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Sir_Knight
Guest
No change in argument. There is no law in praying. If the police come along and tell you that you have unlawfully assembled, then you move on. If you have a permit to gather, you remain and continue to pray. You stay within the law.Nice changing of your argument.
Argument 1: You stated that prayer is different than tearing down a poster.
Once I pointed out that the debate was not over the difference in the gravity of the actions, but whether or not a law was broken, you said:
Argument 2: It’s okay if no laws are broken.
So which is it? I assume you are saying, as long as there are no arrests for prayer at an abortion clinic, there is no sin. Which I can agree with.
That just means that those who have been arrested (whether or not the laws were fair), Fr. Pavone included, have sinned, and need to confess this as such.
Okay, son of Wayne, last time I checked, Wayne did not create a universe out of nothing.I am the son of Wayne, thanks.
I am merely holding up the notion of “break a law or rule and you sin” into the light. Jesus did that a lot, according to the Jewish and Roman legal systems in place at the time. Under this strict, unbending belief, Jesus and the Apostles sinned. Newsworthy for Jesus, not so much for the Apostles.
The Apostles were personally commissioned by the Son of God. You and I were not. We are commissioned by God THROUGH His church. Through the successors of the Apostles.
And that church established official norms for moral behavior. One of those norms is that we can not do evil for a good purpose.