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Elizabeth502
Guest
We’re not talking about ‘to an attorney.’ He’s not considering, in a professional position, The Fifth Commandment. We were, anyway, talking about morality and the Commandments. The Church herself considers the circumstances in the matter of violation of the Fifth Commandment, so I don’t know with whom you’re arguing. The example I gave you was a school zone (I thought); maybe I didn’t, but it’s what I meant. I could not justify to my confessor that my driving 75 mph in a school zone – absent escaping from severe danger or emergency – was not a sin against the Fifth Commandment. (Try to follow, Counsellor.Again, one would have to consider where the excessive speeding was being done to judge it as violating the 5th Commandment. On a race track, on an empty freeway, in downtown traffic, in the presence of people who might be in harm’s way. To an attorney, all things tend to be varying shades of gray, and so I’d not be able ordinarily to say that speeding violates the Commandment absent the circumstances.