Imperfect contrition

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Imperfect contrition (also known as attrition) in Catholic theology is a desire not to sin for a reason other than love of God. Imperfect contrition is contrasted with perfect contrition.[1]

While attrition does not produce justification, attrition (imperfect contrition) does dispose the soul to receive grace in the Catholic sacrament of Reconciliation.

The Council of Trent (1545-1563) was the first council to comment on the matter. It defined contrition (perfect or imperfect) as "sorrow of soul, and a hatred of sin committed, with a firm purpose of not sinning in the future".[1] However, while perfect contrition is motivated out of a love of God, imperfect contrition is motivated for other reasons, such as "the consideration of the turpitude of sin or from the fear of hell and punishment".[2] Therefore, it declared, "If any man assert that attrition ... is not a true and a profitable sorrow; that it does not prepare the soul for grace, but that it makes a man a hypocrite, yea, even a greater sinner, let him be anathema."

Jesus's invocations in the Gospels, of the threat of hell, are held to justify the belief that imperfect contrition can be a source of grace. Biblical support for attrition can be found in Proverbs 13:13, Proverbs 14:26-27, Proverbs 19:23, Matthew 10:28, and Philippians 2:12 in The New King James Version of the Bible (which is a Protestant, not a Catholic Bible edition, but which does share most of its content with a canonical Catholic version like the New American Bible, the Revised Standard Version, the New Revised Standard Version, or the Jerusalem Bible).

References

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