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Is a “lingering” look always sinful? I don’t see how it could be. I can take a lingering look at a beautiful car without falling into the sin of greed of envy of my brother’s goods.
Well, if you’re staring at a good-looking member of the opposite sex for reasons other than lust, then no, it’s not a sin. If, for example, you’re in love with her high-heels, then big deal. Hopefully you’re wife will buy it.Is a “lingering” look always sinful? I don’t see how it could be. I can take a lingering look at a beautiful car without falling into the sin of greed of envy of my brother’s goods.
This is absolutely ridiculous. Please use common sense here, people. Do you really think that checking people out because they’re attractive is a terrible thing to do? Do you really think that someone who watches Dancing With the Stars and is sexually attracted to all of them and then dies is going to Hell? (That’s everything I’ve been taught…one unconfessed mortal sin leaves you totally cut off from God and that means Hell…)If you know you are looking at someone lustfully then that is a mortal sin.
Um, you may want to have a serious discussion with your husband about this.This topic is very interesting to me, as my husband says he has trained his thoughts not to lust, but still allows his eyes to look at, be drawn to, the chest and bottom of every attractive woman he comes across. This unfortunately includes at least our oldest daughter (16yo) who is attractive, but dresses not provocatively or too tightly or revealingly, but still in style for teens. He says his looking is not wrong, just that his eyes are drawn there of their own accord and he has no control. I feel that in the case of his daughters, there should be no way his eyes should be drawn there – that a father’s eyes can’t do that!!! Can’t you men realistically take control of your eyes and not focus on body parts, at least your own daughters? I need to understand.
Couple of things that may help. Men are visual. One can seek a kind of ‘custody of the eyes’ and try not looking - but this does not always work. In fact if one tries too much --it can make things worse *see jimmys article at end.This topic is very interesting to me, as my husband says he has trained his thoughts not to lust, but still allows his eyes to look at, be drawn to, the chest and bottom of every attractive woman he comes across. This unfortunately includes at least our oldest daughter (16yo) who is attractive, but dresses not provocatively or too tightly or revealingly, but still in style for teens. He says his looking is not wrong, just that his eyes are drawn there of their own accord and he has no control. I feel that in the case of his daughters, there should be no way his eyes should be drawn there – that a father’s eyes can’t do that!!! Can’t you men realistically take control of your eyes and not focus on body parts, at least your own daughters? I need to understand.
His eyes may see the form and automatically shift to the sexual values of the body --for they are part of the powerful attraction of the woman. the sexual values of the body are not ‘icky’ they are attractive and beautiful. the person should not be reduced to just those ‘parts’ but the eyes may register these aspects strongly. and remember if it is ‘something that happens to him and not his deliberate act’ it is not something he ‘does’. he does not drop down his eyes…and he may have felt uncomfortable …but admiring a woman – why do your eyes go to bust and butt, not face, if it is not lust??? how can my dds feel comfortable when he drops his eyes to those places? this is so icky – this feels so wrong – this is where we are at odds.
Yes of course …one must. but again i am speaking of what ‘happens to a man’ not him going to the park and trying to see all the women he can…or deliberately staring at a persons sexual values in a lustful or immodest way. one can exercise a kind of custody of the eyes. but the first of the first is not so easy to avoid. Some contemplative monks actually do not allow women at all to visit…they would rather avoid even the automatic first of the first…Can’t you men realistically take control of your eyes and not focus on body parts, at least your own daughters?.
What if you imagine a tought that I guess isn’t appropriate. However it doesn’t cause arousal, or doesn’t cause any “I would if I could…” thoughts. What if you simply enjoy the thought, or the beauty of the thought. Without an accompanied sinful desire for?Yeah. One can’t help but see that at which he looks. It’s the lingering look, and accompanying sexual fantasies that constitute the sin. If I stare at an attractive woman, I’ll fantasize about her, thereby sinning against God, my wife and my own sense of self-respect. I’ll also set a bad example for others, and tarnish my public reputation. A true disciple fights this urge.
I tend to see pictures of celebrities, some with their backs turned where you can see a certain body feature. At first there is a sexual arousal but if anything lustful comes up, I try my best to ignore it and offer it up to God. But I keep on looking at these body features because I’m attracted to them. Is that a mortal sin? I’m not sure whether or not I’m committing lust. Could someone please answer me because I’m really confused and am miserable because I have no idea what state my soul is in and I just went to Confession recently and don’t know if I need to go back. Hopefully the priest doesn’t get sick of seeing me too much.What’s meant by looking at someone “lustfully”?
From the moral theology literature I’ve read, sins of lust committed prior to marriage seem to center around willed venereal pleasure - that is, pleasure experienced in the “organs of generation”. Looking at an attractive woman alone is by no means a sin, nor is enjoying her beauty. Sin enters the equation when 1) there is sexual arousal, and it is willed or willingly enjoyed, or 2) you start think lustful thoughts, “I would if I could…”. The church teaches that offenses against the 6th commandment are generally grave matter, but for grave matter to be mortal sin there must be 1) awareness of the fact that the sin is mortal, and 2) full consent of the will.
That seems right. I see young women at the altar of God dancing around during the Mass of the Los Angeles Cardinal and they are wearing provocative clothing and dressing provocatively. Why does the Church allow this?It would be the Church’s grave responsibility to INSIST on a society like Saudi Arabia or Afghanistan, as upbeatjonm suggested, if this definition of mortally sinful lust is correct.