Me too.......... Oh I see.Actively fantasizing about another specific person may be sinful. I've been over this before, more than once,
I've been known to manage them now and again.That's another good question.
No, I most certainly do not. Nor do I understand how any of those things could even conceivably create any kind of repsponsability to another being.The nature of the universe, God's role in creating it, our purpose in being created -- I think these are sufficient reasons to establish a responsibility to God. Do you not?
.This is not a good argument for or against masturbation, since Onan was killed for not providing his dead brother an heir, and not for masturbating. He wasted his seed ( after plowing the field, btw ) which was promised to the widow of his brother. He didn't want a child that he couldn't claim as his own.
( Yeah, it's a myth. I know )
So looking at a woman with lust is not sinful?Sexual attraction isn't sinful. Actively fantasizing about another specific person may be sinful. I've been over this before, more than once, on this very forum.
So if I do something that I don't believe to be wrong - like having gay sex with a consenting adult - then I am not sinning, even if God would consider it to be sinning?Sin must be intentional, chosen. When you sin, you intentionally choose to do something that you know is wrong when you do it. Whether or not you intend to disobey God, you intend to do something you know to be wrong, and that does disobey God. Does that clarify what I mean?
.First of all, I wouldn't have to know EVERY action committed by every human being -- just ONE sinful action committed by each one.
But, in practice, I'm not even claiming that much knowledge. I'm simply claiming that the Bible indicates that we all sin.
I have always found this puzzling. Apparently I am so utterly wicked that I deserve nothing better than the worst punishment imaginable.Me too.......... Oh I see.
Still you are free to sin as much as you want. A quick prayer and you get off scot free. I have to live with my actions.
Do you think this is why Christianity is popular? It allows people to dodge responsibility for their actions in the arrogant hope a sky fairy forgives them?
Ah, you've defined Bible-based beliefs as a priori arrogant. Thanks for the clarification.
No.That's another good question. The nature of the universe, God's role in creating it, our purpose in being created -- I think these are sufficient reasons to establish a responsibility to God. Do you not?
And yet the very question on this matter remains unanswered. I'll ask again. What specifically, given that you are talking about everyone over the age of 10, and therefore not being held accountable for 'the original sin', is so irresistable and is sinful, that everyone is guilty of it (or them) at least once in their life?Except in practice this isn't actually necessary. I can teach people about the nature of sin, how humans choose to sin, and how someone can repent of sin and re-establish a connection with God.
Haven't you already judged everyone by proclaiming that no one alive today is free of sin?But if you believe it doesn't apply to you -- that somehow you're part of a rare group of people that has never chosen to do something morally wrong -- then that's the end of the discussion. And since I don't have the authority to judge your sins, go in peace.
If it is assumed, as you do, that a free moral agent must have committed such an act, then clearly the meaning of "free moral agent" is nonsense. A free moral agent must be free, at least theoretically, to act correctly at every turn. If there is something inherent in being a free moral agent that automatically prevents that possibility, then one is not a free moral agent at all, freedom of will is a hoax, and God has loaded the dice.No. Only free moral agents. Not infants.
If I am part of a democratic society, I assume the responsibility to function as a member of that society - obey the laws, face the concequences if I don't, etc.
.
And the Catch 22 of the underlined is "original sin". We all did that!
If it is assumed, as you do, that a free moral agent must have committed such an act, then clearly the meaning of "free moral agent" is nonsense. A free moral agent must be free, at least theoretically, to act correctly at every turn.
I don't know.And yet the very question on this matter remains unanswered. I'll ask again. What specifically, given that you are talking about everyone over the age of 10, and therefore not being held accountable for 'the original sin', is so irresistable and is sinful, that everyone is guilty of it (or them) at least once in their life?
Haven't you already judged everyone by proclaiming that no one alive today is free of sin?
If it is assumed, as you do, that a free moral agent must have committed such an act, then clearly the meaning of "free moral agent" is nonsense. A free moral agent must be free, at least theoretically, to act correctly at every turn. If there is something inherent in being a free moral agent that automatically prevents that possibility, then one is not a free moral agent at all, freedom of will is a hoax, and God has loaded the dice.
and yet you said:I don't know.
I can teach people about the nature of sin, how humans choose to sin, and how someone can repent of sin and re-establish a connection with God.