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Is the floor of Hell paved with the skulls of bishops?
Gloria Romanorum ^
| February 3, 2024
| Florentius
Posted on 02/03/2024 1:55:54 PM PST by Antoninus
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To: Antoninus
>>Looking at a woman lustfully in this context means desiring to have sexual relations with a woman other than one’s wife. The very desire, if it is more than just a passing thought, is already the sin of adultery in the heart, and it would be a mortal sin.<<
So according to your personal interpretation of Sacred Scripture, is the passing thought a sin or not? Exactly how much time must elapse before it becomes a sin? Does that sin, once committed, immediately put the sinner in danger of perdition?
To be clear....the above quote is not mine, but from a Roman Catholic site.
To your question.....you thought the thought. In the passage in the Bible no time frame is given.
Thoughts are instantaneous. A millisecond is sufficient to condemn based on the passage in Matthew.
Jesus was trying to show the people that it wasn't just the physical act of adultery that is the sin.....it's also the thought of it.
The people had been told it was the physical act which was the sin. "27“You have heard that it was said, ‘YOU SHALL NOT COMMIT ADULTERY’;"
But He goes on the further explain the commandment.
"but I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lust for her has already committed adultery with her in his heart."
He says the person has committed adultery by the mere act of lusting after the woman.
As I said before, it can be a millisecond of lust yet that is sufficient to condemn the person as committing adultery.
What this illustrates is no matter how good a person may think they are...in this case that may think, I've never actually had sex without someone outside of marriage and they're fine...but IF they've thought it, and I don't know a person on the planet who hasn't....then they're just as guilty as the person who did the actual physical act.
Ephesians 2:1.... 1And you were dead in your trespasses and sins,
I think most of us know when we've committed a sin....but what we don't know is when we've committed the trespass. This, in my opinion, is where our thought life condemns us. We're not even aware of the trespass.
All this to say it shows no matter how much, or how hard we may try....our "good works" are insufficient to save us.
It's why we need a Savior, that is Christ. He is the only One Who can forgive all of our sin debt.
41
posted on
02/04/2024 3:10:38 PM PST
by
ealgeone
To: ealgeone
All this to say it shows no matter how much, or how hard we may try....our "good works" are insufficient to save us. No one disagrees with that. The problem then becomes one of apathy toward sin. Which is why many Protestants feel that they can think about sexual sin, participate in sexual sin, and it's all fine and dandy because, "I'm already saved." I've encountered that attitude frequently.
I would also argue that the lack of ability to partake in sacramental Confession causes problems for Protestants. This is not only because it robs the Protestant Christian of the regular need to examine one's conscience, but also because the act of confessing and the certainty that sins are forgiven by God once confessed is wonderfully cleansing. Even a non-Christian former Lutheran like
Carl Jung noticed the positive effect that Confession had for Catholics.
42
posted on
02/05/2024 6:59:26 AM PST
by
Antoninus
(Republicans are all honorable men.)
To: ealgeone
To be clear....the above quote is not mine, but from a Roman Catholic site.
So hang on a sec. Do you believe the "passing thought" that enters one's mind, immediately becomes a sin worthy of damnation? Be clear.
43
posted on
02/05/2024 7:01:45 AM PST
by
Antoninus
(Republicans are all honorable men.)
To: Antoninus
The issue is the writer is trying to justify the thought by assigning a human time metric. But, we cannot define “passing through”. Is a millisecond passing through or is it 5 seconds? 30? A minute?
See the problem?
. So yes, even a passing thought is considered sin. The individual may not act on it but they don’t have to which is the point of the passage.
44
posted on
02/05/2024 7:23:16 AM PST
by
ealgeone
To: Antoninus
I’ve encountered the same with RCs as well. Pew results tend to show RCs more apathetic to the issue however.
As far as confession Christians can go straight to God and confess sins, the big ones and little ones as they are all sin in His eyes, and know He’s forgiven us per 1 John. He already knows!
But this is not to retain salvation as it is in Roman Catholicism.
45
posted on
02/05/2024 7:28:49 AM PST
by
ealgeone
To: ealgeone
So yes, even a passing thought is considered sin. The individual may not act on it but they don’t have to which is the point of the passage.
Is it possible for passing thoughts to enter our minds as temptations due to the intervention of satan or other demonic spirits? If so, are those thoughts sinful?
