C
chevalier
Guest
As always, I seem to be bringing up a controversial subject. More like looking for a hole in a whole as we say around the place where I live. I just seem to have a habit of pinning down even accepted social traditions which don’t get along well with my vision of morality. But perhaps it’s just vision. Anyway, on to the subject.
Kissing required in stage plays by the script. I’m not talking about simple pecks you would give to friends or even strangers on a good day. I’m talking about Romeo and Juliet style kissing or Sleeping Beauty style of kissing.
It seems to have been tradition in schools. No one seems to mind. But how does it happen? A teacher picks a girl and a guy and tells them to kiss. So they enact the Big French of Romeo and Juliet or she lies down and he leans over, Sleeping Beauty style.
Yesterday, I talked to a Christian lady who didn’t have a problem with that. First, she was claiming it was sweet and innocent. Next, she switched to claiming it was required by the plot and wasn’t in the hearts of the actors – but pondering the best kiss of them all somewhat later pretty much defeats the “not in hearts” argument. Ultimately, she would claim that kissing isn’t a sin or that it was required and she had no choice. I raised that she could always have quit. She replied the teacher would have picked another girl, so what point?
I don’t understand what’s the point of respecting women if they allow themselves to be “taken” like that by guys they don’t even know or like, let alone love. I don’t complain about things people do with those they love. I probably wouldn’t complain about playing such scenarios with a boyfriend/girlfriend (depending on one’s own opposite gender, of course) or even a very good non-romantic friend, but for decency’s sake… A class-mate picked by the teacher?
In my view, the teachers who do that commit a crime. I would never allow my daughter to do something like that and I would sue the school and launch a criminal proceeding against the teacher in question if it had already happened.
The argument “but that was highschool” doesn’t work, either, unless to the effect opposite from intended. Children need to be protected more and they are way farther from even considering marriage, so their activities need to be somehow limited and supervised.
I asked what if the script required removing some clothing or doing something sexual. The answer I got was that it was different from plain kissing. Come on. The difference is in degree only, not in substance. I would even say that stripping for a movie is less personal than kissing – after all, one doesn’t actually do anything with anyone else and shame goes to him who has impure thougths (however, one of my friends who is a church animator disagreed, placing kissing – even open-mouth french-kissing – below nudity).
I’m not making a poll of this because I don’t want to cheapen it by a contest of votes whichever way, let alone questions about questions cutting the thread in pieces. However, I would ask for well-thought answers, preferably in length.
Kissing required in stage plays by the script. I’m not talking about simple pecks you would give to friends or even strangers on a good day. I’m talking about Romeo and Juliet style kissing or Sleeping Beauty style of kissing.
It seems to have been tradition in schools. No one seems to mind. But how does it happen? A teacher picks a girl and a guy and tells them to kiss. So they enact the Big French of Romeo and Juliet or she lies down and he leans over, Sleeping Beauty style.
Yesterday, I talked to a Christian lady who didn’t have a problem with that. First, she was claiming it was sweet and innocent. Next, she switched to claiming it was required by the plot and wasn’t in the hearts of the actors – but pondering the best kiss of them all somewhat later pretty much defeats the “not in hearts” argument. Ultimately, she would claim that kissing isn’t a sin or that it was required and she had no choice. I raised that she could always have quit. She replied the teacher would have picked another girl, so what point?
I don’t understand what’s the point of respecting women if they allow themselves to be “taken” like that by guys they don’t even know or like, let alone love. I don’t complain about things people do with those they love. I probably wouldn’t complain about playing such scenarios with a boyfriend/girlfriend (depending on one’s own opposite gender, of course) or even a very good non-romantic friend, but for decency’s sake… A class-mate picked by the teacher?
In my view, the teachers who do that commit a crime. I would never allow my daughter to do something like that and I would sue the school and launch a criminal proceeding against the teacher in question if it had already happened.
The argument “but that was highschool” doesn’t work, either, unless to the effect opposite from intended. Children need to be protected more and they are way farther from even considering marriage, so their activities need to be somehow limited and supervised.
I asked what if the script required removing some clothing or doing something sexual. The answer I got was that it was different from plain kissing. Come on. The difference is in degree only, not in substance. I would even say that stripping for a movie is less personal than kissing – after all, one doesn’t actually do anything with anyone else and shame goes to him who has impure thougths (however, one of my friends who is a church animator disagreed, placing kissing – even open-mouth french-kissing – below nudity).
I’m not making a poll of this because I don’t want to cheapen it by a contest of votes whichever way, let alone questions about questions cutting the thread in pieces. However, I would ask for well-thought answers, preferably in length.
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