C
chefmomster2
Guest
Our emotions are present, but no, they should never be the “major part” of a rational decision. We reason with our minds, not our “gut”. I would absolutely tell people not to let fear guide their choices. Fear may be based on many inaccuracies and lead to an erroneous judgment. Facts can actually remove this fear or greatly diminish it.Emotions are part of almost every decision, whether we think they are or not. Would you say that emotion should not be the major part of the decision for the woman to get a pap smear if the emotion was fear (of cancer)?
Exactly where was he avoiding responsibility? That is a misreading of my statement. He is fully responsible for his action. Sin, pride, etc. are explanations for why man will sin. They are not excuses. He is fully culpable for his actions. He was not driven to the point of ignorance (blindness to the fact that adultery is a serious sin). So long as he still retains the ability to know this and to choose his action, he is K&W.His actions were still his choice, chefmom, please do not allow him to escape responsibility. All of our actions are the result of our choices.
The mere presence of emotion, however strongly felt, does not in and of itself cause ignorance. He is only ignorant if he is unable to determine that he is about to commit a serious sin.Yes, he acted counter to reason and conscience, when reason and conscience are considered in the context of his right mind, his unaffected mind, and well-informed conscience.
If his conscience tells him that adultery is seriously wrong, his conscience is not malformed. It is in full knowledge of the Church’s teaching.However, he was not “right” in his mind, and his conscience may have been malformed.
No, but I believe that the experience of positive values is equally strong. I don’t have to experience the harm of divorce or adultery. I know the value of fidelity! I have experienced the Christian ideals of a loving and faithful marriage. I know enough to hold fidelity in a place of high esteem, such high esteem that I would never consider acting against it. It is the opposite side of the same coin and equally valid. It is certainly more desirable.Are you saying that you know just as much about the harm done as a person who has actually experienced divorce?
In addition, your insistence on personal experience of the negative consequences would naturally mean that each of us must personally experience murder, homosexuality, abortion, adultery, etc. to have “full knowledge” according to your personal requirements. This just isn’t reasonable. The law is given to us to guide our moral choices. We are intended to trust that the law of Christ is there to protect us from harm. We can and do gain knowledge (an informed conscience) when we accept the Law, when we experience the “good” that exists when the Law is followed, and when we observe the experience of others.
This is not Church teaching. Knowledge of the consequences is simply not required. It may be helpful; it may be instructive. It is not required. Generally there are unintended consequences which we might never anticipate. WhenI ,earned as a child not to touch the stove, it was enough to know that it would hurt me. Period. I did not and could not imagine all of the possible outcomes or harm. It wasn’t necessary.To me, there is a gradient of “knowing”. When a person knows enough about the harm of sin, he avoids sin.
The man has nothing new to say. He isn’t being obstinate. He merely states that nothing in his mind caused ignorance of the facts. He recognizes that he gave into temptation. His faith faltered. He repents because he knows that he has destroyed his relationship with God and hurt those affected by his actions. Repentance is the only path back.