ is God, so the rewards he accrued are infinite and never can be exhausted. The rewards of the saints are added to Christ’s—not because anything is lacking in his, but because it is fitting that they be united with his rewards as the saints are united with him. Although immense, their rewards are finite, but his are infinite.

“If the Church has the resources to wipe out everyone’s temporal penalties, why doesn’t it do so?”

Because God does not wish this to be done. God himself instituted the pattern of temporal penalties being left behind. They fulfill valid functions, one of them disciplinary. If a child were never disciplined, he would never learn obedience. God disciplines us as his children — “the Lord disciplines him whom he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives” (Heb. 12:6) — so some temporal penalties must remain.

The Church cannot wipe out everyone’s temporal punishments because their remission depends on the dispositions of the persons who suffer those temporal punishments. Just as repentance and faith are needed for the remission of eternal penalties, so they are needed for the remission of temporal penalties. Pope Paul VI stated, “Indulgences cannot be gained without a sincere conversion of outlook and unity with God”(Indulgentarium Doctrina 11).

“How does one determine by what amount penalties have been lessened?”

Before Vatican II each indulgence was said to remove a certain number of “days” from one’s discipline—for instance, an act might gain “300 days’ indulgence”—but the use of the term “days” confused people, giving them the mistaken impression that in purgatory time as we know it still exists and that we can calculate our “good time” in a mechanical way. The number of days associated with indulgences actually never meant that that much “time” would be taken off one’s stay in purgatory. Instead, it meant that an indefinite but partial (not complete) amount of remission would be granted, proportionate to what ancient Christians would have received for performing that many days’ penance.

To overcome the confusion Paul VI issued a revision of the handbook (Enchiridion is the formal name) of indulgences. Today, numbers of days are not associated with indulgences. They are either plenary or partial.

“What’s the difference between a partial and a plenary indulgence?”

“An indulgence is partial or plenary according as it removes either part or all of the temporal punishment due to sin” (Indulgentarium Doctrina 2, 3). Only God knows exactly how efficacious any particular partial indulgence is or whether a plenary indulgence was received at all.

“Don’t indulgences duplicate or even negate the work of Christ?”

Despite the biblical underpinnings of indulgences, some are sharply critical of them and insist the doctrine supplants the work of Christ and turns us into our own saviors. This objection results from confusion about the nature of indulgences and about how Christ’s work is applied to us.

Indulgences apply only to temporal penalties, not to eternal ones. The Bible indicates that these penalties may remain after a sin has been forgiven and that God lessens these penalties as rewards to those who have pleased him. Since the Bible indicates this, Christ’s work cannot be said to have been supplanted by indulgences.

The merits of Christ, since they are infinite, comprise most of those in the treasury of merits. By applying these to believers, the Church acts as Christ’s servant in the application of what he has done for us, and we know from Scripture that Christ’s work is applied to us over time and not in one big lump (Phil. 2:12, 1 Pet. 1:9).

“Isn’t it better to put all of the emphasis on Christ alone?”

If we ignore the fact of indulgences, we neglect what Christ does through us, and we fail to recognize the value of what he has done in us. Paul used this very sort of language: “Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the church” (Col. 1:24).

Even though Christ’s sufferings were superabundant (far more than needed to pay for anything), Paul spoke of completing what was “lacking” in Christ’s sufferings. If this mode of speech was permissible for Paul, it is permissible for us.

Catholics should not be defensive about indulgences. They are based on principles straight from the Bible. Pope Paul VI declared, “[T]he Church invites all its children to think over and weigh up in their minds as well as they can how the use of indulgences benefits their lives and all Christian society. . . . Supported by these truths, holy Mother Church again recommends the practice of indulgences to the faithful” (Indulgentarium Doctrina, 9, 11).

How to Gain an Indulgence
To gain any indulgence you must be a Catholic in order to be under the Church’s jurisdiction, and you must be in a state of grace because apart from God’s grace none of your actions are fundamentally pleasing to God (meritorious). You also must have at least the habitual intention of gaining an indulgence by the act performed.

To gain a partial indulgence, you must perform with a contrite heart the act to which the indulgence is attached. To gain a plenary indulgence you must perform the act with a contrite heart, plus you must go to confession (one confession may suffice for several plenary indulgences), receive Holy Communion, and pray for the pope’s intentions. The final condition is that you must be free from all attachment to sin, including venial sin. If you attempt to receive a plenary indulgence, but are unable to meet the last condition, a partial indulgence is received instead.

