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Page 5

Chapter 13; Part 1 Continued...

The 1992 Catechism also reiterated the teaching on Original Sin in unmistakable terms:

"How did the sin of Adam become the sin of all his descendants? The whole human race is in Adam "as one body of one man." By this "unity of the human race" all men are implicated in Adam's sin, as all are implicated in Christ's Justice. Still, the transmission of original sin is a mystery that we cannot fully understand. But we do know by revelation that Adam had received original holiness and justice, not for himself alone, but for all human nature.

"By yielding to the tempter, Adam and Eve committed a personal sin, but this sin affected the human nature that they would then transmit in a fallen state. It is a sin which will be transmitted by propagation to all mankind, that is, by the transmission of a human nature deprived of original holiness and justice. And that is why original sin is called "sin" only in an analogical sense: it is a sin "contracted" and not "committed" - a state and not an act." (404).

"Although it is proper to each individual, original sin does not have the character of a personal fault in any of Adam's descendants. It is a deprivation of original holiness and justice, but human nature has not been totally corrupted: it is wounded in the natural powers proper to it; subject to ignorance, suffering, and the dominion of death; and inclined to sin - an inclination to evil that is called "concupiscence." Baptism, by imparting the life of Christ's grace, erases original sin and turns a man back toward God, but the consequences for nature, weakened and inclined to evil, persist in man and summon him to spiritual battle." (405). [Emphasis added.]

Clearly, Adam was the one who committed the Original Sin, and all mankind is wounded in consequence. The Catholic Church does not officially accept the speculation that "we all have chosen sin," a revisionist view which tries to accommodate polygenism by inferring that each one of us, being sinful, has rejected God as did early mankind. (In such a view, Adam and Eve would be only symbolic representations of mankind.)

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