T
Timothysis
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So you are saying he was slain because he masturbated???I don’t think he would have been killed by God from having abstained from sexual relations. He was slain because he committed mortal sin.
So you are saying he was slain because he masturbated???I don’t think he would have been killed by God from having abstained from sexual relations. He was slain because he committed mortal sin.
anglicancatholic.org/Can you provide a link? I need to add this church to my list for reference purposes.
Thanks.
So you are totally ignoring the fact that scripture says that he “knew the children would not be his?”Onan wanted the pleasure of sex without the obligation.
That’s another way of defining “masturbation.”
Ahem—are we to check our practical knowledge at the door when reading Scripture?So you are totally ignoring the fact that scripture says that he “knew the children would not be his?”
And to what do you attribute his motivation being “the pleasure of sex without the obligation” when the whole purpose of the story is that he did his best to NOT raise up children to his deceased brother?
Finally, most people masturbate because they don’t have a partner to have sex with. Why would someone who obviously does have a partner choose to masturbate instead?
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Well, apparently some check their intelligence and common sense at the door when reading scripture. Look, it’s all really pretty easy.Ahem—are we to check our practical knowledge at the door when reading Scripture?
Did Onan not require pleasure to achieve orgasm?
Tim, while playing with your blocks, go look at what the Jewish tradition on this passage teaches as well. I’ll think you’ll find that it agrees with the Catholic tradition on this passage. As a matter of fact, I think you’ll find that 99% of all Scriptural Exegesis on this passage prior to 100 years ago was pretty much in agreement.Ok guys, I guess I’ll just go play with my blocks and coloring books. Thank you for a totally wasted time.
If you do a google search of “the sin of Onan” you will find plenty of varying thoughts and opinions. Most are like here, they fall on one side or the other (and some go on and on…). I still tend to think that it is the modern mind, along with 2000 years of religious thought and commentary, that projects personal views on the subject. Will there ever be a definitive answer? No, for the subject isn’t as black and white as some would like it to be.Tim, while playing with your blocks, go look at what the Jewish tradition on this passage teaches as well. I’ll think you’ll find that it agrees with the Catholic tradition on this passage. As a matter of fact, I think you’ll find that 99% of all Scriptural Exegesis on this passage prior to 100 years ago was pretty much in agreement.
Why did Jesus have to suffer and die on the cross? There is no answer to these questions. It’s like asking why did Shakespeare say “to be or not to be” instead of “should I, or shouldn’t I?” Asserting that there is meaning in something because the author didn’t say it another way is not convincing.And think on this. If Onan’s decision was to deprive his brother of any children, why did the author need to go into such… uh… “gory details” about Onan’s actions. He could have simply said, “But Onan refused his sister in law of any children and God laid the smack-down on him”.
I can’t access google from work, but I’d like to ask, how many of those varying opinions were prior to the 1900’s?If you do a google search of “the sin of Onan” you will find plenty of varying thoughts and opinions. Most are like here, they fall on one side or the other (and some go on and on…). I still tend to think that it is the modern mind, along with 2000 years of religious thought and commentary, that projects personal views on the subject. Will there ever be a definitive answer? No, for the subject isn’t as black and white as some would like it to be.
I’ll look at what the Church Fathers said of Onan. I’ll try and get back to you on that.It reminds me of the story of Pope St. Gregory the Great who declared that Mary Magdalene was the woman caught in adultery in the Gospels. However, many centuries later, people realized that what he was referring to was a misunderstanding on his part. Yet, for how long and even to this day do people attribute Mary Magdalene with being the woman caught in adultery? It is the same with Onan. Pulling quotes from other parts of scripture to back one’s opinion does not settle the issue. A similar example is the serpent in the Garden of Eden. Nowhere does it say that the serpent was Satan or the Devil. It wasn’t until the Christian era that commentators decided that it was Satan or Satan in the serpent that caused Adam and Eve to fall. In any event, what difference does it make since the creation story is a myth to convey sacred truths to the people of the time? Yet book after book, page after page of commentary has been written about Adam and Eve. Is all of it authoritive?
That’s an entirely different thread, and one that I think I can answer.Why did Jesus have to suffer and die on the cross?
There is no answer to these questions. It’s like asking why did Shakespeare say “to be or not to be” instead of “should I, or shouldn’t I?” Asserting that there is meaning in something because the author didn’t say it another way is not convincing.
Again, I’ll look at the history of the Church’s reasoning behind Onan’s actions. Although I’m confident that the Church has used this as part of its teaching against any time of contraception, I think the words of St. Paul in Romans is more of a testament against masturbation. The Church’s teaching that “all life is good” is probably the very foundation of Her teaching against masturbation and contraception. Onan is simply one of the other pillars to prop up this teaching, though not the main one.It is interesting to me, though, that the Church in Humane Vitae nor in the recent cathechism do not mention Onan in regards to the inappropriateness of masturbation. I wonder why???
Becareful what you say; there ARE answers to these questions.Why did Jesus have to suffer and die on the cross? There is no answer to these questions.
That’s simple. Just ask any couple who have practiced NFP… but you’ll have to wait til their multitude of kids are asleep!Can someone explain just how Natural Family Planning or “having sex during those days in the month when the women in not fertile” is any different than contraception? The goal is the same; having sex for pleasure and that is encouraged by the Church?
Exactly! I’ll give Tim a hint.Becareful what you say; there ARE answers to these questions.
The problem is not “having sex for pleasure” per se.Can someone explain just how Natural Family Planning or “having sex during those days in the month when the women in not fertile” is any different than contraception? The goal is the same; having sex for pleasure and that is encouraged by the Church?
The question was rhetorical. If you can say why God decided that the way he would sanctify mankind by the incarnation, passion, death and resurrection of His only begotten Son, then you are a greater theologian than any in the history of the Church.Becareful what you say; there ARE answers to these questions.
Having sex for the pleasure of another is quite different than having sex for one’s own pleasure, as love of oneself is different than love of one’s spouse.Can someone explain just how Natural Family Planning or “having sex during those days in the month when the women in not fertile” is any different than contraception? The goal is the same; having sex for pleasure and that is encouraged by the Church?
You don’t seem to have read them.The question was rhetorical. If you can say why God decided that the way he would sanctify mankind by the incarnation, passion, death and resurrection of His only begotten Son, then you are a greater theologian than any in the history of the Church.