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The notion that it would be improper to use it (the word) inside of a church or temple. The word Profanity comes from the Latin word Profanus or profane, which literally means outside of the temple.
Stupidity has a lot to do with it, not the one using the profanity but the one who is offended by it.
Once I told someone that I felt like an ass. now an ass and She got very offended by it, but and ass is just a donkey.
What an absolutely rediculous little person she was!
Swear Words are just a result, because when you hurt yourself, get cut of in traffic, of someone angers you, you just open you're mouth and say the worst thing you can think of to vent you're rage!
If there was no such thing as cus words, We would probably just open our mouths to the thing or person and say "I HATE YOU, I HOPE YOU DIE HORRIBLY!" or something like that.
Swear words have no inherrent power of themselves, it's only the power of sin that gives them that power, which either comes from the one who is using them out of anger and hatered or from the one who is being offened by it because of their self righteous delicate dignity.
It seems a tad bit extreme, perhaps even malicious, to say that stupidity is the reason that a person would be offended by certain language. I think we all have things that, although there is nothing inherently wrong with them, we find that they just rub us the wrong way. It strikes me that it has a lot to do with what you grow up with. And, a lot of people have grown up to be acculturated to the fact that certain words are bad. As Christians, we ought to be able to respect and honor that, rather than belittling people for these feelings.
When I started dating my wife, I had to learn to change my vocabulary in some major ways, because she had grown up in a home where vulgarity was frowned upon. Because I care about her, I do my best not to use vulgar words in her presence, and I find the best way to do this is to abstain from using them in general. This was all fine and good until I found myself working with criminal defendants, for whom abstaining from such language would likely come across as somewhat conceited and arrogant. So, strange as it sounds, to really respect people, I have had to learn to swear in come situations and not swear in others. But, it would be be incredibly arrogant of me to claim that either group of people are stupid or defective in some way, because of the sensitivities that have been ingrained into them by their culture. After all, none of us are perfect, and we all have our own weird little sensitivities. Who am I to say that someone else's warrant less respect than my own?
So you're saying it's wisdom to be offended by a word that has no power of it's own but what We give to it?
And yes it is stupid to be offended by something just because you grew up being told that it offensive, is it wisdom to not think things through for one's self and to only believe what We've been told?
Would Jesus be offended by a swear word?
If you're answer is Yes, then you are yet to understand who He is.
And yes it is stupid to be offended by something just because you grew up being told that it offensive, is it wisdom to not think things through for one's self and to only believe what We've been told?
And isnt that exactly how it works?£amb;47018133 said:I am one of those people who grew up in a household where there was no cussing. I'm a grown woman, and yes, I don't like to hear cussing all the time. To say someone is stupid because they find something offensive is rather stupid in itself because everybody is offended by something. So I guess everybody is stupid...![]()
It's not so much the word in itself that I find offensive, but the lack of using our verbal skills. It's amazing how everyone resorts to certain words to describe something when there are much more words to use. Yea, I'm an english freak and love to study words and definitions.
Anyway, my good friend cusses constantly and she knows (and I've kindly asked her) to please refrain from cussing all the time. It gets quite old hearing the same words over and over again.
I feel the same.A well placed cuss word has great effect. They can also help with stress relief. Somehow saying darn doesn't help that much if I drop something on my toe.
I think it's the intent of how the word is used, not the word itself.
I still think this is a case that less is more and I prefer someone that can
get his point across without a bunch of ...cussing.
By the same token one could ask whether it is wisdom to refuse (or to be unable) to exercise control over your tongue so as to avoid unnecessarily offending someone. Likewise, I could ask whether it is wisdom to go around calling people stupid because their values differ from your own. My belief is that wisdom is not easily offended and that wisdom will lead us to avoid unnecessarily offending others.
So, would you say that it is stupid for a child to refrain from walking into traffic solely because his parents told him it is dangerous? Shouldn't he think for himself and decide for himself whether walking into traffic really is dangerous, perhaps even experiment to see for himself to see whether his parents really know what they are talking about? If that is stupidity, then my prayer is that we all are blessed with stupid children.
The fact is that much of what we know and believe is strongly influenced by what we were taught before the age of four. Sometimes we learn some really crappy stuff in that time period. But, sometimes what we learn as a young children and never have reason to reconsider ends up leading us into great wisdom. Why would a wise person ever question those lessons that have never served him ill?
