Posted on 04/11/2012 11:02:40 AM PDT by rawhide
Oh, and it is not an 'incredibly bizarre situation', as the biased reporter wrote.
Searching on ‘pregnancy’ brought up no hits, so I posted it. Oh well, sorry I guess?
More like “In an unsurprising situation”...
Actually it is not duplicate.
No, my bad. If I could delete my own posts I would have done so. Different source, additional information.
I used to love reading the old National Review and The New Republic’s articles on the same events. Between the two you could get the whole picture.
Contract, duh. She’s got no case. Seems not too bright.
I’m a little surprised a woman sports coach is even heterosexual, actually.
I think it is possible to agree with the school AND to feel sorry for her.
Yes, this Christian school has the right and obligation to uphold a moral standard.
But we can also have mercy for people who make mistakes.
.... also, I am glad she decided to keep her baby.
She could have taken the easy way out and done the ‘convenient’ thing but didn’t.
The congregation can support her as a charity case, if necessary, without allowing her to violate her contract and continue as a model for impressionable children.
And can we stop saying “make mistakes” when we mean “sin”? There’s a difference.
“But we can also have mercy for people who make mistakes.”
We could and should. In the interview snippet she seemed more bewildered than anything else though, and conveyed a very nonchalant “that’s my morality” attitude about the event. If that is a fair reflection of her attitude, the school may have had little or nothing to work with. Mercy follows repentance as I understand it.
Agree that at least she is following the right course with her child. That is a start.
I was referring to “mistake” as in the Greek definition of “sin.”
- “a missing of the mark” (Vine Expository Dictionary Of NT Words)
Yes, she made a mistake. Yes, she “missed the mark.”
And yes, I agree with you that local Christians in the church or school could (and even should imo) help this woman who is now without a job and without health insurance.
Additionally, if Christian brothers and sisters don’t help support her financially, taxpayers probably will have to.
You may be correct. I did not see the interview.
But I do know that many people, when sins are uncovered, go through a period of denying responsibility and/or blaming others. Hopefully, this attitude is temporary.
If you are teaching in a Christian school, you are required to model Christian behavior for your students. This woman didn’t, and she deserved her firing.
She should be teaching in government schools where there are no moral requirements.
She violated a Christian moral standard that was a condition of her employment.
Does "incredibly bizarre situation" now mean "easily understood chain of action and consequences"?
Not a duplicate.
This is the fallacy of semantic obsolescence (adopting an obsolete meaning for current (NT)). "hamartia" (v. "hamartanein") may been used in some ancient contexts to mean "miss the mark". However, in the Bible it means "transgressing the law" (anomia). See 1 John 3:4 -- "Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth also the law: for sin is the transgression of the law."
Read D.A. Carson's Exegetical Fallacies, chapter 1, for common word fallacies. It's not perfect, but it is approachable by most.
Here are some related links:
Linguistics for Students of New Testament Greek
Chuck Vine's.
Understood and corrected at 6
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