M
mdaoust
Guest
A minor point, but this was not against civil law.When I was ten, I took a sip of my aunt’s wine during Thanksgiving dinner. This was technically against the civil law. Was it a mortal sin?
A minor point, but this was not against civil law.When I was ten, I took a sip of my aunt’s wine during Thanksgiving dinner. This was technically against the civil law. Was it a mortal sin?
A minor point!A minor point, but this was not against civil law.![]()
I can’t quite equate befriending people, with participating in their sins or crimes. Are you familiar with Sister Helen Prejean? She certainly did more than I to befriend convicts on death row, most of whom had long criminal records. Following your logic, I would conclude that perhaps she would have been better off to rob a bank or two, so that she would be more easily accepted by these convicts.It’s fine for you to speculate, but the fact is that the concept IMO is still commensurate with what St. Paul was teaching. You don’t evangelize a den of thieves by going in with the SWAT team; you do it by befriending them.
You raise an excellent argument.I can’t quite equate befriending people, with participating in their sins or crimes. Are you familiar with Sister Helen Prejean? She certainly did more than I to befriend convicts on death row, most of whom had long criminal records. Following your logic, I would conclude that perhaps she would have been better off to rob a bank or two, so that she would be more easily accepted by these convicts.
When St. Paul said “to those outside the law, I become like one outside the law?”, I can’t imagine that this could mean “to reach thieves, I stole, to reach murderers, I killed, etc.”. In this context, I don’t think that the people “outside the law” meant lawbreakers anyway, but gentiles.
~ Kathy ~I have never heard of a baby going through marijuana withdrawal. I HAVE heard of a baby in withdrawal from alcohol. Alcohol consumption is not forbidden by the Church. So this cannot be a basis for it’s immorality.You can tell Alan’s back…running off at the keyboard again. You tell a newborn baby going thru marijuana withdrawal that smoking a joint is legal.
~ Kathy ~
I really like that summary.What is important is understanding how the Church defines drugs. I have asked, and other than emotionial “you just can’t!” I have not received a LOGICAL and REASONABLE response based on either Church teaching or Scripture. Caffiene, alcohol and tobacco are considered drugs by the FDA. So the Church cannot be using that definition, or it would be forbidding coffee, tea, cigarettes and alcohol, and the Church allows these things.
It cannot be because of potential addictiveness, or many prescription drugs would be forbidden, as well as coffee, cigarettes, tea and alcohol.
It cannot be potential for withdrawal or again, alcohol, cigarettes, caffiene, antidepressants, and many other prescription medications would be forbidden.
It cannot be immoral because it is illegal. It could be illegal because it is immoral, but the law does not prove it’s immorality one way or another. The law is fickle. It could be illegal today and legal tomorrow. If it was inherently immoral (as in abortion), it would be immoral whether it was legal or not.
Thank you for noticing.You can tell Alan’s back…running off at the keyboard again. You tell a newborn baby going thru marijuana withdrawal that smoking a joint is legal.
Code:~ Kathy ~
Yeah, I guess they can afford to leave the petty criminals aside, and go after the REAL threats to society … Terminally ill patients, with cancer, MS, AIDS etc. that have a doctors prescription. I can really sleep much better tonight, knowing theses criminals have been brought to justice.I really like that summary.
It just occurred to me that it is legal in the United States, as far as I know, in Alaska. To grow and use, but not sell. That doesn’t make a lot of sense either, but it’s different. I wonder if the feds leave Alaska alone – I think it was in CA that the feds raided a place that was totally legal and sanctioned by the state, where terminal patients lived and tended their own garden. There it is legal by the state, but the feds cannot let that happen because, well, they are the feds.
Alan
I am a maternity tech for 25+ years. Babies CAN and DO indeed go thru marijuana withdrawal. Same as a baby who’s mother smoked cigarettes during her pregnancy. Baby gets what the mama does. Mama goes thru withdrawal be it marijuana or nicotine and you can bet the baby does too. And let me tell you, you know how YOU as an adult feels quitting smoking, imagine how a baby feels. And they can’t do a darn thing about it. So YES, drug withdrawal of ANY kind in a newborn is NOT pretty.I have never heard of a baby going through marijuana withdrawal. I HAVE heard of a baby in withdrawal from alcohol. Alcohol consumption is not forbidden by the Church. So this cannot be a basis for it’s immorality.
Alcohol, as with many things,(not in and of themselves immoral) even food, it can be abused and thus become “sinful.” If alcohol is abused during pregnancy, than the alcohol consumption is sinful, one because of it’s abuse, but also because of the health consequences to the baby. But the potential for abuse does not “prove” immorality.
As a maternity tech, you would certainly have first hand experience to witness to the different types of withdrawal, and I am not arguing that this is a negative thing. BUT, this cannot be used as a basis to prove the immorality of marijuana (topic of thread), alcohol or cigarettes, except it’s abuse which is sinful outside of preganancy as well…I am a maternity tech for 25+ years. Babies CAN and DO indeed go thru marijuana withdrawal. Same as a baby who’s mother smoked cigarettes during her pregnancy. Baby gets what the mama does. Mama goes thru withdrawal be it marijuana or nicotine and you can bet the baby does too. And let me tell you, you know how YOU as an adult feels quitting smoking, imagine how a baby feels. And they can’t do a darn thing about it. So YES, drug withdrawal of ANY kind in a newborn is NOT pretty.
