Irenaeus
Sub tuum praesidium confugimus!
Holo,
"Compassion" without truth in my view is so many feathers that tickle souls into hell. It is like a doctor who is too afraid to disturb the patient, and therefore does not reveal the cancer. Truth does not equal bluntness (because prudence must be applied always), but we are called upon as Christian people to bear witness to the commandments of God, whether natural or positively revealed. We need not thunder like Moses, but we need not cower like mice. Love does not rejoice in iniquity, but with the truth - simultaneously, love is kind.
Of course, homosexuality can't be compared to a cancer: no analogy may be taken too far. There are counselors who take a Christian point of view, and who help men and women with unwanted same-sex attractions to overcome what caused them to adopt this pattern of behavior.
It is a serious misunderstanding of the nature of Christianity to suggest that "our God" is so intolerant to expect what is best for his creatures, (what may truly be called, in contradistinction to your definition, "well-being") rather than to merely allow them to be governed by every disordinate appetite of concupiscence.
This talk of "love" and soforth neglects something that is so basic to the Christian understanding of man that to neglect it calls into question everything from the creation to the redemption: that something is wrong with man. Whether you are Catholic or Reformed and you definitely call this original sin, or take a little less defined view as an Orthodox Christian, the point is that by and large our desires are disordered, and we "Do not know what we do." The flesh wages war against the spirit.
In heterosexual attraction, and even in other sensible goods like food, drink, recreation and other lawful pleasures, there is always that inclination to pursue what is inordinate - and reason, so often deceived and subjective, usually capitulates to these inordinate appetites, unless informed by a higher moral law, aided by grace, above both passion and mere human reason.
The idea of mere "love", or the feeling of love, governing the hierarchy of morality is an inverted pyramid of Christian belief and moral theology. Both agape and eros, taken in themselves, can be holy, and they can be wicked. Like all passions, and even intellectual powers like the memory and the will, we do not call one or the other "Evil" or "good" unless first we consider what they apply to. We call a man "evil" because his will is evil, like the murderer. We call a man "good" because his will is good, like a loving mother.
We as Christians are called not to merely be ruled by the automation of our emotional attachments and feelings. We are called to live by the intrinsic law of creation, and also by the revealed law of God, which even with the law of Moses was to be "inscribed on your hearts...teach them to your children...post them on your gates."
Any sort of Christian morality that defies the moral authority of God as teacher and as revealer through both created reality and his own self-disclosure, inevitably does not make man more free, but disfigures humanity. "Whoever sins is a slave to sin."
Inevitably one neglects the moral authority of God for fluid personal moral autonomy. If this illogic were to be applied to society at large, the result would be moral anarchy, and power, not the good, will rule the world.
"Compassion" without truth in my view is so many feathers that tickle souls into hell. It is like a doctor who is too afraid to disturb the patient, and therefore does not reveal the cancer. Truth does not equal bluntness (because prudence must be applied always), but we are called upon as Christian people to bear witness to the commandments of God, whether natural or positively revealed. We need not thunder like Moses, but we need not cower like mice. Love does not rejoice in iniquity, but with the truth - simultaneously, love is kind.
Of course, homosexuality can't be compared to a cancer: no analogy may be taken too far. There are counselors who take a Christian point of view, and who help men and women with unwanted same-sex attractions to overcome what caused them to adopt this pattern of behavior.
It is a serious misunderstanding of the nature of Christianity to suggest that "our God" is so intolerant to expect what is best for his creatures, (what may truly be called, in contradistinction to your definition, "well-being") rather than to merely allow them to be governed by every disordinate appetite of concupiscence.
This talk of "love" and soforth neglects something that is so basic to the Christian understanding of man that to neglect it calls into question everything from the creation to the redemption: that something is wrong with man. Whether you are Catholic or Reformed and you definitely call this original sin, or take a little less defined view as an Orthodox Christian, the point is that by and large our desires are disordered, and we "Do not know what we do." The flesh wages war against the spirit.
In heterosexual attraction, and even in other sensible goods like food, drink, recreation and other lawful pleasures, there is always that inclination to pursue what is inordinate - and reason, so often deceived and subjective, usually capitulates to these inordinate appetites, unless informed by a higher moral law, aided by grace, above both passion and mere human reason.
The idea of mere "love", or the feeling of love, governing the hierarchy of morality is an inverted pyramid of Christian belief and moral theology. Both agape and eros, taken in themselves, can be holy, and they can be wicked. Like all passions, and even intellectual powers like the memory and the will, we do not call one or the other "Evil" or "good" unless first we consider what they apply to. We call a man "evil" because his will is evil, like the murderer. We call a man "good" because his will is good, like a loving mother.
We as Christians are called not to merely be ruled by the automation of our emotional attachments and feelings. We are called to live by the intrinsic law of creation, and also by the revealed law of God, which even with the law of Moses was to be "inscribed on your hearts...teach them to your children...post them on your gates."
Any sort of Christian morality that defies the moral authority of God as teacher and as revealer through both created reality and his own self-disclosure, inevitably does not make man more free, but disfigures humanity. "Whoever sins is a slave to sin."
Inevitably one neglects the moral authority of God for fluid personal moral autonomy. If this illogic were to be applied to society at large, the result would be moral anarchy, and power, not the good, will rule the world.
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