ChristOurCaptain
Augsburgian Catholic
I just read Rudolf Hoess´ autobiography.
Uhm......
I just had a glass of coke light.
Why are we sharing what we just did, as if this was Facebook?
Upvote
0
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
I just read Rudolf Hoess´ autobiography.
I don´t know why you are doing it, and I don´t know what coke light might have to do with anything.Uhm......
I just had a glass of coke light.
Why are we sharing what we just did, as if this was Facebook?![]()
I don´t know why you are doing it, and I don´t know what coke light might have to do with anything.
It is never okay to kill. Never.
The experience of being alive is the culmination of biological, chemical, and perhaps divine phenomenon. It should be a crime against existence to ever deny a body in time the experience of life.
We justify the killing of others as a shearing of society of the parts unnecessary and detrimental. Or we bring up the noble ideals of removing the bad parts to improve or protect the collective, which is just lazy. Prevention, not readiness for the effects of evil or what have you, should be the standard.
So, if a child was about to be raped and killed and the only way to prevent it would be to take the criminals life . . . you would condemn someone for interfering and rescuing the child? The wrong of the child's death would only be on the criminal and not the bystander who condoned the action through passivity? Is that right?
snip
10 guy, is that you?
Look here.....
Either, you go with this line of thinking all the way: "We should never punish at all, just turn the other cheek, therefore, let's do away with prisons, police and courts!", or stop trying to use Jesus as a way to justify your own views. To do otherwise is hypocritical and arbitrary.
Am I asking you to be in favor of CP? No. I'm asking you to stop taking the Gospel hostage in your opposition to it. Killing the rapist before he rapes and kills the child (if killing him is the only option available, which it won't be in 99,9% of cases) is protecting the innocent, and THAT, if you want to go there, is most definitely a Christian virtue.
When did the bible become about making myself a 'king' and deciding how a country is run?
I'm not here to create laws for you. If you want to be judge and executioner, go right ahead.
'For even when the archangel Michael spoke with the devil himself, he did not make out to bring a slanderous judgement against him, but instead said 'God himself will rebuke you'.
'Vengeance is mine, I will repay' says God.
It isn't (not since theocratic Israel, anyway). That's MY point, whereas you seem to be saying: "This is my reading of the Bible, therefore society shouldn't have CP". That's the sentiment I opposed.
What a marvellous display of subtle offensiveness...comparing those who DARE to point out the fallacy of your "reasoning" with satan. Well played.
And....that quote is relevant to how society should deal with criminals, HOW?
snip
Moving past the "if everyone was a teletubby" rhetoric . . . NO! crime prevention is the opposite of vengeance. Simply being violent in some cases does not automatically make something vengeance. Vengeance is responsive/ reactive by definition. Crime prevention is proactive by definition. Crime prevention is loving my neighbor as myself. It is ghastly and contra-Gospel to see a crime victim and do nothing.'prevention of a crime', is a form of vengeance. 'You are about to kill, so I will kill you'.
Far better that I die by the sword as a consequence of sacrificing myself for my neighbors, than to bear the shame of having done nothing, like the servant that was given one talent. Where did that servant end up by the way?'Then Jesus said to him, Put your sword back into its place. For all who take the sword will perish by the sword.
Charming, but no. Killing isn't always required but when it is, and a man stands idle, allowing the torment of innocents through complicit inaction, viewing it as mere weakness is a kindness, the shame is unthinkable to allow an evil such as watching a child be raped and murdered and to do nothing. I suspect that you are upholding a moral view based solely on theory & if tested would look down on the "do nothing" and be thankful for the man, who would do violence on behalf of the innocent.The man who doesn't kill the attacker is seen as weak by men. But his weakness shames those who kill. His forgiveness shames those who won't. His placidity shames those who are aggressors.
Not really relevant. One doesn't need to be wise in the ways of the world to stand up for the weak, one doesn't even have to succeed, but to do nothing would be unconscionable.'For it is God who has called the weak, the outcasts, rejects and the fools of teh ways of the world to shame those who are wise of them'.
When Jesus was questioned about the Law, He replied "The first and greatest commandment is this: That you love the Lord your God with all your heart, body, and soul . . . the second is like unto it, that you love your neighbor as yourself, on these two, hang all the Law and the Prophets". If it were my daughter or wife across the street that night, I would want someone to intervene. It is hypocrisy to wish safety for my loved ones and not be willing to contribute to the safety of others. It is simply loving my neighbor as myself to seek to prevent crimes against them.It may be 'lawful' to beget eye for eye. But lawfulness is full of loopholes. Like forbidden fruit, tempting those who live by it. But living by grace and righteousness, with true faith, is set apart from the law.
It is to go 'above and beyond' the law.
Are you suggesting that God condones child rape?It may be 'permissible' to kill the aggressor, but perhaps not 'beneficial' in the sight of God.
If the child rapist believes that it is okay so long as he kills the child afterward, is child rape okay with you?But to answer your question, it is up the person in that position. Who am I to condemn them for doing what they believe is right?
