tana wrote:madeleine wrote:
The soul and body are created together. The soul separated from a body is not a human being. If it were, then we wouldn't call it death, and there would be no need for Jesus Christ.
I don't know that anyone can say what a soul experiences after death.
Also, you have to understand the Christian concept of time. God, being the creator of time, exists outside of it. Most theologians I know of put the soul outside of time as well, after death. So what is time to a soul that is not experiencing time? Some speculate that purgatory would seem, to those of us in time, to be less than a moment.
Spirit + body = soul. Hydrogen + Oxygen = water. Board + nail = house. Electron + nucleus = atom. Each separate elements which create a structure. Each stand alone. What does the spirit consist of separate from the body? I think what you're saying is purgatory is a holding ground for sleeping spirits? It seems to me that to say the spirit is unaware, when it is not nested in the body, has no personality or definition, makes the spirit incoherent.....and a non factor.
I don't know what a soul is aware of, or not aware of, or how a soul experiences anything. What is awareness to a soul? I can't say. As a Catholic I believe souls in heaven can hear our prayers. What is hearing to a soul? It is a word that describes how we understand things, here and now. Who can say how a soul hears our prayers? They certainly don't have ears to hear!
There have been mystics and poets who have tried to describe purgatory. My favorite is "The Dream of Gerontius"...but it isn't doctrine. It is the poem of Cardinal John Henry Newman. A work of art.
Certainly we believe the soul takes on effects from the body. Baptism leaves a permanent mark on the soul. Sin leaves an effect on a soul, which is why we believe purgatory is necessary. God's cleansing fire, that cleanses a soul of the temperal effects of sin.
Catholics believe a person is judged at the time of their death. A soul in purgatory is there before heaven. So purgatory is not so much a holding place, but a stopping place on the way to heaven. If you can even call it a place. Some very good theologians have called purgatory a state,not a place.
A soul is made in the image of God. God is Spirit, not matter. I know of nothing that can measure a soul.
As for your question about testing, Christian belief is that God created us out of love, in order to love Him. His love is not a test, and He isn't testing our love. We were created with free will in order to love God freely, as what sort of love is forced?
As for judgement, we hold no belief that there will be a theological test. Catholic teaching is, all will be judged according to their understand of God, and how they lived what they understood. Not as a form of a test, but as an indication as to the orientation of a person's heart. Towards love for God as they understand, or not. As who would want to live I heaven with God if they have no love for God? Hell, by definition, is a permanent separation from God. Those who will be judged that direction, will have made that choice.
It isn't a test that is based on doing, it is a judgment based on the sort of
being a person is. The doing comes from who one is being.
Being a Christian is not the result of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter with an event, a person, which gives life a new horizon and a decisive direction -Pope Benedict XVI