M
Montalban
Guest
I’ve already addressed your exceptions. You contend that they’re acceptable. I don’t.I have offered reasons, but you have once again chosen not to address them. The reasons demonstrate why they are not exceptions and your argument thus far has amounted to nothing more compelling than “they are exceptions because I say so.” I challenge you to quote and rebut each reason I have provided.
You rule we’re naturally meant to have kids, then make exceptions for priests, those who can’t have children, those who don’t want children. You believe they’re all valid exceptions. But to me the very point you have exceptions lessens the idea of a rule about nature. You are by very reason of reasoning exceptions undermining a *natural *law. It isn’t natural then.
People don’t naturally choose not to have children. The fact that they choose means it’s not about nature
People don’t *naturally *choose to be priests. It has nothing to do with nature but their faculties as reasoning people.
The more you reason exceptions the more you undermine the very *nature *of natural law.
I would agree that if you said “A natural outcome of sex between a man and a woman is a child” That is indeed natural. A decision by them to have sex and to intervene in the process in order to prevent a child is not natural. The mere fact they used reason in their decision to stymie nature makes it un-natural. This is in fact the reason why the RC Church is against contraception - because it goes against *natural *law.
Thus to willingly become celibate is to do something that is a decision of reason. We’re not *naturally celibate *creatures. You’ve yet to show this.
I don’t mean that purpose is irrelevant per se, but knowing the purpose is. Knowing that there is one, is about accepting this on faith. One does not need to know why God exists, to accept that he does. He asks us to come to him like the little children; with faith.Further, if the purpose of a thing is irrelevant, then that thing cannot really be said to have a purpose. Therefore, if the purpose of the sexuality is irrelevant, then logically it is a faculty that can be used to whatever end we choose. If God happens to say not to do one thing with the sexuality but that this prohibition is completely unrelated to what sexuality is for, then God is, logically, being arbitrary.
The mere fact that I am reasoning with you should allay any fears you might have that I am against reason. Wisdom is to know the limits of reason.
I don’t dismiss reason per se. I am reasoning with you that one should have faith.It is true one can offer all sorts of rationalizations to justify one’s own ends regarding the sexuality. Several here have tried. Still you cannot simply dismiss the faculty of reason so blithely. The fact remains that, fallen as it is, we need the use of our reason to even begin to understand what it is that God is saying. What you’re saying, that reason contradicts submission to God, is nothing more than a senseless defence of ignorance.
As Spock is alleged to have said “Logic dictates that logic has no place in this”.
A child has a *reason *for feeling comfortable in the arms of his parent. Likewise I have reason for trusting in God. And, it is not through speculative exercises that seem to both declare a law natural and then allow un-natural exceptions.