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Is smoking a sin? venial or mortal? if venial, how much would be considered a mortal sin?
I think that St Piergiorgio Frassati smoked a pipe.
I think that St Piergiorgio Frassati smoked a pipe.
Smoking is no sin in and of itself. Excessive smoking could be, much like excessive anything could be.Is smoking a sin? venial or mortal? if venial, how much would be considered a mortal sin?
I think that St Piergiorgio Frassati smoked a pipe.
There’s a difference between moderation for things like eating and “moderation for smoking”. Food for example, is not inherently bad for the body but excess eating is. On the other hand, smoking, in any amount, is bad for the body. Smokers who are admitted as patients in the hospital are not allowed to go out and have smoke breaks. They are given nicotine patches and information on how to quit.Excessive smoking could be, much like excessive anything could be.
how times have changed, just last week my wife an i watched ‘the exorcist’ for the upteenth time, and i always laugh at the part when reagans doctor in the hospital comes from the exam area to the hallway to speak to the mother, and pulls out a cigarette and lights up a cigarette in the hallway. that was 1972, i guess.The hospital that I worked at allowed smoking years ago, but only outside. Administration would get complaints from patients, because nurses and doctors would come back from smoke breaks to care for them, and the residual smoke on their clothes would bother the patients. Some would have flare ups of breathing problems because of that.
I am afraid you are wrong on this point:The Bible says that we should honor our body, as it is a gift from God. Therefore, I’d lean towards smoking being a sin, since it is very harmful to the smoker’s body, and to others.
Hence there is nothing wrong with smoking in and of itself. It is the relative circumstances that potentially make it so.2289 If morality requires respect for the life of the body, it does not make it an absolute value. It rejects a neo-pagan notion that tends to promote the cult of the body, to sacrifice everything for it’s sake, to idolize physical perfection and success at sports. By its selective preference of the strong over the weak, such a conception can lead to the perversion of human relationships.
2290 The virtue of temperance disposes us to avoid every kind of excess: the abuse of food, alcohol, tobacco, or medicine. Those incur grave guilt who, by drunkenness or a love of speed, endanger their own and others’ safety on the road, at sea, or in the air.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=24386Christians are called to do what is reasonably necessary to protect their health (cf. CCC 2288). If using a particular product has been proven to be a danger to health and a person disregards known health warnings and uses it anyway with sufficient knowledge and consent, it may be sinful for him to do so
Doesn’t it say in the Bible that it is a sin? In the same way that anything that is purposely harmful to the body God gave you is a sin? The only result of smoking is to cause harm to your body. There are no redeeming aspects to it at all.If someone were to say it is a sin, I would ask for a citation from the Catechism. Also, a disctinction needs to be made between habitual excessive smoking and the occasional smoke. I smoke an occasional cigar, but below the level to which any health risk has been documented.
I agree w/ your post 100%. I don’t see any wiggle room here, either using the Bible or the Catechism. It’s sinful.So, the link you gave me says it is not a sin, but then goes on to say
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=24386
I’m a little confused by that original response then stating that it is not a sin, since smoking has been proven to be a danger to the health of the smoker and the health of bystanders.
Can you honestly say that it is ok to smoke around others, especially children, the elderly or the ill? You see nothing inherently wrong with that?
If you do not see wiggle room it is because you did not read this right. The words “if” and “may” are used:I agree w/ your post 100%. I don’t see any wiggle room here, either using the Bible or the Catechism. It’s sinful.
This is far from a blanket condemnation. As far as the Bible, I am still waiting for the scripture.Christians are called to do what is reasonably necessary to protect their health (cf. CCC 2288). **If **using a particular product has been proven to be a danger to health and a person disregards known health warnings and uses it anyway with sufficient knowledge and consent, it may be sinful for him to do so
I knew this one was coming, so I had the obvious answer:I Corinthians 6:19-20-Apostle Paul wrote “Know you not that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which you have of God, and you are not your own? For you were bought with a price: Therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit which are God’s”.
Filling our temples with posin that will destroy them doesn’t seem to me a way to glorify them.
At what level is it a hazard? I tried to find information on occassional smoking and was unable to find any good data. Most deals with at least daily smoking, usually a pack a day or greater. Does anyone know of any good info on occasional smoking, say less than three or four packs a day or one cigar a day? A week?Well, incense or not, it’s proven that it ruins our bodies.
Not really, but I’ve been told risk is there. I was able to google this, which seems to indicate increased risk of early death for the type of smoker you ask about, but only for men.At what level is it a hazard? I tried to find information on occassional smoking and was unable to find any good data. Most deals with at least daily smoking, usually a pack a day or greater. Does anyone know of any good info on occasional smoking, say less than three or four packs a day or one cigar a day? A week?