Below are indulgences listed in the Handbook of Indulgences (New York: Catholic Book Publishing, 1991):

  • An act of spiritual communion, expressed in any devout formula whatsoever, is endowed with a partial indulgence.
  • A partial indulgence is granted the Christian faithful who devoutly spend time in mental prayer.
  • A plenary indulgence is granted when the rosary is recited in a church or oratory or when it is recited in a family, a religious community, or a pious association. A partial indulgence is granted for its recitation in all other circumstances.
  • A partial indulgence is granted the Christian faithful who read sacred Scripture with the veneration due God’s word and as a form of spiritual reading. The indulgence will be a plenary one when such reading is done for at least one-half hour [provided the other conditions are met].
  • A partial indulgence is granted to the Christian faithful who devoutly sign themselves with the cross while saying the customary formula: “In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.”
In summary, the practice of indulgences neither takes away nor adds to the work of Christ. It is his work, through his body the Church, raising up children in his own likeness.

NIHIL OBSTAT: I have concluded that the materials
presented in this work are free of doctrinal or moral errors.
Bernadeane Carr, STL, Censor Librorum, August 10, 2004

IMPRIMATUR: In accord with 1983 CIC 827
permission to publish this work is hereby granted.
+Robert H. Brom, Bishop of San Diego, August 10, 2004

Myths about Indulgences
 
Upvote 0

Michie

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Feb 5, 2002
178,871
64,201
Woods
✟5,630,825.00
Country
United States
Gender
Female
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
*Permission to post in full*


Question:
One of the causes of the Reformation was the selling of indulgences. Does the Catholic Church still sell them?

Answer:

That’s like asking, “Have you stopped beating your wife?” The Catholic Church does not now nor has it ever approved the sale of indulgences. This is to be distinguished from the undeniable fact that individual Catholics (perhaps the best known of them being the German Dominican Johann Tetzel [1465-1519]) did sell indulgences–but in doing so they acted contrary to explicit Church regulations. This practice is utterly opposed to the Catholic Church’s teaching on indulgences, and it cannot be regarded as a teaching or practice of the Church.

In the 16th century, when the abuse of indulgences was at its height, Cardinal Cajetan (Tommaso de Vio, 1469-1534) wrote about the problem: “Preachers act in the name of the Church so long as they teach the doctrines of Christ and the Church; but if they teach, guided by their own minds and arbitrariness of will, things of which they are ignorant, they cannot pass as representatives of the Church; it need not be wondered at that they go astray.”


The Council of Trent (1545-1564) issued a decree that gave Church teaching on indulgences and that provided stringent guidelines to eliminate abuses:

Since the power of granting indulgences was conferred by Christ on the Church (cf. Mt 16:19, 18:18, Jn 20:23), and she has even in the earliest times made use of that power divinely given to her, the holy council teaches and commands that the use of indulgences, most salutary to the Christian people and approved by the authority of the holy councils, is to be retained in the Church, and it condemns with anathema those who assert that they are useless or deny that there is in the Church the power of granting them.

In granting them, however, it desires that in accordance with the ancient and approved custom in the Church moderation be observed, lest by too great facility ecclesiastical discipline be weakened. But desiring that the abuses which have become connected with them, and by any reason of which this excellent name of indulgences is blasphemed by the heretics, be amended and corrected, it ordains in a general way by the present decree that all evil traffic in them, which has been a most prolific source of abuses among the Christian people, be absolutely abolished. Other abuses, however, of this kind which have sprung from superstition, ignorance, irreverence, or from whatever other sources, since by reason of the manifold corruptions in places and provinces where they are committed, they cannot conveniently be prohibited individually, it commands all bishops diligently to make note of, each in his own church, and report them to the next provincial synod. (Sess. 25, Decree on Indulgences)

In 1967 Pope Paul VI reiterated Catholic teaching on indulgences and added new reforms in his apostolic constitution Indulgentiarum Doctrina (cf. Vatican Council II: The Conciliar and Post-Conciliar Documents, ed. Austin Flannery, O.P. [Northport, New York: Costello, 1980], 62-79).

For more on indulgences and the misconceptions surrounding them, see our tract, “Myths about Indulgences.”

Does the Catholic Church Still Sell Indulgences?
 
Upvote 0

narnia59

Regular Member
Site Supporter
Jul 17, 2007
5,785
1,302
✟428,759.00
Gender
Female
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
I think one of the things that makes indulgences so difficult is a number of key Catholic teachings have to first be understood, and then understand how they work together.

You have to understand the difference between the eternal and temporal punishment of sin. Indulgences (like Purgatory) are 100% about the removal of the temporal punishment of sins that have already been forgiven.

You have to accept that the Church has the authority to bind and loose (Matthew 18:18).

