M
MilesXpisti
Guest
To Faith1960, I would say the following:
There is never an excuse to do a morally incorrect thing. Not ever. Arguing between two evils is like arguing over whether you’re going to commit suicide by hanging yourself or taking a bullet to the head. The end result is the same, only the former is a little cleaner than the other.
Are you seriously asking that, if my son were engaged in premarital sex, would I want him to use a condom? Absolutely not. Does he run the chance of getting an STD or becoming a parent? Could he possibly die from something he could contract in this regard? Absolutely. But it’s better that he die with a soul in a state of grace than to live a thousand years in sin and error. Abraham understood that when he bound Isaac and prepared to sacrifice him as God had commanded. My generation has to learn the lesson that yours apparently never did: our actions must be measure against what God has commanded, there are consequences to our actions and those consequences cannot be abrogated by expedience or social pressures. We are conscious beings before God and we have choices we have to make. Whatever we do, we have to answer for, just as we will when we stand before God when we leave this world. We cannot make ourselves party to the sin of another even to protect them, for in that regard we would show that we love them more than Christ, Who said that anyone that loves another more than Him is not worthy of Him. (cf. Secundum Matthæum 10, 37-38)
There is never an excuse to do a morally incorrect thing. Not ever. Arguing between two evils is like arguing over whether you’re going to commit suicide by hanging yourself or taking a bullet to the head. The end result is the same, only the former is a little cleaner than the other.
Are you seriously asking that, if my son were engaged in premarital sex, would I want him to use a condom? Absolutely not. Does he run the chance of getting an STD or becoming a parent? Could he possibly die from something he could contract in this regard? Absolutely. But it’s better that he die with a soul in a state of grace than to live a thousand years in sin and error. Abraham understood that when he bound Isaac and prepared to sacrifice him as God had commanded. My generation has to learn the lesson that yours apparently never did: our actions must be measure against what God has commanded, there are consequences to our actions and those consequences cannot be abrogated by expedience or social pressures. We are conscious beings before God and we have choices we have to make. Whatever we do, we have to answer for, just as we will when we stand before God when we leave this world. We cannot make ourselves party to the sin of another even to protect them, for in that regard we would show that we love them more than Christ, Who said that anyone that loves another more than Him is not worthy of Him. (cf. Secundum Matthæum 10, 37-38)