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'''Indulgence''', in [[Roman Catholicism|Roman Catholic]] [[theology]], is the (full or partial) remission of temporal punishment due to sins which have already been forgiven. The indulgence is granted by the church after the sinner has [[Confession|confessed]] and received absolution. Indulgences occur when the Church applies existing merit from the Church’s [[treasury]] to an individual, who may be at that point, assigned to [[purgatory]]. The sinner gains the indulgence by participating in certain activities, most often the recitation of prayers, or by a payment of a sum of money.
 
 
 
Indulgences were a major point of contention when [[Martin Luther]] initiated the [[Protestant Reformation]], due to what he termed the purchase and sale of [[salvation]] over the aggressive marketing of indulgences to rebuild St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. In [[Eastern Orthodoxy]] or [[Eastern Catholicism]], indulgences do not exist since its underlying doctrine of salvation differs from the Latin Catholic model. The practice of the clergy accepting money for the removal of the sins of the dead can be traced back to the [[deuterocanonical]] book [[2 Maccabees]] (ca. 100 B.C.E.).
 
 
   
 
   
[[Image:Indulgence3.png|thumb|320px|A Roman Catholic indulgence, dated Dec. 19, 1521. The use of the [[printing press]] made possible the mass production of form documents offering indulgences.]]
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[[Image:Indulgence3.png|thumb|320px|A Roman Catholic indulgence, dated Dec. 19, 1521. The use of the [[printing press]] made possible the mass production of form documents offering indulgences.]]
 
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An '''Indulgence''', in [[Roman Catholicism|Roman Catholic]] [[theology]], is the full or partial remission of punishment for [[sin]]s. The indulgence is granted by the Church after the sinner has [[Confession|confessed]] and received [[absolution]] and involves certain actions by the recipient, most often the recitation of prayers. Indulgences may also be obtained on behalf of a deceased loved one.
==Roman Catholic theology==
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{{toc}}
===Sin===
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Prior to the modern period, indulgences could be obtained by offering a certain amount of money as alms to the Church, and in some cases were offered for forgiveness for sins not yet committed. This "selling" of indulgences was first practiced in the late thirteenth century and was changed after the [[Protestant Reformation]], which was sparked in 1517 by [[Martin Luther]]'s objections to abuses of the tradition. In 1567, following the [[Council of Trent]], [[Pope Pius V]] outlawed financial giving in relation to indulgences. Absolution certificates used by the Eastern Orthodox Church, first seen in [[Jerusalem]] in the sixteenth century, ceased entirely by the beginning of the twentieth century.  
''Personal sins, that is specific sins committed by a person instead of the inherited [[original sin]] or evil resultant of personal sin, are either [[Mortal sin|mortal]] or [[Venial sin|venial]].
 
 
 
*[[Mortal sin]]s destroy charity in the heart of man by a grave (serious) violation of God's law. It turns man away from God, who is his ultimate end and his beatitude, by preferring an inferior good to him. It deprives us of communion with God and therefore makes us incapable of eternal life. For a sin to be mortal, three conditions must be met: The act must be of grave (serious) matter, you must have full knowledge of the sinful character of the act, and you must deliberately consent to committing the act (Catechism of the Catholic Church). Venial sins are less serious sins. They allow charity to subsist, even though it offends and wounds it (CCC).
 
 
 
Punishments for sin can be temporal and eternal. Temporal punishments are temporary punishments—those that affect us in this life or in [[Purgatory]]. The more temporal punishments you incur, the more punishment/suffering you have to endure on earth or in Purgatory. Eternal punishment is everlasting. Basically, if you are suffering eternal punishment, you are in hell. All sins entail some sort of temporal punishment. Mortal sins also carry an eternal punishment. Even though you may be forgiven of a sin (through the sacrament of Reconciliation), and relieved of any eternal punishment (hell), temporal punishments may still remain.
 
 
 
An Indulgence is granted for the remission of the remaining temporal punishments due to sins that have already been forgiven.
 
 
 
===Penance===
 
Plenary (full) indulgences are gained after the individual earning the indulgence completes the required tasks, which always includes the reception of the [[sacrament]] of [[Sacrament of Penance (Catholic Church)|Penance]]. Because the sacrament of reconciliation removes the culpable element of sin, the penitent is restored by reconciliation to the state of grace. However, while the individual’s guilt and any eternal punishment is removed by reconciliation, temporal punishments may still remain. God has mercy upon sinners who repent their sins, but His justice still requires that the sinner be punished for the wrongdoing.  
 
