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As a life long Roman Catholic before recently beginning a move East, I have always been taught that Purgatory is a transition phase and those who go there will eventually get to heaven.
I think this "purgatory is a place" thing is started by Protestants who use this as an apologetic against the Roman Catholic Church. The problem here is that some poorly Catechized Catholics pick this up and believe in it too rather than listen to what the Church actually teaches.
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Does anyone know, where specifically in a magesterial document, that the Church taught that Purgatory was a physical spatially located punitive fire that had a retributive purpose. Is it in the definition that dogmatized Purgatory? No. Purgatory as physical location has never been formally dogmatized. Is purgatory everywhere, if it need not be localized in a place?
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Is purgatory everywhere, if it need not be localized in a place? Since its souls that are in Heaven, Hell or Purgatory, the concept of space and time does not apply to them as they do not have physical bodies.
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The difficulty, I believe, is most Western Catholics treat it as dogma, whether or not it is so defined because of secondary concern. I agree that that is at least part of the difficulty; although I think we could also say, conversely, that many Orthodox treat as dogma the idea that purgatory cannot be a physical place.
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It may not be a dogma that purgatory cannot be a physical place, but it is an inescapable conclusion.
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It may not be a dogma that purgatory cannot be a physical place, but it is an inescapable conclusion. Doesn't the word 'physical place' lose its 'earthly' meaning when discussing purgatory, or even the resurrected body? Didn't Jesus' resurrected body disappear and appear, perhaps even walk through walls, at will?
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Well, that was one of the issues at Florence: the Greeks were perfectly willing to accept that the fires and pains of purgatory were metaphorical or mystical, but the Latins insisted they were "material". The Greeks objected that as the souls of the dead were immaterial, they could not be subject to either material fire or physical pain.
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On the website, www.east2west.org [ east2west.org], Dr. Dragini has a nice answer to a question about this topic, which is worth reading. I'll post it here even though it repeats a lot of what has already been said. As a general rule, all Eastern Christians do not use the word "Purgatory." This includes both Eastern Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Christians. The word "Purgatory" is specific to the Latin tradition, and carries some specific historical baggage that makes Eastern Christians uncomfortable.
In the Medieval West, many popular theologians defined Purgatory as a specific place, where people essentially sat around and suffered. Some theologians went so far as to imply that a literal fire burns those who suffer in Purgatory. It was also popular to tally periods of time that people spent in purgatory for various offences. It is worth noting that contemporary Roman Catholic theology has (thankfully) moved beyond this approach, to a more Patristic understanding of Purgatory.
In the Catholic understanding, only two points are necessary dogma concerning "purgatory": 1) There is a place of transition/transformation for those en-route to Heaven, and 2) prayer is efficacious for the dead who are in this state.
The Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic Churches agree with the Latin Church fully on both of these points. In practice, we routinely celebrate Divine Liturgies for the dead, and offer numerous prayers on their behalf. We would not do so if we did not agree with the above two dogmatic points.
But again, we do not use the word "Purgatory" for two reasons. First, it is a Latin word first used in the Medieval West, and we use Greek words to describe our theology. Second, the word "Purgatory" still carries specific Medieval baggage that we aren't comfortable with.
It is noteworthy that my own Byzantine Catholic Church has never been required to use the word Purgatory. Our act of reunion with Rome, "The Treaty of Brest," which was formally accepted by Pope Clement VIII, does not require us to accept the Western understanding of Purgatory.
Article V of the Treaty of Brest states "We shall not debate about purgatory..." implying that both sides can agree to disagree on the specifics of what the West calls "Purgatory."
In the East, we tend to have a much more positive view of the transition from death to Heaven. Rather than "Purgatory," we prefer to call it "the Final Theosis." This refers to the process of deification, in which the remnants of our humans nature are transformed, and we come to share in the divine life of the Trinity. Rather than seeing this as a place to "sit and suffer," the Eastern Fathers of the Church described the Final Theosis as being a journey. While this journey can entail hardships, there are also powerful glimpses of joy.
Interestingly, Mother Angelica has repeatedly expressed a very positive understanding of "Purgatory" being a joyful state, rather than a place of suffering. In some ways her description lines up well with the Eastern understanding of the Final Theosis.
Although we do not use the same words, Eastern Orthodox/Catholics and Latin Catholics do essentially believe the same thing on this important point.
