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Mainstream Christianity is wrong about Matthew 5:27-28 (the famous “lust” passage)

Billy93

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The OP may have a point, to a certain extent anyway. I always did think that Jimmy Carter's interview in Playboy magazine where he talked about lusting after women other than his wife was a probably bit much.

I am actually not familiar with that interview! Is that real?
 
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Billy93

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There are plenty of sins that don't get a mention in the bible...

But when it comes to sexual sin, there is really nothing new under the sun. The Bible meticulously and explicitly lays out many scenarios of sexual sin in the OT. And in the NT Matthew passage, Jesus intentionally refers directly back to the OT laws which the Jews were already familiar with: in this case, the 10th and 7th commandments.

This is not a new commandment being set forth in this passage about governing one’s thoughts against even fantasizing; rather, He is clarifying how sin starts in the heart, and how in the case of breaking the 7th commandment, you end up breaking the 10th along the way. We know this is what He meant, because He explicitly used the example of “adultery,” rather than just general fornication. Remember, “adultery” to the Jewish audience would have obviously brought to mind the 7th, and Paul confirms that the word Christ used for “lust” referred to the sin of the 10th.
 
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Billy93

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Billy, I'm clicking thru some of your links. A couple of the authors state "the church has been teaching this for centuries but I'm here to tell you today they're wrong." I see a big problem w/ that.

Why? As a Protestant, I already believe “the church” was by and large teaching incorrectly things for centuries. Is it really so difficult to believe that mainstream churches are wrong about something else? I find it telling that no one so far is really tackling my actual argument (that “lust” in the verse in question refers to 10th commandment covetousness), which honestly only makes me more convinced that I’m right about this.

If fantasizing is biblically wrong, then why is the main passage that everyone uses to condemn it referring to something beyond fantasizing?
 
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Billy93

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Afraid I’m not quite sure what you mean by that, sorry.
 
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fhansen

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Jesus didn't want us to turn people into strictly objects of desire -as if that's their only value. We see the fruits of this abuse everywhere, from sex trafficking to pornography addictions, broken homes, etc. As with other sin, lust is a twisting of a God-given good, of a natural, healthy appetite- the desire for sex in this case, into an idol. The natural harmony of creation within us is broken, decreased, as disorder has its way.
 
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Billy93

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Thanks for keeping an open mind! And if I’m wrong, I’ll gladly admit it (I’ve prayed that God would show me, if I am) - but I just find it interesting, because this is the passage that has always been used to beat over boys’ heads that “lust (fantasizing) is a sin.”

...But if it doesn’t even refer to fantasizing, then we have a problem here. Just seems like it’s a bit of a stretch. And I’ve never heard a sermon on this passage in which the pastor admits “I know the word actually refers back to the 10th commandment which is covetousness, but we interpret it to refer even to basic fantasizing because _____.”

So either they simply aren’t aware of this - or they are being deceptive, and know but don’t care that their audience is incorrectly mentally translating “lust” to “fantasizing.” Easier to stick with the status quo and not be controversial, I guess?
 
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Billy93

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But we “objectify” people every day in different ways. Of course that is not their only value; they are a person. I would argue though that our sexual desires are a God-given, natural, healthy appetite. And that as long as we do not commit sexual sin (the NT explicitly defines what classifies as sexual sin, so there’s no mistake) or plan to commit sexual sin (as in desiring to the point of coveting - which is what Matthew 5 refers to), then there is nothing wrong.

Spending a few minutes every day or every few days thinking about sex is not “an idol.” We spend more time every day listening to music, eating, reading, going for walks, etc. Are these things all idols? Yet for some reason whenever it comes to sexual desire, people act like any amount of time thinking about it is “addiction”-level, an idol, etc. I don’t get it.
 
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chad kincham

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Clearly the New Testament teaches that the thought is the same as the act, so if you fantasize about seeing her naked and having sexual intercourse with her, you’ve committed adultery in your heart, as further illustrated by the fact that if you hate someone you are a murderer in your heart, and told that no murderer can enter into heaven - making it obvious the thought is the same as the deed, to God.

You probably should work more to “take every thought captive” and quit looking at women as sex objects to fantasize about having intercourse with.

Probably all of us men have had to deal with the same problem at one time or another, so you’re not the Lone Ranger on this issue.

Blessings.
 
