Not everyone has voicemail or caller ID and the child not knowing whether it is Mommy or Daddy may very well pick it up.
Who doesnât have voicemail these days? It and caller ID are standard far for cell phone plans (most donât even bother advertising them except in the fine print), and if for some reason you have a home phone without built-in voicemail, you could pick up a voicemail machine at any garage sale for twenty-five cents.
But ok, letâs assume an obscure case where the phone is ringing without some sort of voicemail or caller ID and the only person around capable of picking it up is a child who will invariably be kidnapped if the person on the other end of the line thinks they are home alone. First, this is a bad situation to begin with, so there wonât necessarily be a good option. If the child is so young that s/he doesnât know how to speak discretely and is so helpless that s/he would be unable to protect the home at least a little from intruders (by not opening the door, by calling the police, or by calling the neighbors, at the very least), then the child should not have been left home alone in the first place. Second, in this case, the child should simply tell the person that mommy and daddy canât come to the phone right now, which is true. If the person presses them, they could just repeat themselves.
Can you point out to me these impolite occurrences? Donât include things like the money changers in the Temple. Iâm talking about impoliteness, as when someone is attempting to do something nice for you or to help you in some way and you insult them for their efforts.
The qualifications youâre making shift your original argument. If someone is being nice to you, you should return the kindness in kind. So if someone makes you some terrible meatloaf, you should thank them for
feeding you, not for making you the best meatloaf youâve ever had. Telling them that is, frankly, radically
unkind. Itâs what an enemy would do. After all, if you saw your friend (letâs say heâs on morphine because of a recent operation) resting his hand on a hot stove burner, wouldnât you yell at him to take it off? This is obviously not such a big deal, but the principle of similar. One should not encourage error.
Was Peter Satan? No. So, who was Christ speaking to? Was He speaking to Peter himself or to the one influencing Peter?
Irrelevant distinction. If you chastise someoneâs action because you perceive it being influenced by Satan, does this make the action suddenly moral? What
sense does that make?
I doubt very seriously whether our Lord resorted to name-calling.
Because he never called anyone hypocrites, for example, or other such names when appropriate.
I was once told by a very holy priest there is a thing called mental reservationâŚIt means that a person will not tell you some information for a very good reason
This is a theological hypothesis, not a doctrine of the church. It strikes me as extremely deceitful and essentially makes it impossible to lie under any circumstance as long as you remember to do this.
âWhereâs the bathroom?â
âAround the corner [by which I mean, the other direction entirely to everyone but you].â
or
âWhich of these bottles is the medicine I need to live and which is poison?â
âOh, that one is [but really, I meant the other one].â
The end result is the words that you speak to the person do not conform with reality, and your intention is to cause them to have a view of the situation that is untrue as you know it. In other words, identical to a lie in both intent, means, and ends. I donât know about you, but if something looks like a rose, smells like a rose, has a tag on it saying ârose,â has a bunch of gardeners sitting around calling it a rose, and after testing we find out it has the
same DNA as a rose⌠then itâs probably a rose.