Please note: Eastern theology teaches that theosis is an infinite process, and does not cease when a person enters into heaven. The term "final theosis" is not intended to imply otherwise. When he mentions the idea of the Final Theosis as a journey, it makes sense how the idea of the toll houses arose. Peace and blessings, Scott
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Dear brother Stuart, Well, that was one of the issues at Florence: the Greeks were perfectly willing to accept that the fires and pains of purgatory were metaphorical or mystical, but the Latins insisted they were "material". The Greeks objected that as the souls of the dead were immaterial, they could not be subject to either material fire or physical pain. It may have been an issue during the discussions, but the final dogmatic decree on the matter explicitly and intentionally left it out. Given that, I don't know why it would be an issue today. Can you give a reason? (Not even Trent insisted on it) Why is Purgatorial fire still such a bugbear with the Eastern Orthodox? It used to be that Latinization (the Westerns imposing its Traditions on all others) was the boogeyman of unity. Can it be that "hellenization" (the Easterns imposing its own Traditions on all others) will present the same problems for unity? Blessings, Marduk
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Purgatory is not considered a substantive issue by most Orthodox theologians, just as it is not considered a substantive issue by most Catholic theologians. The laity and many of the lesser clergy, on the other hand, turn it into a stumbling block mainly because they do not understand what the Latin Church presently teaches.
As for hellenization, I have often noted in this forum that many Orthodox seem incapable of accepting the legitimacy of any theological expression that is not explicitly Byzantine, regardless of whether the expression is Latin, Oriental or Assyrian.
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On that note, it is also interesting that in this very discussion we have gone almost 6 pages with little or no mention of Protestant views on the matter.
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Which Protestants believe in any sort of Purgatory?
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You can find some high church Anglicans or Anglo-Catholics who lean in that direction. Even a rather low church Orangeman like C.S. Lewis came around to the view that the soul requires purification of some kind.
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On that note, it is also interesting that in this very discussion we have gone almost 6 pages with little or no mention of Protestant views on the matter. Which Protestants believe in any sort of Purgatory? Hi Athanasius, It strikes me that some readers might get the impression, from your post, that the only views worth mentioning or discussing are those that affirm the existence of purgatory. Kind of like the old "We'll discuss this with you just so long as you already agree with us." But since you ask, it seems worth mentioning that James Akin says that "There <are> Protestants who believe in purgatory. One who was very explicit about it was C. S. Lewis ... " and "But beyond Protestants like Lewis, who openly admit their belief in purgatory, it may be said that Protestants in general believe in purgatory, they just don't call it that." (See quotation below, which is taken from http://www.ewtn.com/library/answers/how2purg.htm .) 11. "No Protestant could believe it." Sorry, but this is also false. There <are> Protestants who believe in purgatory. One who was very explicit about it was C. S. Lewis. In his <Letters to Malcom,> he wrote:
"Of course I pray for the dead. The action is so spontaneous, so all but inevitable, that only the most compulsive theological case against it would deter me. And I hardly know how the rest of my prayers would survive if those for the dead were forbidden. At our age, the majority of those we love best are dead. What sort of intercourse with God could I have if what I love best were unmentionable to him?"
"I believe in Purgatory. . . . Our souls <<U>demand></U> Purgatory, don't they? Would it not beak the heart if God said to us, 'It is true, my son, that your breath smells and your rags drip with mud and slime, but we are charitable here and no one will upbraid you with these things, nor draw away from you. Enter into the joy'? Should we not reply, "With submission, sir, and if there is no objection, I'd <U>rather</U> be cleansed first.' "It may hurt, you know'—"Even so, sir.'"
"I assume that the process of purification will normally involve suffering. Partly from tradition; partly because most real good that has been done me in this life has involved it. But I don't think the suffering is the purpose of the purgation. I can well believe that people neither much worse nor much better than I will suffer less than I or more. . . . The treatment given will be the one required, whether it hurts little or much."
"My favorite image on this matter comes from the dentist's chair. I hope that when the tooth of life is drawn and I am 'coming round',' a voice will say, 'Rinse your mouth out with this.' <U>This</U> will be Purgatory. The rinsing may take longer than I can now imagine. The taste of <U>this</U> may be more fiery and astringent than my present sensibility could endure. But . . . it will [not] be disgusting and unhallowed."
But beyond Protestants like Lewis, who openly admit their belief in purgatory, it may be said that Protestants in general believe in purgatory, they just don't call it that. For every historic Protestant will admit that our sinning in this life does not continue into heaven. In fact, they will be quite insistent that although our sanctification is not complete in this life, it will be completed (instantaneously, they say) as soon as this life is over. But that is what purgatory is!—the final sanctification, the purification. Thus it is permissible to say that many Protestants believe in purgatory without even realizing it.
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Well, I grew up Protestant (mother's family Southern Baptist, father's family Pentecostal), and in my experience, Protestants tend to believe that the purification that takes place after death is instantaneous-either immediately upon death or at the Final Judgment. In either case, I do not find it to be reconcilable with either Catholic beliefs about Purgatory or Orthodox beliefs about the purification of souls after death. The strongest evidence-in my opinion-is that most Protestants would not even consider prayers for the dead.
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