T
Tomdstone
Guest
The question that I was answering was not whether or no you are buying their arguments, but what arguments might they give in support of the pro-divorce position.:nope: Nah… I call shenanigans on this one. Jesus castigates those who only love those who love them, and calls us to “love our enemies.” By that standard, we explicitly must love our ex-spouses, so the argument falls apart immediately.
Paul called himself a spiritual father; are you saying that Catholics are wrong on this one?
We absolutely take this literally! But… we take it literally in the way that the term was used in antiquity: as a comparative description. “Hate”, here, means “love less”.
How is this allegorical? If someone insults you, you should not demand satisfaction, but rather, forego those ‘rights’ to satisfaction and allow the insult to stand.
Umm… yes.
Given the analysis I’ve presented, “pro-divorce people” don’t present a reasonable argument.![]()
As far as turning the other cheek is concerned, if Catholics agree that you should not resist an evil person, as Jesus said, why do so many American Catholics on this thread and other Christians also, have guns in their houses to resist a burglary or an intrusion?
Should you resist an evil person? Or
Is it better not resist an evil person?