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Catholic Answers Live

#12370 Does God Punish Us By Afflicting Family? Genesis Gap and More - Jimmy Akin

Catholic Answers Live

Catholic Answers

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.82.2K Ratings

🗓️ 13 September 2025

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“Does God Punish Us By Afflicting Family? ” This episode explores the complex relationship between divine justice and human suffering, addressing questions like whether continuous sin can lead to a loved one’s illness and how the Church can effectively evangelize to those with disabilities. Additionally, we delve into the implications of the death penalty and the miraculous nature of St. Paul’s recoveries.

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Questions Covered:

  • 01:12 – Is it possible that God punishes my continuous sin through my son’s disease?
  • 04:19 – Can a Catholic hold to the Genesis Gap Theory? Or is it heretical?
  • 12:41 – How can the Church evangelize to those with disabilities? What are good resources that can help me get started?
  • 19:28 – Can we in good conscience support the death penalty? I can’t seem to understand why the church changed this. In theory can’t the church’s teaching on this revert?
  • 28:37 – Is there a miraculous quality to St. Paul recovering from the stoning at Lystra or from all of the other beatings he suffered? It seems any number of the rods, stonings, etc. could have disabled him and made his long-distance travel impossible.
  • 32:49 – How does setting a prayer intention before praying a rosary differ from just praying for that intention directly without praying a rosary, does it have something to do with the merit involved with praying a rosary? Thank you!
  • 36:40 – Why can’t Catholicism be just another denomination among the denominations? I think Protestants see Catholicism as a Christian denomination, thus no need to make the move if they are already happy where they are.
  • 43:02 – If priests have the sacramental power to ordain, why has this actually happened so rarely in Church history?
  • 46:50 – Why is it mandatory to go to a priest for confession before one can go for Holy Communion. Why isn’t going to God directly sufficient for this? If someone sits on his seat because he hasn’t gone for confession, everyone would see that he hasn’t gone to confession, it would elicit some kind of shame on this person.

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:05.2

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0:11.5

Learn more at realestateforlife.org. Welcome back to Catholic Answers live.

0:32.9

Thanks for hanging with us.

0:33.9

We continue with Ask Me Anything of the Internet variety.

0:38.1

We've got tons of questions that come to us from the Internet, and we're trying to get to as many of them as

0:41.5

possible. And the guy to do that with is Jimmy Aiken, senior apologist here at Catholic

0:45.8

Answers, author of a whole bunch of great books, including The Bible is a Catholic book

0:50.4

and a daily defense, 365 days plus one to becoming a better apologists and many, many more.

0:57.3

Jimmy, thanks for coming back for another hour.

1:00.0

My pleasure.

1:01.4

Let's get right back to the questions, because we really do have a lot of questions, and this one

1:05.1

comes from Giacomo Cutten, 5630, and Giacomo wants to know this.

1:10.7

Is it possible that God punishes my continuous sin through my son's disease?

1:17.6

Okay.

1:19.6

So anytime anyone asks the question of the form, is it possible that X occurs, the answer is going to be, yes, it's possible, given that God is

1:32.5

omnipotent and can thus do what he chooses. But that's a separate question, then, is it likely

1:39.9

that that's what's happening? And what we're told, especially in the New Testament, is that God is love.

1:48.7

And so, and that includes both love for you and love for your son.

1:54.4

And the way almost all theologians today would look at this question would be to say that your sin and your son's

2:03.1

disease should be understood to be independent of each other, that God's not going to cause your

2:09.4

son to suffer because you're doing something bad. Now, you shouldn't do the thing that's bad,

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