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Liberalsaved
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She should be fired, perhaps followed by a speech on how the secular world works in a free country.
Revenge and Vindication.If that poor person buying the condom was so humiliated and embarrassed, then why did he or she go to the media with the story?
Keep in mind that when Christ said these words, he was addressing it toward those Church leaders who delighted in pointing out the sins of others. In Matthew 23, for example, we find the Church leaders taunting someone because they had not ceremoniously washed their cups. Jesus nails them to the wall for being openly judgmental about their “apparent” sins.Did Jesus Christ calling Pharisees “broods of vipers” demonstrate a lack of compassion? Did it fail to do anything for the Church? For society? Why, then, did Jesus “inflate his own sense of self-righteousness?” Loving someone isn’t always making sure their feelings aren’t hurt.
Jesus didn’t come to tell us that we need to fix each others’ sins of the flesh. People already had that one figured out. He came to empower their methods by teaching them to bear with one another’s faults in love and not making a public spectacle out of them. For some reason, people seem to think Christ is just an ultimately harsh tool by which to condemn sinners, rather than an instrument of peace to get the judgment out of our hearts.23 "Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, you hypocrites. You pay tithes 12 of mint and dill and cummin, and have neglected the weightier things of the law: judgment and mercy and fidelity. (But) these you should have done, without neglecting the others. 24 13 Blind guides, who strain out the gnat and swallow the camel! 25 14 "Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, you hypocrites. You cleanse the outside of cup and dish, but inside they are full of plunder and self-indulgence. 26 Blind Pharisee, cleanse first the inside of the cup, so that the outside also may be clean. 27 15 "Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, you hypocrites. You are like whitewashed tombs, which appear beautiful on the outside, but inside are full of dead men’s bones and every kind of filth. 28 Even so, on the outside you appear righteous, but inside you are filled with hypocrisy and evildoing. 29 16 "Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, 17 you hypocrites. You build the tombs of the prophets and adorn the memorials of the righteous, 30 and you say, ‘If we had lived in the days of our ancestors, we would not have joined them in shedding the prophets’ blood.’ 31 Thus you bear witness against yourselves that you are the children of those who murdered the prophets; 32 now fill up what your ancestors measured out! 33 You serpents, you brood of vipers, how can you flee from the judgment of Gehenna? 34 18 Therefore, behold, I send to you prophets and wise men and scribes; some of them you will kill and crucify, some of them you will scourge in your synagogues and pursue from town to town, 35 so that there may come upon you all the righteous blood shed upon earth, from the righteous blood of Abel to the blood of Zechariah, the son of Barachiah, whom you murdered between the sanctuary and the altar. 36 Amen, I say to you, all these things will come upon this generation.
Why is it that when we are correcting others, we only consider it wrong if we physically harm them?If the girl behind the counter shot the guy buying condoms, then you can complain about lack of compassion.
Some believe it is.Is eating meat a sin?
Yes, this is exactly the type of behavior that earned Christ’s strongest criticism.And was the girl haughty? Yes, indeed. Blunt and dismissive. And no, she admitted to doing it 3 or 4 times before. Her family went in later and monstered the poor manager, telling him he’d be sued for religious descrimination if they dismissed her too. Jesus LOVED/LOVES sinners. This girl and her family didn’t. They were simply being elitist. They strutted around the Church, attending two masses in a row, and hung around out the front before and after so they could collect back-pats and praise.
We don’t know that. I can say I believe such and such is wrong and I can’t participate in it. That is not neccessarily the same as saying I’m judging someone else. It’s much more a case of guarding my own soul.The girl behind the counter judged this person as a sinner and exposed it in public, all the while showing her disrespect for her own earthly master, the person who signs her paycheck.
What exactly did she do? I would like to see a link to the news article or something similiar. “Blunt and dismissive.” doesn’t sound haughty to me at all. Sounds like she just simply said that for personal reasons of religious conviction, she did not feel she could help with such a sale and directed him to another counter.And was the girl haughty? Yes, indeed. Blunt and dismissive. And no, she admitted to doing it 3 or 4 times before. Her family went in later and monstered the poor manager, telling him he’d be sued for religious descrimination if they dismissed her too. Jesus LOVED/LOVES sinners. This girl and her family didn’t. They were simply being elitist. They strutted around the Church, attending two masses in a row, and hung around out the front before and after so they could collect back-pats and praise.
Abortion is not illegal and therefore is not “objectively” wrong based on societal rules. Is that your position? Someone believing something is wrong has very little affect on whether or not it actually is wrong. Eating meat is not a sin and using a condom *is *a sin, regardless of how many people don’t think it is.Some believe it is.
Some believe it is a sin to buy condoms.
Neither is illegal, and therefore neither is “objectively” wrong based on societal rules.
Are you Catholic at all?If you support a cashier for refusing a condom sale based on the fact that she stuck to what she believed, then you must support the vegetarian cashier as well. There is no moral difference except they may belong to a different formal religion than we do.
Ah, an actual reasonable argument in this thread! Kudos, my friend!This needs clarification. For example, material cooperation is not always a sin, even if you know you are cooperating materially. Are you thinking that selling the box of condoms is formal cooperation?
Even if an act is (just) a venial sin, one is still ought not do it.
Included in that speech she should be told that its perfectly ok for the secular world to preach and impose their ideals of human sexuality in the name of free speech but it is completely unacceptable for a religion - Christianity in particular - to do the same thing.She should be fired, perhaps followed by a speech on how the secular world works in a free country.