  
In addition, even though the separation caused by sin is removed, the repercussions for the sin have not been removed and still require punishment. For example, if one steals a loaf of bread, the baker still is missing and suffers the loss of the bread even if the thief makes amends. This punishment is called "temporal punishment," both because it is a punishment of time, as opposed to eternal punishment, and because it relates to the temporary world (Earth or purgatory), rather than to the “final destination” ([[heaven]] or [[hell]]).
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==Theology of Indulgences==
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In Roman Catholic theology, indulgences are granted for ''personal sins''—specific sins committed by a person—as opposed to the inherited [[Original Sin]]. Such sins are either [[Mortal sin|mortal]] or [[Venial sin|venial]] ("light").  
  
===Temporal punishment in purgatory===
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Punishments for sin can be either ''temporal'' or ''eternal''. Temporal punishments are temporary punishments—those that affect us in this life or in [[purgatory]]. The more temporal punishments one incurs, the more suffering one must endure on earth or in purgatory. Eternal punishment, on the other hand, is everlasting. Even though one may be forgiven of a mortal sin (through the sacrament of [[Reconciliation]])—and relieved of the eternal punishment of [[Hell]]—temporal punishments may still remain. Indulgences may be either ''plenary'' (complete) or ''partial''.
Church teachings explain that individuals who experience trials and tribulations in this world by God's grace may have them serve as their temporal punishment for forgiven sins (Catechism 1473); other individuals die without having served the full temporal punishment for their sins. These individuals do not have guilt for sin, because it has been forgiven either through reconciliation or perfect contrition before death, and therefore they will attain Heaven. However, they are not yet ready to enter Heaven, as their punishment has yet to be served. Therefore, these individuals “enter” Purgatory, and the punishment they owe is "purged."
 
  
The Church teaches that the souls in purgatory desire to be there because they have realized that they are not yet ready to attain heaven. Purgatory may be illustrated as a place of preparation for the deceased; they know they will enter heaven, and purgatory is a place in which the deceased are cleansed for God.
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An indulgence is granted to deal with the remaining temporal punishments due to sins that have already been forgiven. The sacrament of [[reconciliation]] removes the guilt of sin and restores the penitent person to a state of grace. However, temporal punishments may still remain. In other words, although God has mercy upon sinners who repent their sins—thus enabling them to avoid eternal punishment in Hell—His [[justice]] still requires that the sinner be punished for the wrongdoing. An analogy might be a convicted murderer who has been given the death sentence but is granted [[clemency]] because of his authentic remorse, yet must still serve time in prison.
  
===The indulgence===
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Thus, even though an individual is in a state of grace, if he dies without having served any remaining temporal punishments, he is not yet qualified to enter [[Heaven]]. Therefore, these individuals “enter” purgatory, where the punishment they owe is "purged." Indulgences occur when the Church applies merit from its spiritual treasury to an individual, enabling him or her to be relieved from punishments which would otherwise have to be purged through suffering in purgatory.
In Catholic theology, the [[salvation]] made possible by [[Jesus]] allows the faithful sinner eventual admittance to [[heaven]]. [[Baptism]] forgives all of the baptized person's existing sins; any sin committed after baptism incurs both guilt and a penalty that must be addressed. These are the sins addressed in reconciliation. With the act of penance after reconciliation, the temporal punishment for the confessed sins is canceled. However, human beings by nature commit many venial, "light" sins daily which are unconfessed and, though they don't break communion with God, do damage one spiritually, and temporal punishment remains for these. This punishment may be remitted in purgatory, or by indulgence. The granting of an indulgence is the spiritual reassignment, as it were, of existing merit to an individual requiring that merit.
 
  
Indulgences occur when the Church, acting by virtue of its authority, applies existing merit from the [[treasure of merit|Church’s treasury]] to an individual. The individual gains the indulgence by participating in certain activities, most often the recitation of prayers. By decree of  [[Pope Pius V]] in 1567, following the [[Council of Trent]], it is forbidden to attach the receipt of an indulgence to any financial act, including the giving of [[alms]]. In addition, the only punishment remitted by an indulgence is existing punishment, that is, for sins already committed. Indulgences do not remit punishment for future sins, as those sins have yet to be committed. Thus, indulgences are not a “license to sin” or a “get-out-of-hell-free” card; they are a means for the sinner to “pay” the “wages” of sin.
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[[Image:Pius V.jpg|thumb|200px|Pius V declared that indulgences could no longer be related to fees or donations.]]
  