You have to understand that just like our sin can affect others in the body of Christ, the holiness of Christ and the saints can affect us even moreso.

You have to understand that God blesses people based on the actions of others. Some examples:
  • The paralytic whose sins are forgiven because his friends carry him to Christ (Mark 2:1-12)
  • Moses intercedes on behalf of Israel and spares them being destroyed (Exodus 32:7-14)
  • Paul says that the Jews are beloved for the sake of their forefathers (Romans 11:28)
  • Isaac is blessed for the sake of his father Abraham (Genesis 26:24)
  • God blessed the Pharoah’s house for Joseph’s sake (Genesis 39:5)
  • God allows Solomon to retain the Kingdom for the sake of his father, David (1 Kings 11:12-13)

The USCCB used to have an article on their website that was very good. These were some of the key points:
  1. It’s because of the Communion of Saints and the graciousness of God, our Father, that some or all of the temporal punishment for sin is removed.
  2. We are never simply on our own. We are linked with Christ and with the martyrs and saints, and we benefit from their holiness in such a way as to be freed from at least a portion of the temporal punishment for sin. “In this wonderful exchange, the holiness of one profits others, well beyond the harm that the sin of one could cause others."
  3. Purpose – to inspire us to live more fruitful and holy lives, and thereby lead us to a more intimate union with Christ and his church.
  4. In receiving indulgences, we should not think that we have earned them. Our efforts express our openness to receiving God’s mercy. As a result we grow closer to Jesus and so are able to reap the benefit of his salvation.
  5. As a means of encouraging the faithful to perform good works and acts of devotion, and so to grow in holiness, the church offers indulgences.
 
Upvote 0

narnia59

Regular Member
Site Supporter
Jul 17, 2007
5,785
1,302
✟428,759.00
Gender
Female
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
I was curious until I looked it up.
The Catholics "banned" them for a time but they were "unbanned" back in the 1950's.
There's even a list and cost per sin so you can even pre-pay for sins.
I know the CC and Catholics don't broadcast them but I've not found any retraction or re-banning of them anywhere.
If you knew how obvious it was that your information comes from anti-Catholic sites that spread falsehoods about what the Catholic church teaches, you wouldn't post such nonsense. At least I would hope not.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Michie
Upvote 0

RileyG

Veteran
Christian Forums Staff
Moderator Trainee
Angels Team
Site Supporter
Feb 10, 2013
31,761
18,882
29
Nebraska
✟638,733.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Celibate
Politics
US-Republican
Can we only get indulgences in the state of grace?

For example, The Sign of the Cross, the Angeles, and many, many other prayers and acts of devotions have partial indulgences attached to them.

What about those in mortal sin?
 
Upvote 0

narnia59

Regular Member
Site Supporter
Jul 17, 2007
5,785
1,302
✟428,759.00
Gender
Female
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
What? Is that what kind of place this is? Your way or no way? That's not Christian.
The truth doesn't mind being questioned.
What is not Christian is to agree to the terms of a site in order to join and then blatantly violate them.

Congregational Forum Restrictions
Members who do not truly share the core beliefs and teachings of a specific congregational forum may post in fellowship or ask questions, but they may not teach or debate within the forum.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: RileyG
Upvote 0

narnia59

Regular Member
Site Supporter
Jul 17, 2007
5,785
1,302
✟428,759.00
Gender
Female
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Can we only get indulgences in the state of grace?

For example, The Sign of the Cross, the Angeles, and many, many other prayers and acts of devotions have partial indulgences attached to them.

What about those in mortal sin?
Yes you have to be in a state of grace to receive an indulgence.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: RileyG
Upvote 0

RileyG

Veteran
Christian Forums Staff
Moderator Trainee
Angels Team
Site Supporter
Feb 10, 2013
31,761
18,882
29
Nebraska
✟638,733.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Celibate
Politics
US-Republican
  • Like
Reactions: Michie
Upvote 0

RileyG

Veteran
Christian Forums Staff
Moderator Trainee
Angels Team
Site Supporter
Feb 10, 2013
31,761
18,882
29
Nebraska
✟638,733.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Celibate
Politics
US-Republican
So- the faithful- if they are prayerful throughout the day- continually receive many partial indulgences? Without being consciously aware of asking for them? If I understand correctly?
 
Upvote 0

narnia59

Regular Member
Site Supporter
Jul 17, 2007
5,785
1,302
✟428,759.00
Gender
Female
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
So- the faithful- if they are prayerful throughout the day- continually receive many partial indulgences? Without being consciously aware of asking for them? If I understand correctly?
My understanding would be you have to consciously ask for them in order to receive them.
 
Upvote 0