Venial sinAccording to Catholicism, a venial sin is a lesser sin that does not result in a complete separation from God and eternal damnation in Hell as an unrepented mortal sin would.[1][2][3] A venial sin consists in acting as one should not, without the actual incompatibility with the state of grace that a mortal sin implies; they do not break one's friendship with God, but injure it.[4] Definition‹The template Manual is being considered for merging.›
According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church:
The definition of the word "venial" is "forgivable".[6] An act, when it is not ordered towards that which is good, is considered to be sinful – either venially or mortally. When such an act is venially sinful, it entails subject-matter that is not considered to be "grave". Such an action, even if it is committed with full knowledge and full consent, remains venial, so long as the subject-matter of the act is not serious. If the subject-matter of a given act is "grave", however, the commission of that act may be mortally sinful. Intentional ignorance and "hardness of heart" increase "the voluntary character of a sin".[7] Thus, in discussing the distinction between venial and mortal sin in his Summa Theologica, St. Thomas Aquinas indicated that a venial sin differs from a mortal sin, in the same way that something imperfect differs from something that is perfect.[8] As such, one can arrive at what kind of sin, for example, was committed, by asking the following three questions:
If all three questions are answered in the affirmative, the criteria for a mortal sin have been met. If any one of the three questions is answered in the negative, only the criteria for a venial sin have been met. Each venial sin that one commits adds to the penance that one must do. Penance left undone during life contributes to the purifying process one must undergo while in the state of Purgatory. A venial sin can be left unconfessed so long as there is some purpose of amendment. One receives from the sacrament of reconciliation the grace to help overcome venial, as well as mortal sins. It is recommended that confession of venial sins be made.[9][10] Venial sins require some kind of penance.[11] According to the Magisterium, venial sins usually remain venial no matter how many one commits. They cannot "add up" to collectively constitute a mortal sin, but their accumulation does lead to being more vulnerable to committing mortal sin.[1] There are cases where repeat offenses may become a grave matter. For instance, if one were to steal small amounts of property from a particular person, over time one would have stolen enough that it would develop into a serious theft from that person.[citation needed] Catholics believe that followers should not take venial sin lightly, especially when committed deliberately. No one without a special grace (generally taken to apply only to the Virgin Mary) can avoid even semi-deliberate venial sins entirely (according to the definition of Trent).[12] But to avoid mortal sins followers must seek (as far as possible) to overcome venial sins. The Magisterium says that although a number of venial sins do not themselves add up to a mortal sin, each venial sin weakens the will further, and the more willing one becomes in allowing such falls, the more one is inclined towards and will inevitably fall into mortal sins if one continues along this path.[1] In Lutheranism, sins are of two classes:[3]
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