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chad kincham

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You can’t compare the old covenant, which has to do with the physical, and the new covenant, which is about spiritual things.

In the old covenant the command was not to kill, so as long as they didn’t kill anyone, they were okay - in the new covenant we find out that thoughts of hate in your mind are the same as physical murder, and one becomes a murderer at heart, and cannot enter into heaven.
 
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Billy93

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Clearly the New Testament teaches that the thought is the same as the act, so if you fantasize about seeing her naked and having sexual intercourse with her, you’ve committed adultery in your heart,

See, that’s just not what it says though, sorry. From your response, it appears you missed the point of my post. The NT doesn’t teach that; it teaches that when you covet another man’s wife (10th commandment), you are committing adultery with her (7th commandment) in your heart. It is not just talking about “fantasizing” in general. The 10th commandment tells explicitly what Matthew 5:27-28 is referring to - so why don’t people go back to the 10th to find out what it means? Why do they instead lump on this “fantasizing” doctrine that is nowhere to be found...?
 
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renniks

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Pretty thin line there. Too easy to cross. There's very little difference between the two. Yes, if it's just a passing temptation, that's not sin, but as soon as it becomes fantasy, that IS coveting.
 
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renniks

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Lol, if I fantasize about your woman, that's definitely coveting her.
 
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Fervent

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To a degree, I agree with the OP. The element of coveting is missing from typical estimations of lust, but you've oversold coveting. Coveting doesn't necessarily have to involve plotting/planning it is purely a matter of desire. It is envy. Being jealous over what someone else possesses/rightfully belonging to them. And that's what fantasizing involves, taking liberties in thought over something that you do not rightly possess. Lust is not simply appreciating beauty, even recognizing that someone is sexually desireable. It is indulging thoughts of inimacy when no such intimacy can properly be had. So it is often overstated when all sexual thought is condemned, but sexual fantasy is crossing the line.
 
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Pavel Mosko

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Well I have seen this thing before on other words. The best example I can think of is the term for tradition in the New Testament. There are folks that are very antitradition where tradition is always evil etc. But that isn't completely true of the New Testament, saint Paul uses the term Paradosis positively two times in reference to his own ministry. But there is a little game people play where paradosis means both tradition, and instruction (You literally are passing something on to someone). So people who have that orientation will use the "instruction" translation of those two passages, to avoid the reality that tradition is not universally bad, it was just bad in terms of people like some of the Pharisees who used it to oppose Jesus.
 
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atpollard

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The Bible is not saying that it's a sin to fantasize about a woman; it's saying that it's a sin to think about a woman (particularly a married woman) with the intent to/having a plan to actually seduce her and have extramarital sex with her.
So ... break out the porn videos and PTL?
 
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fhansen

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Thinking about sex now and then is normal. But all sin originates in the heart before it becomes an action and lust is considered to be covetousness/concupiscence /disordered or inordinate desire. It's the equivalent of gluttony in regard to food, greed in regard to money, wealth, possessions.
 
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Billy93

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So ... break out the porn videos and PTL?

There are some that would argue that’s okay; I think that’s up for individuals to figure out on their own. I think porn is unhealthy regardless of whether it’s a sin or not; from what I’ve read it has an effect on one’s brain. Not to mention that it’s almost impossible to visit a porn site without seeing a bunch of stuff that is blatantly against God’s intentions for sex (homosexuality, orgies, incest, etc.). I may not think fantasizing is wrong, but I do think fantasizing about anything other than man + woman is bad.
 
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Billy93

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Pretty thin line there. Too easy to cross. There's very little difference between the two. Yes, if it's just a passing temptation, that's not sin, but as soon as it becomes fantasy, that IS coveting.

How so??
 
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Billy93

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Lol, if I fantasize about your woman, that's definitely coveting her.

? No, it’s not. Just because you spend a few minutes fantasizing about her doesn’t mean you’re thinking you actually want to be with her in real life, like you’d actually come over if I were gone and she were okay with it. It’s just fantasizing. Coveting is directly tied to taking.
 
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Billy93

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You’re right that sin originates in the heart, which is why covetousness is the heart-sin. But covetousness is more than simply fantasizing for a few minutes… And gluttony is over-indulgence and over-consumption of food; thinking about how good a cheeseburger would taste is not gluttony. Etc.
 
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