Indulgences are "plenary" or "partial”:
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The Church changed its attitude toward some issues regarding indulgences after the [[Protestant Reformation]]. In 1567, following the [[Council of Trent]], [[Pope Pius V]] issued a decree declaring that it is forbidden to attach the receipt of an indulgence to any financial act, including the giving of [[alms]]. In addition, the only punishment remitted by an indulgence would henceforth be ''existing'' punishment, that is, for sins already committed. Thus, indulgences would no longer be issued that could be used, in effect, as a license to sin. An individual may still gain the indulgence for a specific individual in purgatory other than himself.  
*"plenary" indulgences remit all of the ''existing'' temporal punishment due for the individual’s sins. An individual can only earn one plenary indulgence per day.
 
*"partial" indulgences remit only a part of the ''existing'' punishment.
 
  
Before the [[Second Vatican Council]], partial indulgences were stated as a term of days, weeks, months, or years. This has resulted in Catholics and non-Catholics alike believing that indulgences remit a specific period of time equal to the length of the soul's stay in purgatory.  This was not true, rather the stated length of time actually indicated that the indulgence was equal to the amount of remission the individual would have earned by performing a canonical penance for that period of time. For example, the amount of punishment remitted by a “40-day” indulgence would be equal to the amount of punishment remitted by the individual performing 40 days of penance.
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To gain an indulgence, an individual must be “in communion” with the Church, and have the intention of performing the work for which the indulgence is granted. To be “in communion,the individual must be a [[baptism|baptized]] Catholic without any un-reconciled mortal sins and must not be dissenting from the Church’s teaching.
  
The original reasoning for the "days" notation was, in the early days of the Church, a person's only means of returning to the state of grace was performing penances equal to the actions he had committed. Because a person may not receive Eucharist while not in a state of grace, he must perform these penances if he wished to be Catholic. However, because some people had been professional thieves, prostitutes, or some other sinful individual, he would have to undergo hundreds of years of penance to get remission for his sins. To alleviate this, the Church instituted certain actions or prayers which would cleanse him for the amount of time noted.
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Generally, a plenary indulgence requires the following conditions in order to be valid:
 
 
In addition to remitting punishment for the individual's own ''existing'' sins, an individual may perform the actions necessary to gain an indulgence with the intention of gaining the indulgence for a specific individual in purgatory. In doing so, the individual both gains the indulgence for the soul in purgatory, and performs a spiritual act of mercy.
 
 
 
To gain an indulgence the individual must be “in communion” with the Church, and have the intention of performing the work for which the indulgence is granted. To be “in communion,” the individual must be a baptized Catholic without any un-reconciled mortal sins (if there are any un-reconciled mortal sins, the individual has cut himself/herself off from God and cannot receive the indulgence) and must not be dissenting from the Church’s teaching. The individual must also intend to receive the indulgence.
 
 
 
Generally, a plenary indulgence requires the following conditions in order to be valid (in addition to the acts performed to earn the indulgence).
 
 
*reconciliation, which is required for all indulgences  
 
*reconciliation, which is required for all indulgences  
 
*receiving the [[Eucharist]]
 
*receiving the [[Eucharist]]
*All attachment to sin must be absent.
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*all attachment to sin must be absent
*pray for the intentions of the Holy Father. An [[Our Father]] and a [[Hail Mary]] said for the intentions of the Pontiff is sufficient, although you are free to substitute other prayers of your own choice.
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*prayer for the intentions of the pope
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==Controversy==
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The doctrine of indulgences was a major source of controversy in the Western church, leading to the start of the [[Protestant Reformation]]. The ability to grant full or partial pardons from the punishment of sins had been used by members of the Catholic hierarchy for many centuries. In the [[Middle Ages]], however, a growing sense of ecclesiastic corruption, coupled with various political and socioeconomic factors, created a volatile situation, in which the sale of indulgences would spark a major revolution.
  