The reality is that, while there is probably nothing harmful about vulgar language, there is absolutely nothing beneficial about it either. So, I fail to see why there is good reason for a person to embrace it despite their upbringing.
Would Jesus unnecessarily use language that He knew to be offensive to His audience?
If you're answer is Yes, then [ditto your response above.]
Seriously, any intelligent person can communicate effectively without vulgarity when it is likely to offend. Any wise person will do so without looking down on those who would be offended.
I feel the same.
I think for the most part cuss words become cuss words when directed at another person in a mean way.
I mean if I stub my toe and scream a whopper I don't believe I have cursed per se, but more like vented...I guess it is either that or drop to my knees and cry..
Many people suggest that cussing is sin and I just don't see it that way. I have yet to read a Scripture that I believe says there are "bad" words. Words are only bad if you use them in a hurtful way..Kind of like that saying "guns don't kill people, people kill people"
Some cuss alot because they lack vocabulary skills to express theirself, I don't believe that is "cussing" but surely can be annoying. Just like when youngsters use cussing because they think it makes them grown up or cool...Yes it may sound vulgar and be annoying, but I don't think it is sin or the cursing the Bible speaks of..(feel free to correct me)
The only good argument I have heard against using "bad words" is not to offend others. But then I have to ask myself why in a grown up world are people so thin skinned that a word can offend them? I guess that really can't be answered..
But is funny because when I took my dog to the vet and we were talking about breeding she kept referring to the female dog as the (wow the censor got it...LOL) OKAY WELL MOST PEOPLE KNOW THE CORRECT TERM FOR A FEMALE DOG.. I couldn't help but laugh to myself thinking how many people would walk out that vets office offended and now thinking many would not even go back...
I just think that is one more sign of how much of our childhood we take with us, a sort of programming..Maybe some people should step back and take inventory of our beliefs and why we think as we do ...and...whether it makes sense at all..Unless we want to walk around offended all the time.
Yes and did I not say that it was the stupidity of both parties involved and not just of the one being offended?
Yes I did!
Nonetheless, I fail to see the wisdom or love in calling "stupidity" those value systems that differ from your own.Stupidity has a lot to do with it, not the one using the profanity but the one who is offended by it.
Please do not assume that every rebuke is a product of offense. It would take a lot more than that to offend me.Are you offended that I said it was stupidity to be offended unnecessarily?
I don't agree that stupid and foolish are equivalent in meaning and connotation. Nonetheless, by your standard, everybody is foolish, because there is not a person alive who does not accept at least some values without any sort of critical analysis.I certainly would call someone foolish (same as stupid) who has a value system that they have put not thought into and do not even understand why they have it as a value system.
Notice that my question was whether Jesus would unnecessarily use language that is offensive. To be intellectually honest, you should address the question that I actually presented, not the one that you would have preferred. The one word you omitted makes a huge differenceWould Jesus use language that He knew would be offensive?
On the contrary, Jesus calculated His words to cause some offense to those whose self-righteousness blinded them to the presence of God. Assuming that Jesus' motivation was to challenge the hearts of those who were far from God while claiming to to be close to Him, it would be absurd for Him to go around using language calculated to offend for no other purpose than to offend. To the audience that Jesus was speaking to, the Truth was offensive enough. But, there was good reason to preach the Truth: the Truth saves. To be offensive for the sole purpose of being offensive is contemptuous and would be inconsistent with "love your neighbor as yourself."Jesus didn't care if He offended anyone or not. Most people were offended at Him, it's how He got nailed to a cross!
I don't know if we would, and I am inclined to agree with you that Jesus was probably not easily offended. Nonetheless, the fact that Jesus would not be offended does not mean that a person who would be is stupid.Jesus also was not prone to loosing His temper and saying a few choice words, We on the other hand are, but I asked would Jesus be offfended by someone swearing, and the answer is No He would Not!
It doesn't. I never said that it did.Ask yourself why someone's swearing offends you?
This Scripture could be just as aptly (if not more so) used to correct someone who insists that other people's values are "stupid."Let Me leave you with a few of Jesus's words that I think are very much to do with being offended of someone using a profanity.
Mat 7:3 And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?
Mat 7:4 Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye?
Mat 7:5 Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye.