S
sanctareparata
Guest
Thanks KAMZ. I realize that’s what she said.
Doesn’t address my thoughts, though.
Doesn’t address my thoughts, though.
thank goodness the Catholic church is clear that it is up to each parent and it is not a sin and it is not immoral, so anything you say against it is merely your own opinion and has nothing on the Catholic churches teachings… as those are the teachings I care about for my family… not someone else’s personal feelingsThanks KAMZ. I realize that’s what she said.
Doesn’t address my thoughts, though.
Note the differece between God ALLOWS and God COMMANDS.See, now this I just don’t get and probably won’t till someone can really, in-depth-like, explain it to me. And so far several theologians and priests I’ve asked cannot explain it to me and just get tongue-tied.
God allowed intermarriage in OT times. He allowed concubines. He even commanded His people to destroy entire nations - not just the men but the women and innocent children. That is certainly something that would be considered immoral today - to intentionally kill an innocent child for the reason that his parents were God-haters. So why cannot God command circumcision and then revoke it?
But you forgot something:Note the differece between God ALLOWS and God COMMANDS.
God may allow evil to occur, He does not Command it to happen.
Anything that God Commands, is, by definition a Moral Good.
And as God is Unchanging, so is the Moral Law.
That is not necessaryily a violation of the Moral Law either.But you forgot something:
“He ***allowed ***concubines. He even ***commanded ***His people to destroy entire nations - not just the men but the women and innocent children.”
I understand the allowances, but He still commanded His people to take toddlers and small children and murder them…
IF we call. Amputating a limb and removing the foreskin are not the same thing either and it is a concern when people become so determined to be right that they rename a procedure to try to make/support their point.Calling both circumcision doesn’t serve my thoughts here - if we call what God commanded “slicing” and what we do today “amputation” you can see my concern that it just isn’t the same thing. Today we remove the healthy functioning part of the body that God intended to be there for a very definite purpose. That is my issue/concern. It just isn’t the same.
It is true that a lot more is taken off today than on OT times. But as far as what you call “cicumcision,” well, etymologically it has nothing to do with a penis and foreskin at all, to begin with. It simply means “cut around.” So you can’t really say cutting off x amount is circumcision, but more than x is not, or something like that.My other concern is that in OT times, circumcision was radically different than it is now. Calling what happened then and what happens today by the same name of *circumcision *is misleading, in my opinion. This is why I think so:
God is the creator of the perfect human body. He intended that men have foreskins for a reason. As has already been stated, the foreskin performs a function in sex (natural lubrication, etc), it protects the glans which was intended by God to be an internal organ, it keeps the glans sensitive, soft and supple, and it has self cleaning properties.
So why would God, by His very nature, desire that a normal, natural, healthy part of the human body He Himself designed be cut? Because cutting then didn’t affect the foreskin to such an extreme that it renders it useless. A “snip” off the end (as was done in OT times) does not ruin any of the aspects of the foreskin. It can still glide in intercourse, it still protects, it still keeps the glans mostly covered. It still serves its God given purpose.
But what is done today is NOT the same as what was done then. Today’s radical surgery completely removes the foreskin, the ridged band, the layers of mucosa, the frenulum, and traumatizes the glans with an additional wound.
Calling both circumcision doesn’t serve my thoughts here - if we call what God commanded “slicing” and what we do today “amputation” you can see my concern that it just isn’t the same thing. Today we remove the healthy functioning part of the body that God intended to be there for a very definite purpose. That is my issue/concern. It just isn’t the same.
So to say that it isn’t immoral because God commanded it defies my logic for two reasons: God no longer commands it and instead the NT speaks out against it, and today’s circumcision is vastly different than the literal “snip” God did command.
This is all medical reasons aside, of course.
I am with you. Circumsizing is torture for a newborn.It is true that a lot more is taken off today than on OT times. But as far as what you call “cicumcision,” well, etymologically it has nothing to do with a penis and foreskin at all, to begin with. It simply means “cut around.” So you can’t really say cutting off x amount is circumcision, but more than x is not, or something like that.
I don’t think it is right to do to an infant who cannot consent, after having seen a video of one. But that is my personal opinion. Heck, I’m even against piercing the ears of an infant, and circumcision is a much more painful thing than that to do to a baby who can’t understand why they are hurting, imo. But just because it is not required anymore doesn’t make it inherently immoral. But it is an unnecessary procedure that parents should discuss and research and put thought into, and not have done to their baby ‘just because’.
My son did NOT cry once, or after it. They used numbing meds.I am with you. Circumsizing is torture for a newborn.
I never said amputating a limb. I never said that removing the foreskin was the same as amputating a limb.IF we call. Amputating a limb and removing the foreskin are not the same thing either and it is a concern when people become so determined to be right that they rename a procedure to try to make/support their point.
I realize this, too. But every American person hear “circumcision” and visualizes what happens today to our boys. They don’t hear “snip as was done in OT times”. I was just “renaming” what it was because most people don’t know there is a difference past and present and/or what the word circumcision actually means.It is true that a lot more is taken off today than on OT times. But as far as what you call “cicumcision,” well, etymologically it has nothing to do with a penis and foreskin at all, to begin with. It simply means “cut around.” So you can’t really say cutting off x amount is circumcision, but more than x is not, or something like that.
Yea, once it is naturally able to be pulled back. an infant’s cannot be. they need to poke and prod to detach it before removing it.Also, if they are not circumcised, the child needs to be taught regular hygiene since early on and explaing him why he should have hygiene in that manner.
The foreskin should be pulled back and only water should be used to rinse it. This should become second nature to them and they should not have any problems.
I am with you. Circumsizing is torture for a newborn.
Because it does not violate any moral principle. The foreskin is not a major organ, is not needed to live or perform the sexual act appropriately, it may be a source of pathology many times, and its removal is understood to be beneficial.Therefore, why isn’t it that if a human man today circumcises a helpless child outside the command of God, why is that not considered immoral? That is the question I have.
That’s good.My son did NOT cry once, or after it. They used numbing meds.
This should be done ONLY once the foreskin becomes retractable on its own! Never to an infant. The foreskin and glans are fused at birth, and separate over time naturally. (This is also one reason why circumcision as practiced today is so brutal. They literally have to skin the baby’s penis to get the foreskin off!) If you pull it back forcefully before it is ready, you will injure your son and could cause scar tissue, which will cause you tons of problems later. If the intact penis is mistreated, then it can indeed become very problematic.Also, if they are not circumcised, the child needs to be taught regular hygiene since early on and explaing him why he should have hygiene in that manner.
The foreskin should be pulled back and only water should be used to rinse it. This should become second nature to them and they should not have any problems.
Some physicians use injections rather than topical medications.they put a topical numbing medication on the penis, but they are detaching the inner layers of skin from one another