It is recommended that the Communion be received at Mass on the same day that the indulgence is earned. Reconciliation may be within a prudent period before or after the act (typically, one week, though during the [[Great Jubilee]], the [[Roman Curia|Vatican]] specifically allowed confession within three weeks of the act). Several indulgences may be earned under the same confession (reconciliation). If any of these additional conditions is missing, the plenary indulgence will instead be partial.
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In 1294, [[Pope Celestine V]] issued a [[Papal bull|bull]] of pardon in [[L'Aquila]], [[Italy]], offering plenary indulgences to sincere [[Christian]]s entering the [[basilica]] of [[Santa Maria di Collemaggio]]. In 1476, Pope [[Sixtus IV]] decreed that a person still living could obtain an indulgence for someone in [[purgatory]]. In 1517, [[Pope Leo X]] offered indulgences for those who gave alms to rebuild [[St. Peter's Basilica]] in [[Rome]]. The aggressive [[marketing]] practices of the German monk [[Johann Tetzel]] in promoting this cause provoked [[Martin Luther]] to write his [[95 Theses]], protesting what he saw as the purchase and crass sale of [[salvation]].  
  
Penitential redemptions were a milder form of indulgence that cut down the time of penance.
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[[Image:Martin Luther by Lucas Cranach der Ältere.jpeg|thumb|200px|Martin Luther]]
  
===Indulgenced Acts===
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In thesis 28, Luther objected to a saying attributed to Tetzel:  
The following acts are examples of those which result in the award of an indulgence:
 
*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."
 
*A partial indulgence is granted for the recitation of the [[Angelus]].
 
*A partial indulgence is granted to Christian faithful who on day of the liturgical feast of any saint recite in that Saint's honor a prayer taken from the Missal or other prayer approved by legimate authority.
 
*A partial indulgence is granted for reading the Holy Scripture at least 15 minutes per day.
 
  
==Controversy==
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{{cquote|As soon as the coin in the coffer rings, the soul from purgatory springs.|20px||}}
The doctrine of indulgences has historically been a controversial teaching in Western Christianity [[soteriology]]. The abuse of this doctrine, in part, led to the start of the [[Protestant Reformation]].
 
  
The ability to grant full or partial pardons from the punishment of sins has been used by members of the Western Church's hierarchy throughout history. These indulgences were related to the removal of the temporal punishment of forgiven sinners.
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In thesis 82, he questioned the spiritual value of indulgences.
  
In 1517, [[Pope Leo X]] offered indulgences for those who gave alms to rebuild [[St. Peter's Basilica]] in [[Rome]]. The aggressive [[marketing]] practices of [[Johann Tetzel]] in promoting this cause provoked [[Martin Luther]] to write his [[95 theses]], protesting what he saw as the purchase and sale of [[salvation]]. In thesis 28, Luther objected to a saying attributed to Tetzel: "As soon as the coin in the coffer rings, the soul from purgatory springs".<ref>Bainton, 60; Brecht, 1:182; Kittelson, 104.</ref> The 95 Theses not only denounced such transactions as worldly but denied the pope's right to grant pardons on God's behalf in the first place: the only thing indulgences guaranteed, Luther said, was an increase in profit and greed, because the pardon of the Church was in God's power alone.<ref>''Certum est, nummo in cistam tinniente augeri questum et avariciam posse: suffragium autem ecclesie est in arbitrio dei solius.'' (Thesis 28)</ref>
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{{cquote|Why does not the pope empty purgatory, for the sake of holy love and of the dire need of the souls that are there, if he redeems an infinite number of souls for the sake of miserable money with which to build a Church? The former reasons would be most just; the latter is most trivial.|20px||}}
  
While Luther did not deny the pope’s right to grant pardons for [[penance]] imposed by the Church, he made it clear that preachers who claimed indulgences absolved buyers from all punishments and granted them salvation were in error.<ref>''Errant itaque indulgentiarum predicatores ii, qui dicunt per pape indulgentias hominem ab omni pena solvi et salvari.'' (Thesis 21)</ref> From this controversy the [[Protestant Reformation]] was launched.
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The only thing that indulgences-for-money guaranteed, Luther declared, was an increase in profit and greed, because the pardon of the Church was in God's power alone.<ref>''Certum est, nummo in cistam tinniente augeri questum et avariciam posse: suffragium autem ecclesie est in arbitrio dei solius.'' (Thesis 28)</ref> While Luther did not deny the pope’s right to grant pardons for [[penance]] imposed by the Church, he made it clear that preachers who claimed that indulgences absolved buyers from all punishments were in in grave error.<ref>''Errant itaque indulgentiarum predicatores ii, qui dicunt per pape indulgentias hominem ab omni pena solvi et salvari.'' (Thesis 21)</ref> From this controversy the [[Protestant Reformation]] was launched.
  
