C
chevalier
Guest
The teaching of the Church on this is 100% correct. I just don’t know what precisely it is and I’m at the end of my wits.
So, suppose you’re on a date or you are around someone attractive or something like that and you start feeling a bodily response (I’m trying to use nice language here). You neither seek nor accept it and it doesn’t present a challenge to your resolve not to have sex, not to fantasise and so on. What’s your obligation at that point? Do you need to stay completely in control of your thoughts but are allowed to continue the date or approach that person for a conversation and so on, as long as you control yourself, or do you need to eradicate the sensation at the cost of interrupting a date or not beginning a conversation with that person?
Or suppose you go on a dating site. You browse profiles, cards or whatever it is. Either there are no temptations or they present no serious challenge, but you become stimulated after a while from the mere exposure. Are you obligated to stop until the stimulation is totally gone from your system or are you only obligated to stop before it begins to be occasion of sin for you?
Basically, I know there is an obligation not to accept pleasure which is not lawful to have. I know there is an obligation to avoid occasion of sin. Knowing this, I still can’t solve this problem. I don’t know at which point happens a sin or near occasion here and when it becomes grave or mortal. I have trouble with grave matter here (lust is, occasion to mortal sin is, still can’t solve this), or consent (precisely I don’t know whether you consent to the sin of lust or to near occasion of sin if you start or continue a conversation or a date or something with a person if you are stimulated but you are neither thinking lustful thoughts nor facing a serious temptation to do so, nor seek or welcome that stimulation).
So, suppose you’re on a date or you are around someone attractive or something like that and you start feeling a bodily response (I’m trying to use nice language here). You neither seek nor accept it and it doesn’t present a challenge to your resolve not to have sex, not to fantasise and so on. What’s your obligation at that point? Do you need to stay completely in control of your thoughts but are allowed to continue the date or approach that person for a conversation and so on, as long as you control yourself, or do you need to eradicate the sensation at the cost of interrupting a date or not beginning a conversation with that person?
Or suppose you go on a dating site. You browse profiles, cards or whatever it is. Either there are no temptations or they present no serious challenge, but you become stimulated after a while from the mere exposure. Are you obligated to stop until the stimulation is totally gone from your system or are you only obligated to stop before it begins to be occasion of sin for you?
Basically, I know there is an obligation not to accept pleasure which is not lawful to have. I know there is an obligation to avoid occasion of sin. Knowing this, I still can’t solve this problem. I don’t know at which point happens a sin or near occasion here and when it becomes grave or mortal. I have trouble with grave matter here (lust is, occasion to mortal sin is, still can’t solve this), or consent (precisely I don’t know whether you consent to the sin of lust or to near occasion of sin if you start or continue a conversation or a date or something with a person if you are stimulated but you are neither thinking lustful thoughts nor facing a serious temptation to do so, nor seek or welcome that stimulation).