alan,
*That all sounds good, except one thing: what is the purpose of the temporal discipline? *
==> The purpose of discipline is really threefold: Correction, teaching, protection. It is needed for correction so the person learns that their actions must not be repeated. It serves as a teaching role by informing the person that life has boundaries. It serves as protection by demonstrating to the public that such actions will not be tolerated and when they are the authorities will take action.
When I hear “discipline” I think it is often confused with “punishment.” If this is not what you intended, then you can ignore my question about what is it for.
==> As far as I am concerned discipline and punishment are really very closely related, they are essentially synonymous. God does discipline and punish us He does so for our benefit. Likewise, we are to lovingly discipline/punish as an act of love.
Quote:
Authorities must also earn respect of the children, or it’s just a big cat-and-mouse game.
That is hogwash! Jesus is our Lord, did He have to earn our respect? A Priest is our spiritual father, did he have to earn our respect? Authorities can lose their respect, but they cannot earn it, they must either be given theirm proper respect, or else the young person has no real formation.
Well, yes, Jesus did have to earn our respect. He did miracles on a regular basis, so that we would see them and believe in Him.
I can abide with your assertion that authorities don’t “have” to earn our respect, but that they can lose it.
Thank you, I was very careful when I worded that and for some of the same reasons you mentioned. Though I cannot read Jesus’ mind, he prevented legitimate authority from administering just consequences. There are times I think that is a good strategy. Therefore, “Jesus and I” agree there are times when punishment is not the best answer. If He didn’t agree with me on this (of course who do I think I got the idea from anyway) then He would have thrown the stone himself; after all He did say, “he who is without sin shall cast the first stone,” but then he tricked them by being without sin yet not casting it.
==> So, you are saying that the one incident erases all other revelation? Wow, you really are good, though that sound particularly Protestant at its core.
Yes, agreeing with Jesus on one specific issue does not mean I have the entire revelation from God. However, asserting that authority is duty bound to administer consequences has a direct counterexample in the Bible, and that’s really the only point I’m trying to get across. An authority figure is NOT bound by God to blindly administer consequences just because it is within his authority to do so.
==> You site one example of Jesus’ teachings, yet you ignore the many times that Jesus taught that there are consequences to our actions…that sin separates us from Him, that sin leads a person down the wrong path. You seem to conveniently ignore that Jesus left a Church in order for people to learn these things, and that Jesus’ Word gives authority to legitimate authorties for rebuking and disipline. It is sooooooooo easy to be a verse plucker, yet it is far more difficult to consider everything Christ taught and it is even more difficult for some people to realize that the Church has been given authority by Christ.
He died so we would not have to endure the punishment for our sins,
==> Wrong! He died so that we “might” not have to receive punishment for our sins. The simply truth is, we can all fall and loe our salvation…we can all sin, we all do sin, we all must turn back to Christ every single time we sin. Jesus gave no unconditional promises…again your position seems very Protestant in nature.
It’s like Jesus gave us this great gift, but for whatever reason we just can’t seem to accept it.
==> Again, your views are very evangelical Christianlike. Jesus spoke many times of consequences and the consequence are not pleasant.
Are there any examples of Jesus telling parents of worldly authority that they have been too lenient on a sinner?
==> Nope. Are there any examples of Jesus saying “hey, go sin all you want, because my saving work on the cross means you can kill people or commit adultery or fornicate or whatever there are no consequences of any kind?”
I honestly mean no insult and apologize if you take offense with anything I have written…it just seems lean on a false Gospel.