In 1294, [[Pope Celestine V]] issued a [[Papal bull|bull]] of pardon in [[L'Aquila]], [[Italy]], offering plenary indulgence to everybody sincerely [[Contrition|contrite]] and confessed entering the [[basilica]] of [[Santa Maria di Collemaggio]]. The only other [[Saint Door]] outside [[Vatican City|Vatican]] is opened annually by a [[Cardinal (Catholicism)|Cardinal]] between the evening of August 28 and the day after.
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Luther's critique of indulgences had a tremendous impact on his [[world]]. The 95 Theses gained enormous popularity over a very short period of time. [[Leo X]] demanded that Luther recant 41 purported errors, some from the 95 Theses and others from other writings and sayings Luther, which Luther famously refused to do before the [[Diet of Worms]] in 1521, thus symbolically initiating the [[Protestant Reformation]].
  
 
==Other traditions==
 
==Other traditions==
[[Image:Orthodox Indulgence.jpg|thumb|300px|An eighteenth-century indulgence granted by the Patriarch of Jerusalem and sold by Greek monks in [[Wallachia]]]]
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[[Image:Orthodox Indulgence.jpg|thumb|250px|An eighteenth-century certificate granted by the  
Because the underlying doctrine of salvation differs from the Latin Catholic model, indulgences do not exist in [[Eastern Orthodoxy]] or [[Eastern Catholicism]]. Although the former had, in some places, a similar practice of [[Absolution Certificates]] until the twentieth century, known as ''aphesis'' or ''συγχωροχαρτια - synchorochartia''; at the beginning of the eighteenth century [[Synod of Jerusalem|Dositheos Notaras]] (1641-1707), [[Patriarch of Jerusalem]], writes about indulgences as something known to everyone in the ancient tradition: "This practice was confirmed by ancient Tradition that was known to all, that the Most Holy Patriarchs would grant certificates ''(συγχωροχαρτιόν - synchorochartion)'' for the remission of sins to the faithful people.."
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Patriarch of Jerusalem and reportedly sold by Greek monks in [[Wallachia]].]]
  
Those traditions which reject a Latin Catholic concept of [[purgatory]] (or alternatively, a “condition of waiting”) also reject indulgences, as there is no need for remission of temporal punishment where no temporal punishment exists.
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===Orthodox Church===
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Because the underlying doctrine of salvation differs from the Catholic model, indulgences do not generally exist in [[Eastern Orthodoxy]]. However, some Eastern churches did have a similar practice in the form of absolution certificates that were occasionally issued to individuals. At the beginning of the eighteenth century, for example, [[Synod of Jerusalem|Dositheos Notaras]] (1641-1707), [[Patriarch of Jerusalem]], stated that, "This practice was confirmed by ancient Tradition that was known to all, that the Most Holy Patriarchs would grant certificates for the remission of sins to the faithful people." Never as widespread a tradition as in the Catholic Church, absolution certificates ceased entirely in the eastern churches by the beginning of the twentieth century.  
  
The practice of the clergy accepting money for the expiation of the sins of the dead appears in the [[deuterocanonical]] book [[2 Maccabees]] (ca. 100 B.C.E.). This practice is seen nowhere else in the Roman Catholic Bible. The author praises the practice of donating money to the temple as a way of improving the standing of dead sinners on [[Judgment Day]]. These "indulgences" are associated with the [[Pharisees]]. The [[Sadducees]] did not believe in Judgment Day and the [[Essenes]] were not part of the Temple power structure.
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===[[Protestantism]]===
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Protestant denominations today frequently cite indulgences as a prime Roman Catholic error. Generally, Protestants reject the distinction between temporal and eternal debt for sins and argue that Christ paid all debts in full by his sacrifice. To receive God's grace for the remission of sins is strictly a matter of faith in Jesus as the resurrected Lord and has nothing to do with indulgences. Any need of the sinner to merit remission of divinely imposed penalties, argued Luther, obscured the glory and merit of Christ and overthrew the Gospel of unmerited salvation for Christ's sake.
  