~ Kathy ~
~ Kathy ~Semantics? I am just trying to stay on topic.The topic of the thread isn’t “do you or would you smoke marijuana?” The topic is " Is the use of marijuana in moderation immoral?" I know many people who completely abstain from alcohol and are happy, but this does not mean alcohol consumption is immoral. It is simply a personal decision, not based on morality, except some Protestants who do believe it is immoral.I think we are debating semantics here. Like I tell my son, when I am down, I want my arms around a warm body not a cold bottle. When I am high, I want it to be because I am on a mountain top, not because I “rolled one”
Moral or immoral, smoking marijuana is not something I chose to do. I don’t know, I may be funny about some things, or as my son would say “old fashioned”, but I am a whole lot happier than my kids are and I like it that way!
~ Kathy ~
Ok Ana…you win. If you go by the dictionary definition of immoral, marijuana smoking is not immoral. Illegal in places, but immoral …no. Now do you feel better?Semantics? I am just trying to stay on topic.The topic of the thread isn’t “do you or would you smoke marijuana?” The topic is " Is the use of marijuana in moderation immoral?" I know many people who completely abstain from alcohol and are happy, but this does not mean alcohol consumption is immoral. It is simply a personal decision, not based on morality, except some Protestants who do believe it is immoral.
BTW, I am glad you are happy.![]()
So you are stating that your position on the topic of the thread, is that marijuana is not immoral, but that you choose to not smoke it (or eat it).Ok Ana…you win. If you go by the dictionary definition of immoral, marijuana smoking is not immoral. Illegal in places, but immoral …no. Now do you feel better?
~ Kathy ~
MY position is it is immoral. Merriam-Webster however defines immoral differently than I do. That’s all I’m saying. How is it up there on your soapbox anyway? You seem very opinionated. And before you go off on me, opinionated is not necessarily a bad thingSo you are stating that your position on the topic of the thread, is that marijuana is not immoral, but that you choose to not smoke it (or eat it).
I wasn’t aware I was feeling bad. I didn’t state how I was feeling one way or another. You did. you said you were happy and I responded that I was glad, and I am.![]()
~ Kathy ~Oh, this is so wonderful. An amiable agreement has been reached.Ok Ana…you win. If you go by the dictionary definition of immoral, marijuana smoking is not immoral. Illegal in places, but immoral …no. Now do you feel better?
~ Kathy ~
You might be partly right. From the evidence, it does indeed appear that you cannot rationalize with a drug user. From what I’ve read so far, though, my guess is that your problem might extend beyond drug users, though.One thing you can be sure of and that is you cannot rationalise with a drug user. They see nothing wrong in taking drugs (pot or stronger) in the first place, they never see they have a problem after using regularly, and they always try to justify why they are taking drugs. They also deny they are addicted.
Then I must be a drug addict by your logic. God allowed his only begotten Son to be brutally tortured and murdered though completely innocent, so that we may be saved – isn’t that a bit like an evil means to a good end?Take Alan in this thread. He is trying to justify taking drugs in order to evangelise. How crazy and stupid is that!! Even if it was true (which its not) that in itself is also a sin. The Church clearly teaches that an end, no matter how good, is never justified by the means, if not good and drug taking is definitely not good. Only drug addicts will argue otherwise.
Now I understand why this is so hard for you. When you have something personal at stake that is understandable.If anyone wonders why I feel so strongly about this its because my nephew has been in rehab the past 5 months. None of us knew about his habit as he lived in a rented appartment near his college. We only discovered his habit when he was arrested. By the way Alan, he started on pot thinking it was okay but then moved on to stronger drugs.
DRUGS ARE EVIL
Drugs are the path leading to Satan not the path to Christ.
Alan, however you may try to justify using drugs you are only kidding yourself. Drugs are evil and it IS a mortal sin to take them.
You just insulted my father, again, after I’ve explained it one time, and condemned him to hell because he was taking drugs the day he died – mostly by IV.Are you even capable of learning to quit making unqualified sweeping, blanket statements? I already gave you one out in case you are mentally ill but you went right by that and persisted in your folly.Your profile says you are Catholic, which I do not doubt. I wonder, though, whether you have leanings toward Christian Scientists? They don’t believe in using drugs.By this logic, you would not give a dying man a drink. I can see it in the old westerns: “Please … get … me … a … drink,” and John Wayne of Ron Reagan saying, “sorry, drugs are evil. It is better that you suffer greatly.”It states in the book that the distribution, sale or use of illegal drugs is a mortal sin (Fifth Commandment).
Pray tell, what does that have to do with the topic of this thread, and how does that factor into your reckless and frequent assertion that all drugs are evil?
Scroll down to the Fifth Commandment and you will see it is a mortal sin to take or sell illegal drugs.Thirdly I refer you to website www.catholic.org/frz/examen/mortal_main.htm
Pray tell, what does that have to do with the topic of this thread, and how does that factor into your reckless and frequent assertion that all drugs are evil?
Nobody should kid themselves that smoking pot is okay. That kind of attitude rubs off to children who in turn think there is no problem doing that.
Drug taking leads to self destruction and destruction of families. It is EVIL.There you go making reckless blanket assertions again. :tsktsk:If you want to get high, then get high on GOD.
I’m not sure what you are “high” on, but whatever it is, I’ll have to just say “no” because it seems to have uncharitable effects.
Alan