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See my definition in the OP. The feeling is unavoidable. The action could be a sin.Depends. Can be a feeling can be an action.
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See my definition in the OP. The feeling is unavoidable. The action could be a sin.Depends. Can be a feeling can be an action.
See my definition in the OP. The feeling is unavoidable. The action could be a sin.
Ask me one question.You are cherry-picking what I am saying. I've been nothing but fair to you. I have answered all your questions. You don't actually say anything about my argument. So you ask questions when it suits you and when I say something you cannot refute you ignore it.
Ask me one question.
I don't understand the question. Can you give an example? Note the word that I bolded.Does God command that we have certain emotions and command that we do not have other emotions?
I don't understand the question. Can you give an example? Note the word that I bolded.
I still do not understand. Are you saying that God commands us to feel worry and God commands us not to feel worry?"Don’t worry" (Matthew 6:25)
I still do not understand. Are you saying that God commands us to feel worry and God commands us not to feel worry?
See Is worrying a sin? and follow up thereDon't worry is a command. There are no commands that say you should worry. So worrying is a sin.
See Is worrying a sin? and follow up there
I still do not understand the question. Are you saying that God commands people to feel a certain way and if you don't feel that way, you sin?You still have not answered my question. Does God command certain emotions and command we do not do other emotions?
I still do not understand the question. Are you saying that God commands people to feel a certain way and if you don't feel that way, you sin?
I would just define impatience in two senses: feeling and action. As an avoidable physiological feeling, it is not a sin. As a deliberative action, it could be a sin.I tink it's epigenetic
I would just define impatience in two senses: feeling and action. As an avoidable physiological feeling, it is not a sin. As a deliberative action, it could be a sin.
I would just define impatience in two senses: feeling and action. As an avoidable physiological feeling, it is not a sin. As a deliberative action, it could be a sin.
I have not asserted in reality one can always do. I separated them as a matter of definition.It's the enviroment that causes the feeling through chemical signals from the brain. It causes the feeling which is an impetus to action so I'm not sure that you can seperate feeling and action because of that.