JoeP222w
Well-Known Member
The "majority of time"? What about the "times" outside of the majority of times? Are you not justifying those times? (even though you claim lying is NEVER justified)
Not a contradiction. I was shifting to the motivation as to why people lie. I was not saying that there is ever a justification for lying, if people are not protecting themselves from a difficult or inconvenient situation. That is not my position.
You also say, "Remaining silent is not a lie."
But, remaining silent may be a betrayal for personal gain. Would that be a sin?
It goes to the heart attitude and since I do not know a person's heart other than what they demonstrate or speak, I can not say if remaining silent is a sin. It might be, it might not.
If you had to choose between honoring a confidence (or protecting private information) would you remain silent to preference your own reputation above that of another? Especially when your silence obviously confirms the inquiry.
If someone revealed something to me in known confidence, I would hope that I would remain silent, unless it involved known illegal or immoral activity as defined by the Bible. For example, if someone came to me and said, "I have been selling heroin to teenagers on a regular basis, but don't tell anyone." I would reply to them, "You need to stop immediately this action, repent of this and turn to Jesus Christ and seek His forgiveness. And you need to turn yourself into the police. If you do not, you are forcing me to report you." If I did not report them, I would be an accessory and I myself would be just as guilty.
Now if it was private information that was legal or moral, for example, if someone told me their password to their bank account, by the grace of God, I would never reveal that to anyone (remaining silent). Such as being given the Power of Attorney for someone. Even under a court order, that would be going against my conscience, which is not a safe thing to do.
That second case has nothing to do with prefer my own reputation, but honoring a legitimate trust.
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