Instead of simply agreeing you started making statements like "what IS illegal and done anyway is sinful" in an effort to show that you initial statement was right. The problem is that you were wrong again because there have been and still are many unjust laws, and it is NEVER sinful to break an unjust law. I was in no way comparing Rosa Parks to going nude--the point was that, as I just said, it isn't sinful to braek an unjust law.
QUOTE]
Actually, YES, breaking an "unjust law" IS a sin. There are other ways Rosa Parks (and anyone else who is victim to an unjust law) could have gotten her point across that wouldn't have been breaking the law. I for one am glad she DID get her point across, and I'd probably have done the same in her situation. Doesn't mean it was the "sinless" way to do it. The only time it's not a sin to break a law, is when that law goes against the bible, eg, being told we're not allowed to pray, or to publicly worship.
Tom: Just to be precise, I heard that Rosa Parks was actually sitting in the first row of the "Black" section of the bus. As more white people got on the bus than there were White seats for, the bus driver asked Rosa to vacate her seat in the Black section so a white person could sit there. I don't know if there was another seat in the Black section for Rosa to sit in or not. When Rosa refused to obey the driver, the driver had her arrested.
As for nudity in public, which I believe was the original post, in the US in most places it is a sin BECAUSE it's against the law. We're instructed to follow the law of our land.
Tom: I think this is a key point, and I think I agree with it at least generally, i.e., if a person breaks a non-Biblical law with no compelling reason, I would generally agree that the action violates God's stated wishes and would be a sin. But my understanding of whether actions are sinful or not goes to motivation. In the first case of wilful disobedience of a law, if there was a compelling reason, e.g., running out of burning house while nude, I do not think that is a sin. [BTW, you may remember about a year ago that in Saudi Arabia, the morality police did not allow girls to escape a school that was on fire, causing the girls to burn to death, because they were not wearing their head scarves.] Therefore, if a Christian is speeding on the interstate, say going 65 is a 55 zone, they are sinning, unless there is a compelling reason like taking someone to hospital with a life-threating emergency. And futher, if a person is speeding without a compelling reason, they are sinning just the same as a person going nude in public. If you agree that "sin is sin", then there is no degree of difference in the sin.
We're also instructed not to do that which would cause another to stumble. If we KNOW that nudity causes a significant number of people to sin, then we shouldn't go around nude in public for THAT reason alone...no matter what the law says. Yes, I'm aware that some men and women are aroused no matter what another is wearing, but the MAJORITY of people, from my experience, wouldn't fall into that category.