The [[Reformation]] from which most [[Protestant]] denominations came from arguably began with the posting of [[Martin Luther]]'s 95 Theses, which were a harsh critique of the practice.  Thus, Protestant denominations today frequently cite indulgences as a prime Roman-Catholic error. Luther rejected the distinction between temporal and eternal debt and argued that Christ paid all debts of all sinners in full by his sacrifice. Any need of the sinner to merit remission of divinely imposed penalties, argued Luther, obscured the glory and merit of Christ and overthrew the Gospel of unmerited salvation for Christ's sake.
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Luther in particular criticized the Catholic understanding of the "Office of the Keys," which the Roman Church believes were given by Christ to [[Saint Peter]] as the first pope. In this view the Office of the Keys is a legislative power given to the pope authorizing him to create conditions and means for salvation. Luther's understanding was that the Keys were bestowed on the whole Church, administered publicly by all the clergy equally, and consisted of the command of Christ to forgive the sins of the penitent and retain the sins of the impenitent. Under the right use of the Keys as commanded by God, no bishop or pope could possibly have the authority to set up additional means of obtaining forgiveness, whether canonical satisfactions or indulgences. While Protestants continue to express a sense of a completed atonement similar to Luther's, the Protestant doctrine of the Keys is found almost exclusively among [[Lutherans]] today.
 
 
In contrast the papal understanding of the Office of the Keys as a legislative power given to the pope for creating conditions and means for salvation, Luther understood the Keys as bestowed on the whole Church, administered publicly by all the clergy equally, and consisting in the command of Christ to forgive the sins of the penitent and retain the sins of the impenitent. As he saw the right use of the Keys as commanded by God, no bishop or pope could possibly have the authority to set up additional means of obtaining forgiveness, whether canonical satisfactions or indulgences. Most Protestants continue to express a sense of a completed atonement similar to Luther's, although Luther's doctrine of the Keys is found almost exclusively among [[Lutherans]] today.
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Line 92: Line 62:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Corvin, Otto von. ''Scandals in the Roman Ctaholic Church'', Merkur Publishing, 2003. ISBN 978-1885928160
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* Catholic Book Publishing. ''The Handbook of Indulgences''. Catholic Book Publishing Company, 1992. ISBN 978-0899425856
*Lea, Henry Charles. ''A History of Auricular Confession and Indulgences in the Latin Church'', Kessenger Publishing, 2004. ISBN 978-1417922321
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* Corvin, Otto von. ''Scandals in the Roman Ctaholic Church''. Merkur Publishing, 2003. ISBN 978-1885928160
*Paulus, Nikolaus. ''Indulgences As a Social Factor in the Middle Ages'', University Press of the Pacific, 2001. ISBN 978-0898753332
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* Lea, Henry Charles. ''A History of Auricular Confession and Indulgences in the Latin Church''. Kessenger Publishing, 2004. ISBN 978-1417922321
*''The Handbook of Indulgences'', Catholic Book Publishing, 1992. ISBN 978-0899425856
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* Paulus, Nikolaus. ''Indulgences As a Social Factor in the Middle Ages''. University Press of the Pacific, 2001. ISBN 978-0898753332
*U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Apostolic Penetentiary of the Vatican. ''Manual of Indulgences'', USCCB Publishing, 2006. ISBN 978-1574554748
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* U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Apostolic Penetentiary of the Vatican. ''Manual of Indulgences''. USCCB Publishing, 2006. ISBN 978-1574554748
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/audiences/1999/documents/hf_jp-ii_aud_29091999_en.html Pope John Paul II's General Audience on Indulgences] - 29 September 1999
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All links retrieved March 2, 2018.
*[http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/tribunals/apost_penit/documents/rc_trib_appen_pro_20000129_indulgence_en.html The Apostolic Penitentiary publication on 'The Gift of the Indulgence']
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*[http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/audiences/1999/documents/hf_jp-ii_aud_29091999_en.html Pope John Paul II's General Audience on Indulgences &mdash; September 29, 1999] ''www.vatican.va''.
*[http://www.vatican.va/archive/catechism/p2s2c2a4.htm#X "Indulgences"], in the ''Catechism of the Catholic Church''.
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*[http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/tribunals/apost_penit/documents/rc_trib_appen_pro_20000129_indulgence_en.html The Apostolic Penitentiary publication on 'The Gift of the Indulgence'] ''www.vatican.va''.
*[http://www.catholic.com/thisrock/1994/9411fea1.asp "A Primer on Indulgences" by James Akin]
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[[Category:philosophy and religion]]
 
[[Category:philosophy and religion]]
 
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Latest revision as of 19:36, 8 October 2020


A Roman Catholic indulgence, dated Dec. 19, 1521. The use of the printing press made possible the mass production of form documents offering indulgences.

