Christianity, Homosexuality and Greed

Christianity, Homosexuality and Greed

Spirituality

Cookies help us deliver our Services. By using our Services or clicking I agree, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn More.

anybody seen my

underpants??

Joined
01 Sep 06
Moves
56453
17 Aug 10

marriage ceremonies are usually held with the intention of inviting friends and family to celebrate the spiritual and emotional bond that the two people already have. In it they restate for the community gathered what they have already promised each other in their hearts. that's where marriage truly happens...in the "heart"; its about the commitment not about the ceremony.

Boston Lad

USA

Joined
14 Jul 07
Moves
43012
17 Aug 10

Originally posted by duecer

marriage ceremonies are usually held with the intention of inviting friends and family to celebrate the spiritual and emotional bond that the two people already have. In it they restate for the community gathered what they have already promised each other in their hearts. that's where marriage truly happens...in the "heart"; its about the commitment not about the ceremony.
Consummation irrelevant (according to Scripture)?

F

Unknown Territories

Joined
05 Dec 05
Moves
20408
17 Aug 10

Originally posted by ThinkOfOne
Same thing with gluttony. Evidently all the teaching that Jesus did against hypocrisy was meaningless to them.
Funny, I asked you the same thing in your rant over here...
Thread 132888

T

Joined
15 Oct 06
Moves
10115
17 Aug 10

Originally posted by FreakyKBH
Funny, I asked you the same thing in your rant over here...
Thread 132888
What "same thing"?

anybody seen my

underpants??

Joined
01 Sep 06
Moves
56453
17 Aug 10
3 edits

Originally posted by Grampy Bobby
Consummation irrelevant (according to Scripture)?
in ancient Israel the wedding ceremony consisted of putting your cloak around your spouse and taking them to bed. Once intercourse happened, the marriage was complete. It was not the elaborate ceremony we see today, but rather a mutual acknowledgement and agreed upon marriage by the two families (many were pre-arranged)

the actual act of marriage was the betrothal contract between the groom and the brides father. Once the deal was truck, they we officially considered married

Boston Lad

USA

Joined
14 Jul 07
Moves
43012
17 Aug 10

Originally posted by duecer
in ancient Israel the wedding ceremony consisted of putting your cloak around your spouse and taking them to bed. Once intercourse happened, the marriage was complete. It was not the elaborate ceremony we see today, but rather a mutual acknowledgement and agreed upon marriage by the two families (many were pre-arranged)

the actual act of marriage was the b ...[text shortened]... the groom and the brides father. Once the deal was truck, they we officially considered married
And in the NT (applicable today)?

anybody seen my

underpants??

Joined
01 Sep 06
Moves
56453
17 Aug 10

Originally posted by Grampy Bobby
And in the NT (applicable today)?
NT didn't change anything. Marriage customs were and largely still are culturally based.

Chief Justice

Center of Contention

Joined
14 Jun 02
Moves
17381
17 Aug 10

Originally posted by AThousandYoung
How come so many Christians lash out at homosexuals while ignoring greed? Some of the greediest people I've met were members of the Religious Right.
At least some of this has to do with the so-called "Prosperity Gospel" currently fashionable among some very influential and politically connected evangelical mega-churches. But it would be a shame to paint all evangelicals, or, more, all Christians, with this brush. That the really radical message of the NT has been commodified and packaged for folks already influenced by a materialistic culture doesn't reflect poorly on Christianity, but on us generally.

Texasman

San Antonio Texas

Joined
19 Jul 08
Moves
78698
17 Aug 10

Originally posted by karoly aczel
Seeing other' sins is easier than seeing their own.

Other than that, there is some deep psycological repulsion towards homosexuality, possibly because, deep down, everyone shares similar thoughts about sexuality.
The gays can just handle it better in general.

I bet they dont think its as bad to have sex out of wedlock than to be gay.
No I can honestly say I have no desire or thoughts to be with a man and I actually find nothing about it appealing. And because of that I think I handle my sexuality just fine.

T

Joined
15 Oct 06
Moves
10115
17 Aug 10
1 edit

Originally posted by bbarr
At least some of this has to do with the so-called "Prosperity Gospel" currently fashionable among some very influential and politically connected evangelical mega-churches. But it would be a shame to paint all evangelicals, or, more, all Christians, with this brush. That the really radical message of the NT has been commodified and packaged for folks alread ...[text shortened]... enced by a materialistic culture doesn't reflect poorly on Christianity, but on us generally.
I don't see a "broad brush" here. I think his point was the hypocrisy that many Christians have of "lash[ing] out" at the "sin" of homosexuality while turning a blind eye towards other sins such as greed, gluttony, etc. in themselves or others.

R
Standard memberRemoved

Joined
15 Sep 04
Moves
7051
17 Aug 10

Originally posted by AThousandYoung
How come so many Christians lash out at homosexuals while ignoring greed? Some of the greediest people I've met were members of the Religious Right.
I think a little qualification is warranted here. Which Christians 'lash' out? Which are actually greedy? Let's not turn anecdotal observations into generalisations.

As for your question, not all sins are perceived equally. In the Catholic Church, for example, there is a major division of sins between venial and mortal. Mortal sins concern grave matters whereas venial sins are generally inconsequential. There is also a distinction between contingent and intrinsic evils, contingent when the matter may sometimes be justified; intrinsic when it never can be. So for Catholics at least, there is no hypocrisy in addressing one sin over another. Homosexuality, as the Church perceives it, is an intrinsic evil of mortal kind, whereas the possession of wealth is morally neutral.

anybody seen my

underpants??

Joined
01 Sep 06
Moves
56453
17 Aug 10

Originally posted by Conrau K
[b]I think a little qualification is warranted here. Which Christians 'lash' out? Which are actually greedy? Let's not turn anecdotal observations into generalisations.
how about these people? Is this lashing out?

http://www.godhatesfags.com/

R
Standard memberRemoved

Joined
15 Sep 04
Moves
7051
17 Aug 10

Originally posted by duecer
how about these people? Is this lashing out?

http://www.godhatesfags.com/
Yes. Can you prove that they are greedy?

Can't win a game of

38N Lat X 121W Lon

Joined
03 Apr 03
Moves
154888
17 Aug 10

This is one of the great sins of the modern western church. The hypocrisy is in that while they go about bashing gays these same are gluttons or have sex out of wed lock or what have you. To me this is the hypocrisy.





Manny

T

Joined
15 Oct 06
Moves
10115
17 Aug 10
2 edits

Originally posted by Conrau K
I think a little qualification is warranted here. Which Christians 'lash' out? Which are actually greedy? Let's not turn anecdotal observations into generalisations.

As for your question, not all sins are perceived equally. In the Catholic Church, for example, there is a major division of sins between venial and mortal. Mortal sins concern grave matters ...[text shortened]... it, is an intrinsic evil of mortal kind, whereas the possession of wealth is morally neutral.
Just because an organization has chosen to formalize their hypocrisy doesn't make it any less so.