You are not a polygamist?
You are not a polygamist?
[PeaceMakingPolygamist ] You know that I'm not a polygamist.
Porn is stupid. Lonely persons watch it because they lack intimacy.
Pornography can be a nude selfie a wife gives her husband while he's away fighting the war against ISIS; he will use it to channel his sexual desires and thoughts towards her; his nocturnal emissions will be about her. Sin or not?
Or not (Pr 26:4).Anyone is welcome to respond to that.
Jesus loves you (Jn 3:16). Jesus is willing to save you (2 Pe 3:9). Repent (Eze 18:30-32; Ac 17:30). Believe (Mk 9:23).
[PeaceMakingPolygamist ] "This people draweth nigh unto me with their mouth, and honoureth me with their lips; but their heart is far from me."
:yawn: Proof please (Eph 4:14). each:
(I must note: Healthy adults in healthy relationships also use pornography...
Pornography can be a nude selfie a wife gives her husband while he's away fighting the war against ISIS; he will use it to channel his sexual desires and thoughts towards her; his nocturnal emissions will be about her. Sin or not?
That is correct. I don't see anything wrong with that. In fact as long as it isn't degrading or used as a form of blackmail in the future there is nothing inherently wrong with that.
The only issue would be if the woman considers sending pornographic imagines immoral or a sin- or if the man receiving them considered it to be a immoral or a sin. Then they'd be going against what they believed in. At least in my opinion. I have a feeling some people will disagree.
Ahem, let me define that now. I apologize for not doing that in the post. I intended to do that originally.Without defining "healthy adults" and "healthy relationship" and without giving an opinion on the morality of pornography ... :idunno:
I agree with that.Can we agree that a married couple watching child pornography are not healthy and not in a healthy relationship? I'm sure we can agree on that.
There are situations in which pornography is acceptable. Your earlier example was reasonable.If pornography is generally immoral, then are we really possibly talking about healthy adults in healthy relationships? Above I tried to give a specific situation where the context might make it amoral or perhaps moral. :idunno:
Specifically during the marital act. Which prompts the question, What does it mean to covet a woman? Unless you're seeing her as a servant or labor of some sort, what else could it mean to covet a woman, except to desire to unite with her bodily? And it is in this way that coveting is distinct from lust, because we can covet possessions without wanting to unite bodily with them. (Desiring to unite with an animal or other object is also an offense against chastity.)I understand. My position is that I cannot covet my wife anymore than I can covet what belongs to me. We are one flesh.
Because the Church teaches that lust is distinct, and that all offenses against chastity are transgressions against the commandment, Thou shalt not commit adultery, and not, Thou shalt not covet.We ought not to covet (Exodus 20:17). Why see inordinate desire (lust) as something other than coveting?
See my comment below about the difference between sin and trespassing.The idea of coveting is expressed in Greek words like epithumia and epithumeó, is it not?
We are discussing acts that can be sin in one context but not sin in another context
Let's discuss sin then, since I think we are at odds over this definition also, and it is perhaps the governing word in this discussion anyway., and trying to do so without agreeing on the definitions of words. That's not a recipe for success.
Pornography can be a nude selfie a wife gives her husband while he's away fighting the war against ISIS; he will use it to channel his sexual desires and thoughts towards her; his nocturnal emissions will be about her. Sin or not?
What does it mean to covet a woman? Unless you're seeing her as a servant or labor of some sort, what else could it mean to covet a woman, except to desire to unite with her bodily?
And it is in this way that coveting is distinct from lust, because we can covet possessions without wanting to unite bodily with them. (Desiring to unite with an animal or other object is also an offense against chastity.)
Because the Church teaches that lust is distinct, and that all offenses against chastity are transgressions against the commandment, Thou shalt not commit adultery, and not, Thou shalt not covet.
A sin is a moral offense, which I call a trespass, that is done fully voluntarily, and that, in every way conceivable. So as to whether a trespass is a sin is all about the heart of the trespasser. And meanwhile, where there is no trespass, there can be no sin, regardless of our heart.
So with pornography, it is in and of itself a trespass or moral offense, and a grave one at that, according to the Church. Regardless, it is possible to engage in the production, distribution and consumption of pornography without ever sinning, when and only when the conditions, physical and mental and emotional and social etc., of the trespasser relegate the trespass to something other than fully free, voluntary and uncoerced. When we commit a moral offense, no matter how grave, in such circumstances, our guilt is reduced for the trespass, to either a venial (or forgiven) sin (e.g., gluttony), or it is all together eliminated.
My impression is that you believe that any bona fide moral offense (e.g., murder) is a sin, regardless of other circumstances. Is this correct?
Lusting is not coveting. Lusting is offense against chastity.Similarly, if you think to steal something, whether you do it or not, you have already committed the sin coveting that thing you thought to steal.
Taking another person's physical life was not always the sin of murder in the Bible narrative. For example, there were cities of refuge for those who killed but didn't murder.
I don't have wet dreams anymore, I've only been married for 16 years. My point being that the younger folk in overbearing religious environments can feel condemned over something that is a normal bodily function. Christians and there warfare against all things sexual only create more problems than solutions.
Problem? Idols. Solution? Jesus Christ!
Granted most young men will suffer their prodigal child miseries of the world and pleasure leaving them high and dry before turning to Christ and finding joy and peace and contentment in Him.
That doesn't preclude us from warning young men from the misery the world offers.
Paul paints a picture of a repentant heart in Phiilipians 3. Pressing on toward perfection. Forgetting what is behind, holding on to what we attained through Christ. (Phiilipians 3:12-16)Do you still sin ever?
You don't know? Are you doubting the "science" you've presented? Wasn't your brain "hijacked" by porn, or did you have free will, and therefore sinned willfully?
If you cannot keep from doing the things you don't want to do, you lack free will. That's common sense.
Consider you are misunderstanding Romans 7:15 because Paul is not talking about wilful sin but unintentional sin, like becoming unclean by accidentally touching something unclean (Lev 5:2), or menstruation for women (Lev 15:30). If you believe looking at porn is sinful and you do it in spite of that knowledge and spirit of grace, then your fate is Hebrews 10:27-29; whereas, if you wife menstruates, she no longer is guilty of sin for that and no longer has to make atonement with God for that.
Does that mean you no longer sin at all or that you have put this sin, and perhaps others, behind you?
Over *that* sin doesn't sound like he gave you victory over every sin? Why's He holding back? Why are you?
Lusting is not coveting. Lusting is offense against chastity.
Paul paints a picture of a repentant heart in Phiilipians 3.
Pressing on toward perfection.
The point is the pressing on. Repenting.
Do we have free will.
God holds us responsible for our actions.
The Holy Spirit convicts in a process gradually in the sanctification process, as we choose to take part in His way for our lives.(Romans 6:22)