T
The_Otaku
Guest
A thought crossed my mind a while ago and peaked my interest towards an answer enough to create this thread. If you are in an occasion of sin (a former alcoholic in a bar for example) you can be certain you’re on thin ice, but if the situation has changed where the occasion of sin for a former vice, addiction, fetish, etc, has been cured, especially if by prayers and God’s healings and graces upon you, is it mortally sinful or sinful at all to be interacting with or around things that USED TO be a huge source of temptation and sin for you?
I use the example of the drunk. If he’s clean and hasn’t touched a drop, but for whatever reason, he has friends that drink and out of not wanting to lose them, he frequents the bars and enjoys the ambiance, watching the game on the tv there, BSing with his friends, etc, what then? For some people, it’s not so much what they did that was addicting, but the habitat, niche, or environment in which they did it. It might have been comfortable for them. In the example of a bar, club, or whatever, if the person who used to be an alcoholic still goes there to hang out with friends, he’s not committing a sin, is he, so long as he doesn’t touch a drop? And even if he does have a drink, if he can prove to himself and to God that it won’t go any farther and he exercises discipline in what used to be or still is an occasion or environment of sin, is there anything he should be worried about morally, with the obvious exception of relapsing and becoming a drunk again?
Obviously, the temptation will be there, and the demons of alcoholism will try to bring him back into it, but if he can exist in this environment, even though it used to be his downfall and ruin, is there a problem and in this sinful? Certainly we wouldn’t advise the man or woman to do this, but if they can demonstrate restraint, shouldn’t it be ok?
At first, we might think the person as weak, for not being strong enough to fully let the addiction go- they got rid of the drinking, but didn’t get rid of the environment and occasion of sin. Where is the sin there and where is it no longer? If he doesn’t drink but he stays around drinking buddies and likes the environment he’s in, isn’t this a contradiction of his intentions? Or, perhaps we can consider his resolve lukewarm? What can we say to this situation?
He got rid of the critical part, the drinking, but he doesn’t want to let go of the other aspects that helped foster the addiction in the first place.
I ask this hypothetical because I used to have some fetishes. I don’t look at the online material there is for this stuff anymore (it was only ever online to begin with), but the memories of the images or videos, or even my own fantasies or daydreaming still remain sometimes. I’m similar to the drunkard example. I’ve gotten rid of the critical part of the addiction- the fetish material, but the fetish itself isn’t completely wiped away since I still fantasize, usually unintentionally at first. The thoughts just pop into my head, and I entertain them. However, they don’t excite me like they used to, and the temptations to go farther are not there anymore, praise God. However, I still have the thoughts, and that in itself, is an occasion of sin for me, as it could lead to masturbation or back into looking at the material online. That’s the danger for me, like falling back into drinking is for the alcoholic.
I pray this doesn’t happen to me, but I’m not so proud or cocky as to think it couldn’t or wouldn’t ever happen again. It most likely will, in a moment of weakness, but I’ll go to confession, like always, and things will be made right again. For me, this struggle is psychological. For the drunk, it’s a mixture of physical and psychological, as well as sociological, so he’s worse off than I am most likely.
At least with having a fetish, you pretty much keep it to yourself and it’s something private that people don’t know about unless you tell them (like I’ve had the courage to do). But with drinking, it’s in public, usually, unless you’re a closet drunk, and it’s with friends which encourage it, and in an environment given to it.
Considering how bad a situation it is for the drunk, if, despite all that, he’s clean and sober, is it sinful for him to be there and interacting with sinners that he used to be just like? Definitely we can say it’s unwholesome, but can we say it’s sinful?
I use the example of the drunk. If he’s clean and hasn’t touched a drop, but for whatever reason, he has friends that drink and out of not wanting to lose them, he frequents the bars and enjoys the ambiance, watching the game on the tv there, BSing with his friends, etc, what then? For some people, it’s not so much what they did that was addicting, but the habitat, niche, or environment in which they did it. It might have been comfortable for them. In the example of a bar, club, or whatever, if the person who used to be an alcoholic still goes there to hang out with friends, he’s not committing a sin, is he, so long as he doesn’t touch a drop? And even if he does have a drink, if he can prove to himself and to God that it won’t go any farther and he exercises discipline in what used to be or still is an occasion or environment of sin, is there anything he should be worried about morally, with the obvious exception of relapsing and becoming a drunk again?
Obviously, the temptation will be there, and the demons of alcoholism will try to bring him back into it, but if he can exist in this environment, even though it used to be his downfall and ruin, is there a problem and in this sinful? Certainly we wouldn’t advise the man or woman to do this, but if they can demonstrate restraint, shouldn’t it be ok?
At first, we might think the person as weak, for not being strong enough to fully let the addiction go- they got rid of the drinking, but didn’t get rid of the environment and occasion of sin. Where is the sin there and where is it no longer? If he doesn’t drink but he stays around drinking buddies and likes the environment he’s in, isn’t this a contradiction of his intentions? Or, perhaps we can consider his resolve lukewarm? What can we say to this situation?
He got rid of the critical part, the drinking, but he doesn’t want to let go of the other aspects that helped foster the addiction in the first place.
I ask this hypothetical because I used to have some fetishes. I don’t look at the online material there is for this stuff anymore (it was only ever online to begin with), but the memories of the images or videos, or even my own fantasies or daydreaming still remain sometimes. I’m similar to the drunkard example. I’ve gotten rid of the critical part of the addiction- the fetish material, but the fetish itself isn’t completely wiped away since I still fantasize, usually unintentionally at first. The thoughts just pop into my head, and I entertain them. However, they don’t excite me like they used to, and the temptations to go farther are not there anymore, praise God. However, I still have the thoughts, and that in itself, is an occasion of sin for me, as it could lead to masturbation or back into looking at the material online. That’s the danger for me, like falling back into drinking is for the alcoholic.
I pray this doesn’t happen to me, but I’m not so proud or cocky as to think it couldn’t or wouldn’t ever happen again. It most likely will, in a moment of weakness, but I’ll go to confession, like always, and things will be made right again. For me, this struggle is psychological. For the drunk, it’s a mixture of physical and psychological, as well as sociological, so he’s worse off than I am most likely.
At least with having a fetish, you pretty much keep it to yourself and it’s something private that people don’t know about unless you tell them (like I’ve had the courage to do). But with drinking, it’s in public, usually, unless you’re a closet drunk, and it’s with friends which encourage it, and in an environment given to it.
Considering how bad a situation it is for the drunk, if, despite all that, he’s clean and sober, is it sinful for him to be there and interacting with sinners that he used to be just like? Definitely we can say it’s unwholesome, but can we say it’s sinful?