46
posted on
02/05/2024 7:29:53 AM PST
by
Antoninus
(Republicans are all honorable men.)
To: Antoninus
Interesting question. Temptations would not be sinful as we are all tempted. Usually these come from outside our thoughts. As an example, if a gal came to you and said, hey, let’s go have sex. That’s a temptation. We cannot avoid temptations.
BUT, if you went home and contemplated having sex with her it shifts to a sin as you’re now the one thinking about it.
47
posted on
02/05/2024 8:19:01 AM PST
by
ealgeone
To: ealgeone
As an example, if a gal came to you and said, hey, let’s go have sex.
OK, now let's shift to this scenario which I think is much more common. You're on FR and someone posts a photo of a really attractive, scantily-clad woman. You look at said photo for 4.5 seconds. Have you committed a sin?
48
posted on
02/05/2024 8:35:49 AM PST
by
Antoninus
(Republicans are all honorable men.)
To: Antoninus
It was a sin for you to wanna feel up Ellen. It was a sin for you to plan to feel up Ellen. It was a sin for you to figure out a place to feel up Ellen. It was a sin to take Ellen to the place to feel her up. It was a sin to try to feel her up and it was a sin to feel her up. There were six sins in one feel, man!
-George Carlin
49
posted on
02/05/2024 8:38:00 AM PST
by
dfwgator
(Endut! Hoch Hech!)
To: ealgeone
I’ve encountered the same with RCs as well. Pew results tend to show RCs more apathetic to the issue however.
Pew polls do not tend to differentiate between Catholics who actually attend Mass regularly (actual Catholics) and those who don't -- who are technically in a state of mortal sin and outside the Church. So they're fairly useless.
They also don't differentiate between traditional Catholics and Novus Ordo Catholics. If they did, you would find that the traditional Catholics are almost 100% NOT apathetic. If anything, their error tends more towards scrupulosity.
50
posted on
02/05/2024 8:38:56 AM PST
by
Antoninus
(Republicans are all honorable men.)
To: Antoninus
You’re again trying to put a time frame on how long you can lust before it becomes a sin.
51
posted on
02/05/2024 8:42:50 AM PST
by
ealgeone
To: Antoninus
You may not even be aware of what you’re subconscious is thinking…hence why we’re dead in our sins and trespasses.
52
posted on
02/05/2024 8:43:54 AM PST
by
ealgeone
To: Antoninus
Now you’ve added a work to salvation with mandatory attendance to Mass. How many do you have to attend? Daily? Hourly? Weekly? Monthly?
53
posted on
02/05/2024 8:45:22 AM PST
by
ealgeone
To: Antoninus
To which must be added the Holy Days of Obligation.
54
posted on
02/05/2024 8:52:27 AM PST
by
ealgeone
To: ealgeone
You’re again trying to put a time frame on how long you can lust before it becomes a sin.
So what's the answer to the question? If the photo shows up on your scroll and you see it even for a split second, have you sinned?
55
posted on
02/05/2024 9:20:55 AM PST
by
Antoninus
(Republicans are all honorable men.)
To: ealgeone
Now you’ve added a work to salvation with mandatory attendance to Mass.
In John 3:5, Our Lord says: "Unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter the kingdom of God."
Is baptism not a "work" required for salvation?
56
posted on
02/05/2024 9:25:24 AM PST
by
Antoninus
(Republicans are all honorable men.)
To: Antoninus
One ell of hell is reserved for the Clinton and Biden family.
57
posted on
02/05/2024 9:28:33 AM PST
by
Leep
To: Antoninus
58
posted on
02/05/2024 9:48:13 AM PST
by
ealgeone
To: ealgeone
No. It’s not a work.
Really.
So attending Mass, which is done specifically because of the injunction of Our Lord to "do this in remembrance of me" is a work. But baptism, which is done specifically because Our Lord said "Unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter the kingdom of God" is not a work.
You can perhaps understand how that makes little sense.
59
posted on
02/05/2024 11:53:05 AM PST
by
Antoninus
(Republicans are all honorable men.)
To: Antoninus
28Therefore they said to Him, “What shall we do, so that we may work the works of God?”
29Jesus answered and said to them, “This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent.”
John 6:28-29 NASB 95
The consistent message of the NT....believe in Him.
60
posted on
02/05/2024 5:12:58 PM PST
by
ealgeone
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