B
Biedrik
Guest
Where exactly is there something ad hominem?If your argument is in opposition to my argument, then this is insinuative, and borderline ad hominem.
Where exactly is there something ad hominem?If your argument is in opposition to my argument, then this is insinuative, and borderline ad hominem.
If you think that merely have SSA means is equivalent to being dragged through the mud, then I will pray for you, that you fall in line with Christ’s teaching through the Church.Yes, I’ve heard his name dragged through the mud too.

Thank you for explaining this better.The problem is the use of a broad definition of “Gay”.
If a person suffers some form of SSA but does not act on it then they are not a homosexual. I would not call them “Gay”.
There are some people out there that believe that everyone one whats to be a priest must be a homosexual.
There are some who have experienced some sort of SSA (though not acting on it) who are so repulsed and in denial that they attack anything that even hints at SSA being something that might be something that everyone experiences at one point in their life.
No man who is sexually active should be considered as a candidate for religious life/priesthood. No man who has recently been sexually active or in a relationship should be considered. No man who actively supports any sinful life style (homosexual lifestyle is one but not the only one) should not be considered.
A man who suffers from some sort of SSA which is determined not to be “deep seated” (which means he is not acting out on it or supporting the life style) should not automatically be removed from consideration just as a man who has had heterosexual sex outside of marriage (fornication) or had heterosexual sex with a married woman (adultery) should not be removed from consideration.
Someone who supports that no man suffering from SSA (in any degree) should not be considered for the priesthood/religious life should then also support that any man who has had sex outside of marriage (either fornication or adultery) should not be considered.
The statement that since most of the canonized saints are priests and religious, so surely one must have had SSA is an implication. If you meant to give no inference, then I shall recant.I would never say that Saint Francis was gay, nor David and Samuel. I’m simply saying that out of twenty thousand Saints, one of them had to have this. God calls all to the Priesthood and Religious life, regardless of attraction.
I implied that there was something gay about being a Priest? Have you even looked at my signature? I want to be a Priest. I’m not a homosexual, trust me. But I do believe that God calls all to the Priesthood and Religious life, and that their sexual orientation is irrelevant. Everyone that joins the Religious life and Priesthood must sacrifice their sexuality. A man that has a sexual orientation to a woman has as much lust as a man that has a sexual orientation to another man, and they can both fulfill the temptation just as easy.
Last I heard, there are over twenty thousand Saints, most of them being Priests and Religious. Therefore [sic] Isn’t it a bit far-fetched to say that not one of them had same sex attraction? -Teutonic
Actually, you just agreed with my claim of what you said.To Baelor that having SSA is equal to being dragged through the mud, huh? That was not said. What was said is that I have heard St. Francis’ name dragged through the mud for allegedly having SSA. The comment was a reference to that is supposedly inevitable that some saint has had SSA and that St. Francis is an example, which I deny that he is.
On what factual basis?St. Francis is an example, which I deny that he is
I will provide an outline of a statistical method. Find the probability that a given person has SSA. In fact, let us say that there is a binary: straight or not straight. Let us say that the probability of a given person being straight is 99%, which is an overestimate according to most psychologists/sociologists/etc. Let us bump it up to 99.9% for the religious, especially given societal and historical norms of the time (assuming you reject natural homosexuality).Lastly, the burden falls back to Teutonic. If it is your claim that some saint, who, by virtue of being a priest or religious, is necessarily SSA, then you must provide a cause more sufficient than that he was a priest if religious.
I am asking whether you have a factual basis for claiming that St. Francis is straight. Do you?Dude! You’re not reading, your injecting. Re-read it. I’m saying IT’S NOT FACTUAL!
“Same team, Farva.”
But false accusations are not equivalent to dragging someone through the mud. If I claimed that St. Francis was from Norway when he was not, no one in their right mind would claim that I am dragging him through the mud. I would be wrong, but I would not be slandering him, because slander is “the action or crime of making a false spoken statement damaging to a person’s reputation.” If you believe that SSA is damaging to a person’s reputation, then I hope we can pray together for a day that that is not the case.Being dragged through the mud is another expression for slander. The point is not that having SSA is dragging through the mud, it is clearly written, twice now, that being falsely accused is being dragged through the mud.
You are completely missing the point. See above.I can’t explain it to you again. If you repeat exactly what you just said, then i can only presume that you will not understand it at all.
