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forgiveness is a social reality.

      The Church Is a Community of Discernment

      The other modern way of stating the meaning of the phrase “to bind and loose” arises clearly out of the usage of the rabbinic teachers of the time. To these scribes and teachers were brought problems of moral decision: “Is it permitted to . . . ?” The teacher who then spoke to permit or to forbid was binding if he stated a clear obligation, especially a negative one; he was loosing if he left the matter open or permitted the action which the pupil had proposed. Thus, the authorization given to the church deals not only with the offender but also with the authority of the standards by which an offense is to be recognized.

      The two functions of moral discernment and forgiveness are closely interrelated. It is only because there is some clear understanding of what the standards are that sin can be recognized; it is only in continued wrestling with particular offenses and asking why they should be considered as offenses that the church keeps its understandings of what is right and wrong alive and practical.

      The first clear lesson of Jesus’ instruction is that the discernment of right and wrong cannot be separated from the situation in which we deal with our brothers and sisters and their need. We do not promulgate ethical generalities outside the context of their application. We do not identify as vices or as virtues whole categories of behavior without sharing the struggle and the tension of applying them to the situation of the believer who must determine how to behave when one really meets the choice. This is the easiest way to ensure that the church will not continue to proclaim standards that are no longer capable of application. The standards must constantly be tested by whether it is possible to convince a believer that he or she has sinned. In the process of conversation with the believer, if the church has been accusing one of sin when the accusation was unfair, the mutual reconciling procedure is the way to modify the rules. If, on the other hand, the standards by which the offender is judged continue to be correct, it is in the conversation with the tempted believer that the church will give the most fruitful attention to finding other ways of meeting those needs and temptations which led that person to fall. Thus, the redeeming conversation with the believer is the instrument of ethical discernment in the New Testament church.

      Q. What is the baptismal pledge?

      A. It is a commitment which man makes to God publicly and orally before the church, in which he renounces Satan, all his thoughts and works. He pledges as well that he will henceforth set all his faith, hope and trust alone in God, and direct his life according to the divine Word, in the power of Jesus Christ our Lord, and in case he should not do that, he promises hereby to the church that he desires virtuously to receive from her members and from her fraternal admonition, as is said above.

      Q. What power do those who are in the church have over one another?

      A. The authority of fraternal admonition.

      Q. What is fraternal admonition?

      A. That one who sees his brother sinning goes to him in love and admonishes him fraternally and quietly that he should abandon sin. If he does so he has won his soul. If he does not, then he takes two or three witnesses with him and admonishes him before them once again. If he follows him, it is concluded, if not, he says it to the church. The same calls him forward and admonishes him for the third time. If he now abandons his sin, he has saved his soul.

      Q. From where does the church have this authority?

      A. From the command of Christ, who said to his disciples, all that you bind on earth shall be bound also in heaven and all that you loose on earth shall also be loosed in heaven.

      Q. But what right has one brother to use this authority on another?

      If we understand the significance of the promise of the Holy Spirit deeply enough, related so specifically in Jesus’ words to the church which gathers to bind and to loose (Matt 18:19-20), this may even protect us against certain misunderstandings of the use and the authority of scripture. One of the most enduring subjects of unfruitful controversy over the centuries has been whether the words of scripture, when looked at purely as words

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