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Glassman96
Guest
Isaiah 44: 24, " Thus says God, your redeemer, He who formed you in the womb: I, Myself, God made all things,…". Who are we to destroy what God has formed in the womb?
It wasn’t overlooked. I was being polite and not mentioning how pointless it was.
Is it better now that I’ve said it plain?
No, it is not better; it is more insolent.
It appears that way to you? How so? What have I posted that said that this has anything to do with my needs? Where?
"I need to preserve the life of the unborn child." "I need to protect women from doing themselves great bodily harm … " Both direct quotes from your earlier post.*** So here we can excise***.
um… 'cause I’m here alla the time… and I hope that Catholics ALSO don’t get abortions.
***Fair enough. ***
If you think that abortion is ok, why do you peddle your opinion on a Catholic forum?
(This is gonna be interesting)
I think the exercise of God-given free will is OK; in fact, I believe it is our duty as human beings and recipients of the gift of free will to apply it to any and every given situation in life after careful scrutiny and according to our own “highest eyes”. I detest abortion but I would never dictate to any woman to either have one or not have one. Every human being has been endowed with some capacity to evaluate his or her own relationship with a higher power - or no higher power, if that be the choice - neither you nor I have the market cornered on what pleases God. Do you think your cursory interpretation of my post and your attempt to diminish me with your language and your attitude pleases God?
No… NOT AT ALL. I’m aligning YOU and those who would have the woman undergo an abortion.
If you align me with those who would “have the woman undergo an abortion” then you have again utterly misunderstood my position, and this tack bores me.
Sure, the woman is emotional, hurt, vulnerable… so you rush her off to ‘fix things’, but who is there to hold her hand afterwards as she tries to deal with the consequences she had no way of foreseeing before she ‘fixed’ things? And what about the consequences she took because you and your ilk would suggest that she would be better off, some how ‘fixed’ by having an abortion.
You look at who you are aligned with!
Where have I ever, in any of my posts of this entire forum, indicated that I would “rush her off to ‘fix things’”?! I won’t even discuss an unexpected, unplanned, or defective pregnancy with any woman unless she approaches me. I do not interject my beliefs or experiences in this area unless she asks me to address her situation. I do not primarily endorse abortion as any woman’s solution to her dilemma. I have certainly not rushed any woman to an abortion clinic and left her there with no one to console her before, during or after her procedure. In fact, I have never accompanied any other woman to an abortion clinic, period.
So you tell me, Apryl, how on earth did you morph my post into a treatise of murder and mayhem, without conscience, without love, without God? When you point a finger and spew out phrases such as, “you and your ilk”, you’d better be absolutely certain about your claims. From where I’m sitting, you appear to be a person of minimal depth who suffers from an inability to plug into dialogue and instead gets her kicks jumping to erroneous and unfounded conclusions. Thoughtful posting is one thing; mouthing off quite another.
Limerick***
Who has asked you to destroy what God has formed in the womb? You are responsible for making decisions for yourself. Allow others the same courtesy.Isaiah 44: 24, " Thus says God, your redeemer, He who formed you in the womb: I, Myself, God made all things,…". Who are we to destroy what God has formed in the womb?
I’ve been here since December. I’ve also been up front. Also, notice I used “I Believe” If you want to look through my posts, I’ve said I respect the Church, but refuse to follow it because I do not believe that the authority of the Pope is from God. Not that you were not free to believe it, but I choose not to. I’d rather be apostate than be a “Cafeteria Catholic”, and I will not believe in something that I disagree with.Oh boy…what to say…hello, and welcome to Catholic Answers Forums…JReducation? any thoughts?![]()
There is a difference between Gravity, which can be observed, and God, which cannot be observed. I am not an atheist, and I believe in a personal deity, however, that deity is not the same as yours. I find the church far too black and white, when everything is a gray area, aside from murder and rape, abortion happens to fall in that gray area.I do not believe in the law of gravity.
That does not change the fact that it still applies to me.
Not by the truth of the church. The truth is subjective when it comes to religion.I said that even non-Catholics are bound by truth. Are you saying that you are not bound by truth? Or are you saying that you have the power and insight to define truth?
I’m actually kind of anti-social. Well to a point. I follow my own moral code. Which is don’t kill, don’t rape, be generous in everything, and to help others as best I can.No one is saying that you have to be Catholic, only that you have to be guided by truth. You can be an atheist, if you wish. But if you’re a social animal, you can’t live in society without truth. That would make you anti-social.