An Indulgence, in Roman Catholic theology, is the full or partial remission of punishment for sins. The indulgence is granted by the Church after the sinner has confessed and received absolution and involves certain actions by the recipient, most often the recitation of prayers. Indulgences may also be obtained on behalf of a deceased loved one.

Prior to the modern period, indulgences could be obtained by offering a certain amount of money as alms to the Church, and in some cases were offered for forgiveness for sins not yet committed. This "selling" of indulgences was first practiced in the late thirteenth century and was changed after the Protestant Reformation, which was sparked in 1517 by Martin Luther's objections to abuses of the tradition. In 1567, following the Council of Trent, Pope Pius V outlawed financial giving in relation to indulgences. Absolution certificates used by the Eastern Orthodox Church, first seen in Jerusalem in the sixteenth century, ceased entirely by the beginning of the twentieth century.

Theology of Indulgences

In Roman Catholic theology, indulgences are granted for personal sins—specific sins committed by a person—as opposed to the inherited Original Sin. Such sins are either mortal or venial ("light").

Punishments for sin can be either temporal or eternal. Temporal punishments are temporary punishments—those that affect us in this life or in purgatory. The more temporal punishments one incurs, the more suffering one must endure on earth or in purgatory. Eternal punishment, on the other hand, is everlasting. Even though one may be forgiven of a mortal sin (through the sacrament of Reconciliation)—and relieved of the eternal punishment of Hell—temporal punishments may still remain. Indulgences may be either plenary (complete) or partial.

An indulgence is granted to deal with the remaining temporal punishments due to sins that have already been forgiven. The sacrament of reconciliation removes the guilt of sin and restores the penitent person to a state of grace. However, temporal punishments may still remain. In other words, although God has mercy upon sinners who repent their sins—thus enabling them to avoid eternal punishment in Hell—His justice still requires that the sinner be punished for the wrongdoing. An analogy might be a convicted murderer who has been given the death sentence but is granted clemency because of his authentic remorse, yet must still serve time in prison.

Thus, even though an individual is in a state of grace, if he dies without having served any remaining temporal punishments, he is not yet qualified to enter Heaven. Therefore, these individuals “enter” purgatory, where the punishment they owe is "purged." Indulgences occur when the Church applies merit from its spiritual treasury to an individual, enabling him or her to be relieved from punishments which would otherwise have to be purged through suffering in purgatory.

Pius V declared that indulgences could no longer be related to fees or donations.

The Church changed its attitude toward some issues regarding indulgences after the Protestant Reformation. In 1567, following the Council of Trent, Pope Pius V issued a decree declaring that it is forbidden to attach the receipt of an indulgence to any financial act, including the giving of alms. In addition, the only punishment remitted by an indulgence would henceforth be existing punishment, that is, for sins already committed. Thus, indulgences would no longer be issued that could be used, in effect, as a license to sin. An individual may still gain the indulgence for a specific individual in purgatory other than himself.

To gain an indulgence, an individual must be “in communion” with the Church, and have the intention of performing the work for which the indulgence is granted. To be “in communion,” the individual must be a baptized Catholic without any un-reconciled mortal sins and must not be dissenting from the Church’s teaching.

Generally, a plenary indulgence requires the following conditions in order to be valid:

  • reconciliation, which is required for all indulgences
  • receiving the Eucharist
  • all attachment to sin must be absent
  • prayer for the intentions of the pope

Controversy

The doctrine of indulgences was a major source of controversy in the Western church, leading to the start of the Protestant Reformation. The ability to grant full or partial pardons from the punishment of sins had been used by members of the Catholic hierarchy for many centuries. In the Middle Ages, however, a growing sense of ecclesiastic corruption, coupled with various political and socioeconomic factors, created a volatile situation, in which the sale of indulgences would spark a major revolution.

In 1294, Pope Celestine V issued a bull of pardon in L'Aquila, Italy, offering plenary indulgences to sincere Christians entering the basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio. In 1476, Pope Sixtus IV decreed that a person still living could obtain an indulgence for someone in purgatory. In 1517, Pope Leo X offered indulgences for those who gave alms to rebuild St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. The aggressive marketing practices of the German monk Johann Tetzel in promoting this cause provoked Martin Luther to write his 95 Theses, protesting what he saw as the purchase and crass sale of salvation.

