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GandalfTheWhite
Guest
Discuss please!
What’s the Catholic undestanding of this sentence?
Pax Christi,
~G
Pax Christi,
~G
Is that what the Church teaches and has always tought or is this your opinion?If they are only having sexual intimacy the government should stay out of the bedroom. In fact everyone should stay out of others’ bedrooms. The individual’s consicence has to be moved to confess it otherwise it is noone’s business.
IMO, If the State is going to insist that it approve/license marriage, then it should also accept responsibility for enforcing the agreement between spouses. If that agreement includes monogamy the State should enforce it.…or a husband cheats on her wife. …
Why don’t you tell us what you think?Is that what the Church teaches and has always tought or is this your opinion?
That would be opinion. The conscience has to be an informed conscience.If they are only having sexual intimacy the government should stay out of the bedroom. In fact everyone should stay out of others’ bedrooms. The individual’s consicence has to be moved to confess it otherwise it is noone’s business.
I agree. When sodomy laws were struck down in some states a year or two ago, I didn’t see any statements from the Church about those laws. Obviously, sodomy is a sin, but I think the Church is neutral on whether or not a state makes the sin illegal.Why don’t you tell us what you think?
I do not believe that the Church has officially commented on the statement “What goes on in a private bedroom between consenting adults is no business of the state.” as that seems to be a governmental issue and the Church acknowledges the States right to set laws in its own governance and encourages those laws to uphold a moral framework.
The Church is against immorality even when it is between consenting adults and done in a private bedroom.
Well, I’ve always held the view that we are free to sin and that our behaviour is our choice and we are going to pay for it when we die. Today I was asked that question and I started rethinking that. Does my opinion reflect the spirit of secularism and modernism that’s present all around me or am I correct? The same argument is passed by those who call themselves “pro-choice”. They say that they are against abortion but believe that people should have the choice. I’m thinking whether my ideas don’t at least to some extend reflect the same kind of thinking. After all, should all that is against God be made illegal? So basically I’m split and so I’m trying to find out! I really want to avoid modernism!Why don’t you tell us what you think?
I agree. So I should re-phrase the question this way: According to the Church which of the following is preferred (or should be encouraged) - a state in which fornication is illegal or a state which has no laws against it (most of Western society as far as I know).I do not believe that the Church has officially commented on the statement “What goes on in a private bedroom between consenting adults is no business of the state.” as that seems to be a governmental issue and the Church acknowledges the States right to set laws in its own governance and encourages those laws to uphold a moral framework.
I understand thatThe Church is against immorality even when it is between consenting adults and done in a private bedroom.
I would think that the Catholic understanding is that an immoral act doesn’t get less immoral because it is kept private. (Scandal can add to the problem but avoiding scandal doesn’t mean that you’re avoiding sin.)Discuss please!What’s the Catholic undestanding of this sentence?
Pax Christi,
~G
As stated it is too general. Imagine a brother and sister? They consent. The state has no interest in such things?Discuss please!What’s the Catholic undestanding of this sentence?
Pax Christi,
~G
What is victimless? Adultery can destroy a marriage which can lead to poverty and the state having to care for children.Only, as previously stated, there are no victims. Incest is one of the exceptions, because of the child that might be conceived. A spouse of an adulterer is capable of initiating divorce action. A product of an incestuous union cannot, and it is in the interest of the state to prosecute those who commit incest to prevent such children from being conceived because of the high incidence of genetic problems.
So, adultery has no societal effects?Adultery CAN lead to divorce. Each situation is different. Ever hear of forgiveness? Divorce, well handled, rarely leads to the state having to care for children. When that is the case, you will find that the parents are so troubled that that would have happened anyway.