I do many things against the moral code of the Church. Aside from not going to church, I can think of a lot of things I do that are against the church, such as using Tarot and consulting with spirits through meditation. Obviously that’s something the church does not find moral, yet I still do it, because I am not bound by those codes.You can refuse to live by moral codes set forth by the Pope. However, popes don’t create moral codes. You’re misunderstanding their role. They point to moral laws that exist independent of us human beings. That’s their role. To codify moral law is not the same as creating it. No pope has ever created moral law. They simply codify it, just like the state codifies civil law.
No human can know the mind of God, (Or, insert name of deity here) and I personally do not believe that the Bible was inspired by God. Or if it was, how could man not mess it up somehow? I believe that historically, Jesus existed, but I don’t agree with anything the church has handed down, especially in regards to “Sexual Deviance”. I believe that Jesus was a rebel, who died for his beliefs, and had a lot of wisdom, but I don’t see that in the hierarchy or structure of this or any other Christian churches.You say that “they are human and do not have a direct contact with God.” How do you know this? Who said they did? What has been said since the time of Christ is that God does not allow popes to teach contrary to faith and morals. It is God’s action, not the popes’.
I fully believe that the Pope can make errors on morals,and I was using “Direct link to God” as sort of a metaphor, because you say he is infallible on matters of morals, and I disagree. As I have said, no man is infallible on everything all the time, so I don’t believe that he can dictate my morals on behalf of God.You can deny that God protects the popes from making errors on matters of faith and morals, if that is what you wish to do. But if you’re going to do that, you must make sure that you use language correctly and that you understand what is being taught. No one is teaching that popes have a hotline to God or that they are gods. We are saying that we believe in the power and mercy of God and we believe in the promise that Jesus made to Peter that “the gates of Hell will not prevail against you.”
I can neither prove nor disprove either way. I fully admit I don’t know. However, because there is no solid proof to me that Christianity is absolutely true, I will not forgo my morals and beliefs just to be on the safe side. Jesus had a lot of good ideas, but I feel they got lost in the pomp and circumstance of the church.You can argue that Jesus could not make such a promise and that his promise is null and void. But you would have to prove that. The only way that you could win that debate is to prove that Jesus is not who he said he was, the one and only God.
I don’t choose to accept Christ as my savior, but I believe he existed. If accepting Christ meant not having to accept all of the stifling organized religion, I might do it. However, I will not change my beliefs, nor would I ask anyone else to.If you are saying that you do not believe in Jesus Christ, then that’s another discussion. We would have to start a thread on Christology.
I’m sorry that you think this way. I would suggest that you read an old classic written by Thomas Merton, No Man Is An Island.
Fraternally,
I’m actually happy, TBH. I’ll look up the book when I have time.Br. JR, OSF![]()
You, too??I found today’s Gospel reading appropriate
Everyone has the courtesy to make their own decisions, but when it comes to abortion, they should know that when they abort, they are destroying what God has formed in the womb.Who has asked you to destroy what God has formed in the womb? You are responsible for making decisions for yourself. Allow others the same courtesy.
Limerick
You contradict yourself. If you feel murder does not fall in “a grey area”, then abortion cannot either.There is a difference between Gravity, which can be observed, and God, which cannot be observed. I am not an atheist, and I believe in a personal deity, however, that deity is not the same as yours. I find the church far too black and white, when everything is a gray area, aside from murder and rape, abortion happens to fall in that gray area.
If only belief were a choice! But it is not. This is one of those things so obvious it’s difficult to explain. First let me say, as I have said on many threads, a lot of diagnosing of mental illness goes on on these boards by people not qualified to make medical diagnoses.Belief is a choice. A person can just stop believing in something, they simply choose to believe something else. If a person has no choice over what they believe, they have a mental illness or are below the “age of reason”.
I have to wonder how sorry for that sin they can be if they keep doing it so often.One cannot be forgiven of sin if one is not sorry for that sin.
Very true. The correct phrasing is “abortion is murder”, whether legal or not.Murder is not the same as abortion.
That makes even less sense. Abortion is not murder. Never has been.Very true. The correct phrasing is “abortion is murder”, whether legal or not.
Distance check. To avoid definitional problems: a mother who procures an abortion for the sole sake of her own convenience after implantation willfully takes the life of her unborn. True or false?That makes even less sense. Abortion is not murder. Never has been.
Actually, it can’t - which is why it wasn’t discovered until 1679. It was not until the effects of gravity were analyzed by leading physicists (especially Isaac Newton) that it became the “obvious” concept that we all understand today.There is a difference between Gravity, which can be observed,