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Paul_Rimmer
Guest
For clarification:
Nevertheless, the question stands: what two or more principles do you think “be fruitful and multiply” depend upon?
What is the non sequitur? I don’t understand; this statement seems pretty straight-forward to me.However, since this is an application of a basic principle to our day and age, even if it were for all ages, it would still be a matter of Ecclesiastic Discipline, and not a matter of faith or morals [non sequitur].
That is not what I’m saying. What I’m trying to say is that it follows generally from first principles (as “do not kill”). “Be fruitful and multiply” is not applied to particular actions in the way of a disciplinary ordinance (as “do not eat a particular sort of meat on a particular day”, or “refrain from certain types of dance”, etc.) which deals with moral principles, but on specific act-by-act and circumstance-by-circumstance applications.[so you are presuming that the purpose of the marital act is the begetting of children is an indemonstrable first principle?? - why would you (anyone) think that?]
Nevertheless, the question stands: what two or more principles do you think “be fruitful and multiply” depend upon?
I don’t understand your point here.[so, “if a matter of prudence, then merely disciplinary (not a matter of morals)”?? - non sequitur - to act against prudence (imprudently) is to act against reason is to act against the moral law]