Rob’s Wife said:We don’t know that. I can say I believe such and such is wrong and I can’t participate in it. That is not neccessarily the same as saying I’m judging someone else. It’s much more a case of guarding my own soul.
And we are supposed to call attention to sins. Is it a kindness to leave them ignorant of their sins?
The spiritual works of mercy call us all to:
1. Admonisher the sinner.
2. Instruct the ignorant.
3. Council the doubtful
4. Comfort the sorrowful
5. Bears wrongs patiently
6. Forgive all injuries
7. Pray for the living and the dead
We don’t have an earthly master and even if it’s looked at that way - standing firm in our personal morals is not disrespectful to our employers.
You make a good point, in that he changed the views of how people with a certain social status behaved. Your point addresses the fact that the employee, who is servant to the store and its customers, had the nerve to stand up and speak.Yes, Jesus loved/loves the sinner. Actually He loves us all.
**However, He was well known to not tolorate sin too. Even got mighty angry about it a time a two and certainly was public about His opinion of it and those who persisted in committing sins. I recall the passage where He very publicly tells a man he has a greater chance of fitting thrugh the eye of a needle than getting into heaven. Bet that hurt the rich fellows ego a bit and made more than a few in the crowd think Jesus was a bit too uppity for an unemployeed guy off the street.**
I don’t know how exactly this girl spoke or behaved. So far it’s all speculation.
True. She was an accident waiting to happen. Just because you get away with bad behavior one time or twice, doesn’t mean you will be able to do it forever.I will say that it could have been handled in a quiet and calm manner and the customer may have been just as furious. Some people are like that. The OP does say the girl admitted to having done this before and none of those people seem to have felt a need to go to the media over it.
No, that’s a horrible misinterpretation. Both letters to the Corinthians are simply Paul pointing out their sins and telling them they need to cut it out. Was Paul a “viper?” Would Jesus have scolded Him for doing so? Apparently not, as the Church sees fit to honor his letters as authoritative.Keep in mind that when Christ said these words, he was addressing it toward those Church leaders who delighted in pointing out the sins of others.
Where in the Gospel does Jesus say its wrong to tell someone their sins? There are a *multitude *of passages in the New Testament that encourage us to do so. What Christ warns against is *judging *people and, thanks to liberals, we’ve managed to blend correction and judgement into the same thing and this is absurd. If my child thinks 2 + 2 = 5 and I correct her and tell her that its really 4, that’s not judgement. If I tell her she’s stupid for thinking 2 + 2 =5, *that *would be judgement.This girl would have been right at home among those against whom Christ directed those harsh words. Obviously she is trained well to be a good little soldier for them.
You’re right. Its much better what we’re doing now: teaching them to be tolerant of everyone’s beliefs and never correct anyone in fear of rocking the boat. That’s worked wonders for the moral fortitude of our society.Of course I don’t know the girl personally, so I can’t say how culpable she is. Sure I suppose it could have been the first time the issue came up, and she could have been caught off-guard. If so, this marks a problem in the way we form our children spiritually.
Show me the passage where Christ condems this girl and I will give you plenty that support her. You’re misintepreting Scripture.Perhaps it seems harsh to imagine Christ speaking these words to her, but you who applaud her, please consider what we are saying. She is joining up with the mindset that Christ spoke against – if her behavior is reinforced then she will become fully mature in her ability to deserve these words:
Yes, he did. Does “am I my brothers keeper?” ring a bell? Furthermore, if people have figured out that they need to fix their sins of the flesh, why is it that we’ve descended so far into sins of the flesh? With pornography as the leading industry in the world and abortion and pre-marital sex rampant, you give society too much credit.Jesus didn’t come to tell us that we need to fix each others’ sins of the flesh. People already had that one figured out.
Who made the spectacle? The guy could have quitely walked away to another register and the conversation could have just been between him and the cashier and maybe a customer behind him, no one would have to know what had happened (for all they knew he could have had incorrect change or something). The only person making a spectacle out of it is the person trying to buy the condoms by going to the press.He came to empower their methods by teaching them to bear with one another’s faults in love and not making a public spectacle out of them.
Scripture?Yes, this is exactly the type of behavior that earned Christ’s strongest criticism.
Umm, this sounds more judgemental to me than what the girl is described as doing. If the girl was wrong to “judge” the person buying condoms because she can’t know the customer’s heart (as she can’t), then how is it right to judge the girl’s intentions through her perceived reactions to this brew-ha-ha?And was the girl haughty? Yes, indeed. Blunt and dismissive. And no, she admitted to doing it 3 or 4 times before. Her family went in later and monstered the poor manager, telling him he’d be sued for religious descrimination if they dismissed her too. Jesus LOVED/LOVES sinners. This girl and her family didn’t. They were simply being elitist. They strutted around the Church, attending two masses in a row, and hung around out the front before and after so they could collect back-pats and praise.
But Paul was speaking to BELIEVERS, people who had chosen to follow Christ. Where do we draw the line in what we force on other non-believers? Not going to mass is a sin. Should we go around berating non-Catholics for not attending mass on Ash Wednesday? God gave us free will. Who are we to manipulate the actions of others?No, that’s a horrible misinterpretation. Both letters to the Corinthians are simply Paul pointing out their sins and telling them they need to cut it out.
How can any person know this?Basically I feel it was fairly obvious that the action was done with no love whatsoever, and it achieved nothing for the customer, for the Church, or for society.