Martin Luther

In thesis 28, Luther objected to a saying attributed to Tetzel:

As soon as the coin in the coffer rings, the soul from purgatory springs.

In thesis 82, he questioned the spiritual value of indulgences.

Why does not the pope empty purgatory, for the sake of holy love and of the dire need of the souls that are there, if he redeems an infinite number of souls for the sake of miserable money with which to build a Church? The former reasons would be most just; the latter is most trivial.

The only thing that indulgences-for-money guaranteed, Luther declared, was an increase in profit and greed, because the pardon of the Church was in God's power alone.[1] While Luther did not deny the pope’s right to grant pardons for penance imposed by the Church, he made it clear that preachers who claimed that indulgences absolved buyers from all punishments were in in grave error.[2] From this controversy the Protestant Reformation was launched.

Luther's critique of indulgences had a tremendous impact on his world. The 95 Theses gained enormous popularity over a very short period of time. Leo X demanded that Luther recant 41 purported errors, some from the 95 Theses and others from other writings and sayings Luther, which Luther famously refused to do before the Diet of Worms in 1521, thus symbolically initiating the Protestant Reformation.

Other traditions

An eighteenth-century certificate granted by the Patriarch of Jerusalem and reportedly sold by Greek monks in Wallachia.

Orthodox Church

Because the underlying doctrine of salvation differs from the Catholic model, indulgences do not generally exist in Eastern Orthodoxy. However, some Eastern churches did have a similar practice in the form of absolution certificates that were occasionally issued to individuals. At the beginning of the eighteenth century, for example, Dositheos Notaras (1641-1707), Patriarch of Jerusalem, stated that, "This practice was confirmed by ancient Tradition that was known to all, that the Most Holy Patriarchs would grant certificates for the remission of sins to the faithful people." Never as widespread a tradition as in the Catholic Church, absolution certificates ceased entirely in the eastern churches by the beginning of the twentieth century.

Protestantism

Protestant denominations today frequently cite indulgences as a prime Roman Catholic error. Generally, Protestants reject the distinction between temporal and eternal debt for sins and argue that Christ paid all debts in full by his sacrifice. To receive God's grace for the remission of sins is strictly a matter of faith in Jesus as the resurrected Lord and has nothing to do with indulgences. Any need of the sinner to merit remission of divinely imposed penalties, argued Luther, obscured the glory and merit of Christ and overthrew the Gospel of unmerited salvation for Christ's sake.

Luther in particular criticized the Catholic understanding of the "Office of the Keys," which the Roman Church believes were given by Christ to Saint Peter as the first pope. In this view the Office of the Keys is a legislative power given to the pope authorizing him to create conditions and means for salvation. Luther's understanding was that the Keys were bestowed on the whole Church, administered publicly by all the clergy equally, and consisted of the command of Christ to forgive the sins of the penitent and retain the sins of the impenitent. Under the right use of the Keys as commanded by God, no bishop or pope could possibly have the authority to set up additional means of obtaining forgiveness, whether canonical satisfactions or indulgences. While Protestants continue to express a sense of a completed atonement similar to Luther's, the Protestant doctrine of the Keys is found almost exclusively among Lutherans today.

Notes

  1. Certum est, nummo in cistam tinniente augeri questum et avariciam posse: suffragium autem ecclesie est in arbitrio dei solius. (Thesis 28)
  2. Errant itaque indulgentiarum predicatores ii, qui dicunt per pape indulgentias hominem ab omni pena solvi et salvari. (Thesis 21)

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Catholic Book Publishing. The Handbook of Indulgences. Catholic Book Publishing Company, 1992. ISBN 978-0899425856
  • Corvin, Otto von. Scandals in the Roman Ctaholic Church. Merkur Publishing, 2003. ISBN 978-1885928160
  • Lea, Henry Charles. A History of Auricular Confession and Indulgences in the Latin Church. Kessenger Publishing, 2004. ISBN 978-1417922321
  • Paulus, Nikolaus. Indulgences As a Social Factor in the Middle Ages. University Press of the Pacific, 2001. ISBN 978-0898753332
  • U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Apostolic Penetentiary of the Vatican. Manual of Indulgences. USCCB Publishing, 2006. ISBN 978-1574554748

External links

All links retrieved March 2, 2018.

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