Well, you do seem to be offering some different opinions. I can't say as I have encountered many people who would stand idle and watch a child rapist rape and murder a child. It is pretty much outside my understanding of loving one's neighbor and suffering the little children to come unto (Jesus) & I suppose at this point I am curious how such a person lives. Like, if you really believe anything is okay so long as the other person believes it is okay, do you lock your doors? Do you keep money in a wallet in a pocket or do you withdraw all your money from the ATM and set it on the sidewalk expecting it will be there when you need to buy something? When I think about what the lifestyle you propose ACTUALLY would look like, I wonder if you live it or if you just espouse these views to make yourself feel better about ignoring the poor or innocent.I assume because you're here, that you're willing to listen to other opinions. But in the end, it's up to you.
Moving past the "if everyone was a teletubby" rhetoric . . . NO! crime prevention is the opposite of vengeance. Simply being violent in some cases does not automatically make something vengeance. Vengeance is responsive/ reactive by definition. Crime prevention is proactive by definition. Crime prevention is loving my neighbor as myself. It is ghastly and contra-Gospel to see a crime victim and do nothing.
Far better that I die by the sword as a consequence of sacrificing myself for my neighbors, than to bear the shame of having done nothing, like the servant that was given one talent. Where did that servant end up by the way?
Charming, but no. Killing isn't always required but when it is, and a man stands idle, allowing the torment of innocents through complicit inaction, viewing it as mere weakness is a kindness, the shame is unthinkable to allow an evil such as watching a child be raped and murdered and to do nothing. I suspect that you are upholding a moral view based solely on theory & if tested would look down on the "do nothing" and be thankful for the man, who would do violence on behalf of the innocent.
I have told the story here and here it comes again: I was awakened one night to the screams of a young lady being slapped around and about to be gang raped at the bus stop across the street. Knowing the police response time in the neighborhood was excessive, I asked my bedmate to call 911 and then I went down to the street with an instrument of lethal force in my hand and encouraged the gang members to let the woman pull her pants back up and leave her alone. I phrased it a bit more colorfully, but you get the idea? I would have had absolutely no problem pulling the trigger had they reached for weapons or continued their actions on her. They chose not to get shot. The bus came and the woman was gone before the police ever arrived, some 20+ minutes after the event was over.
In view of this story, and the tale of the Good Samaritan, what would the moral obligation have been had the witnesses seen the crime in progress rather than the victim afterward?
Not really relevant. One doesn't need to be wise in the ways of the world to stand up for the weak, one doesn't even have to succeed, but to do nothing would be unconscionable.
When Jesus was questioned about the Law, He replied "The first and greatest commandment is this: That you love the Lord your God with all your heart, body, and soul . . . the second is like unto it, that you love your neighbor as yourself, on these two, hang all the Law and the Prophets". If it were my daughter or wife across the street that night, I would want someone to intervene. It is hypocrisy to wish safety for my loved ones and not be willing to contribute to the safety of others. It is simply loving my neighbor as myself to seek to prevent crimes against them.
Are you suggesting that God condones child rape?
If the child rapist believes that it is okay so long as he kills the child afterward, is child rape okay with you?
Well, you do seem to be offering some different opinions. I can't say as I have encountered many people who would stand idle and watch a child rapist rape and murder a child. It is pretty much outside my understanding of loving one's neighbor and suffering the little children to come unto (Jesus) & I suppose at this point I am curious how such a person lives. Like, if you really believe anything is okay so long as the other person believes it is okay, do you lock your doors? Do you keep money in a wallet in a pocket or do you withdraw all your money from the ATM and set it on the sidewalk expecting it will be there when you need to buy something? When I think about what the lifestyle you propose ACTUALLY would look like, I wonder if you live it or if you just espouse these views to make yourself feel better about ignoring the poor or innocent.
Yes you're right, given the chance, I would stand in and sacrifice myself for another person's sake. I know I would. I'd grab the child and run or hold off the attacker. But I certainly wouldn't kill him.
And after the fact, I certainly wouldn't have him executed.
Well, if that´s what you guys did and what you personally joined in that´s fine with me - but not my problem.It didn't. But it seems we were mentioning random facts of things we were doing, so I joined in.
Have you read it?No, it wasn't.
There is a difference between murdering and killing. Murdering is taking the life of another without a justifiable cause. Just because you don't like the way a man looks at your wife is not grounds to kill, it would be murder.I tried to address this issue under the title "Pacifism," but there were not very many people interested in a wide pacifism discussion. Since I am confronted by the topics of gun control, gun rights, and worries of possible firearm legislation in nearly every newscast I see, I thought I might try to limit the discussion to one very specific pacifistic topic, killing.
As a Christian, I do not believe it is ever acceptable for one person to kill another person. What are your thoughts?
Have you read it?
If so, you really didn´t see the relevance for the point you brought up?
I don't know why this thread has gone on so long. No Christian thinks killing is "OK" even when it is justified such as in war or in self defense. One day there will be no more war or killing of any kind. But until the Lord returns there will be killings. So lets just live with it and do what we can to minimize it.