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  2. Mortification in Catholic theology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortification_in_Catholic...

    The Roman Catholic Church has often held mortification of the flesh (literally, "putting the flesh to death"), as a worthy spiritual discipline. The practice is rooted in the Bible: in the asceticism of the Old and New Testament saints, and in its theology, such as the remark by Saint Paul, in his Epistle to the Romans, where he states: "If you live a life of nature, you are marked out for ...

  3. Mortification (theology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortification_(theology)

    Mortification in Christian theology refers to the subjective process of Sanctification. It means the 'putting to death' of sin in a believer's life. ( Colossians 3:5) Reformed theologian J.I. Packer describes it in the following way: "The Christian is committed to a lifelong fight against the world, the flesh and the devil.

  4. Mortification of the flesh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortification_of_the_flesh

    Mortification of the flesh is an act by which an individual or group seeks to mortify or deaden their sinful nature, as a part of the process of sanctification. [1] In Christianity, mortification of the flesh is undertaken in order to repent for sins and share in the Passion of Jesus. [2]

  5. Willem Duynstee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willem_Duynstee

    In Christian Theology, mortification refers to bringing “to death” something humanly unruly or seemingly-uncontrollable, especially one's concupiscible or pleasurable powers (i.e., food, sex, play, rest, etc.). [43] Theology views the flesh as wounded and in need of reasonable governance and appropriate vigilance.

  6. Mortification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortification

    Mortification may refer to: Mortification (theology), theological doctrine; Mortification of the flesh, religious practice of corporal mortification; Mortification in Roman Catholic teaching, Roman Catholic doctrine of mortification; Extreme embarrassment; Mortification (band), a Christian extreme metal band Mortification

  7. Interior life (Catholic theology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interior_life_(Catholic...

    In Catholic theology, this life has been understood as a participation in divine, intratrinitarian life introduced in the life of a Christian at baptism (Cf. "partakers of the divine nature" in 2 Pt 1:4), and which grows through further reception of the sacraments, channels of grace which in its essence is "divine life." This divine life also ...

  8. Penitential canons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penitential_canons

    These canons, collected, adapted to later practice, and completed by suitable directions formed the nucleus of the Penitential Books (see Moral Theology). They all belong to the ancient penitential discipline and retain only a historic interest; if the writers of the classical period continue to cite them, it is only as examples, and to excite ...

  9. Self-mortification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-mortification

    Mortification in Catholic theology; Involuntary. Sometimes used interchangeably with mortification of the self, personality disruption done to an individual in a ...