We’re done. There is an obvious impasse. I say cat, and you say I said dog. This doesn’t work.I am asking whether you have a factual basis for claiming that St. Francis is straight. Do you?
Yes. He is a Saint.
But false accusations are not equivalent to dragging someone through the mud. If I claimed that St. Francis was from Norway when he was not, no one in their right mind would claim that I am dragging him through the mud. I would be wrong, but I would not be slandering him, because slander is “the action or crime of making a false spoken statement damaging to a person’s reputation.” If you believe that SSA is damaging to a person’s reputation, then I hope we can pray together for a day that that is not the case.
And yes, false accusations are PRECISELY what dragging someone’s name through the mud is. Those, AND ALSO, the repeated exercise of recalling some bad deed which is historical.
You are completely missing the point. See above.
Uh…yes, you can. It’s called social science. Statistics do not prove causality. But I can certainly make reasonable assumptions and pump out numbers that are meaningful. If you deny this, you are in general denial.You can’t process a theory regarding history using statistics. Statistics do not prove a causality. But It’s just not intelligible to assume a statistic in the first place.
No, it did not, because we have not established that SSA can be eliminated. The Church certainly does not claim this.Ergo, no Saint did not overcome SSA. The probability just fell to Zero.
Incorrect. The impasse comes with you not admitting the fact that you are wrong. I will even distil the conversation to factoids, for your benefit and for all those here:We’re done. There is an obvious impasse. I say cat, and you say I said dog. This doesn’t work.
So, let’s get this straight: You believe that there’s no possible way that any Saint could’ve had SSA? That is not an intelligent nor logical belief. God calls all to become Saints, regardless of what sexual orientation they have. To quote Brother Jay from this site: “You do not become a Religious because you’re worthy. You become a Religious because you hear him say ‘Come, follow me.’”I’m a sensible man. So I’m not going to entertain stupid theories about the statistical probability that some saint at some time in history had SSA. It’s just assinine.
Your conclusions are non-sequitor
“Most people have a problem with SSA” or “that I must have SSA because I know that st Francis did not”
Nice try boudreaux. In no world do either of those carry any validity.
Seriously. You’ve completely lost whatever foothold of logic you thought you were standing on.
And you’re not clever. Not even with your smily face. But thanks for the slander.
By the way, its not called a claim, its called a premise. And its not called a consequence, its called a conclusion. You’ll learn little grasshopper, maybe. Statistics and Logic are not the same. And “pumping out numbers” makes the numbers decidedly - not meaningful. Statistics have also been shown, with great effect, to be senseless. Logic does not recognize statistics.
“Bleibt ist bleibt, nein kumpf fur das.”
Perhaps the stupidity in this discussion does not lie with my very reasonable statistical argument, but rather with something that you must confront. Also, it is spelled asinine. The fact that you are unable to actually interact with my posts in any meaningful way just demonstrates that you cannot assault them on any substantial basis. That means that their content stands.I’m a sensible man. So I’m not going to entertain stupid theories about the statistical probability that some saint at some time in history had SSA. It’s just assinine.
Your conclusions are non-sequitor
Actually, they are not. They follow directly, which is why I summarized the argument.“Most people have a problem with SSA” or “that I must have SSA because I know that st Francis did not”
They do in this one.Nice try boudreaux. In no world do either of those carry any validity.
No.Seriously. You’ve completely lost whatever foothold of logic you thought you were standing on.
You made a claim.By the way, its not called a claim, its called a premise.
Consequence: “a result or effect of an action or condition”And its not called a consequence, its called a conclusion.
Quote me where I equate them.Statistics and Logic are not the same.
Source?And “pumping out numbers” makes the numbers decidedly - not meaningful. Statistics have also been shown, with great effect, to be senseless.
Nothing in my post requires them to. You presented neither statistics nor logic, so there is no conflict.Logic does not recognize statistics.
Was bedeutet “kumpf?” Mein Deutsch is nicht so gut. Je crois plutot qu’on devrait parler en francais, ou, encore mieux, en anglais – que les autres puissent comprendre.“Bleibt ist bleibt, nein kumpf fur das.”
You are correct. If it is a reference to my post, it was just to make the application of the binomial distribution possible.As for sexuality being binary, the prevalent thought on that today is that it is not.
Yes I am fully aware of that. I just thought that the point needed to be expressly stated as some posters here might have either missed it or they might actually think that sexuality is binary.You are correct. If it is a reference to my post, it was just to make the application of the binomial distribution possible.