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Ender
Guest
Your judgments of others is not simply inappropriate it is irrelevant. There are two question here: does the Church have a position on gun control and (if not) how do we determine what controls are “best”? Neither question is addressed by your psychoanalysis of why someone might want to own a gun.To some owning a Gun gives them psychological Power
To others owning a Gun means defending their Freedom (“IF”) it entails living in Peace.
And yet with others owning a Gun means they can uncharitably Lord it over others.
The power and responsibility of owning a Gun means so many things to people who wish to possess them for whatever reason. Personally; I sometimes can’t help but see the acquisition of owning a Gun so extremely important in peoples lives that in someways the overwhelming desire of having a Gun for whatever legitimate or illegitimate reason leaves the materialistic Gun in itself in someways becoming a God unto itself.
Think about the psychological power driven behind possessing a Gun for whatever reason.
As to the first question: no, the Church has no position.
As to the second question: evidence suggests that strict controls are counter productive (not to mention unconstitutional). Few people object to reasonable controls where the emphasis is on controlling firearm ownership rather than preventing it.
If this was true you might expect the Church to have said something about it. Since she hasn’t, the probability is high that this claim is … flawed.So long as mankind continues to reject God there can never be Gun Control.
Ender