The thing about pornography and masturbation is that there are no performance demands--physically or emotionally. It's reliable. It's cheaper and easier than adultery. And much, much safer.
What's the solution?
Nope - I can care less how he is. All I am concerned about is that justice is done. And jealousy is a response to an occurence. The way you treat jealousy is very strange.So you don't desire that John be someone else than a person who steals your money?
What I'm saying doesn't just hold for a romantic context. — TheWillowOfDarkness
This is false. I haven't blamed any woman.You want sexual exclusivity so much that you blame any woman going into the future. — TheWillowOfDarkness
This is a fact - not the total lack of intimacy, but it will have less potential than otherwise.Supposedly, your relationship will be soiled, lesser, somehow without intimacy because one or both of you have had sex with someone else. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Is that what you would say if you were me? >:OIf she feels you have the greatest spiritual connection with here and you come back with: "Ugh, our relationship isn't that great because I've had sex with previous girlfriends. You'd be better off finding some virgin." — TheWillowOfDarkness
Firstly you need to make the distinction between an ideal - and the actual situation. Yes the actual situation can be different than the ideal, no one disputes this. But one can still judge the actual situation as inferior to the ideal (which it necessarily is, hence why something acts as ideal). This is not to say that one shouldn't be exceedingly grateful for the actual situation - or refuse it simply because it doesn't reach up to the ideal. Those are very very different. The fact remains that we are who we are - as I have told you before, sin in this life is eternal. Nothing (well apart from God) can be done to remedy it. This does not mean that one shouldn't try to do one's best with whatever is left. Of course they should - hence Jesus's admonition "sin no more". Look, I made a mistake - people make mistakes - either because they don't know any better, because they don't have the required wisdom and social support around, and so forth - all I can do after having made it is learn from it, which I did. But the fact that I learned from it, and in this manner turned the evil into some good doesn't mean that the evil was erased, or that somehow the good surpasses the evil. Such comparisons are pointless - nothing can erase my history - except God, in the next life hopefully.This is what I mean about love being an image to you. Rather than love being considered in terms of living people, you imagine it as a statue floating in the sky. It shows two people who are sexually exclusive to each other. An image which amounts to intimacy. — TheWillowOfDarkness
For the very simple reason because it is part of my history, and we cannot undo our histories. They are fixed - utterly necessary once they have occurred. This isn't to say that you will constantly think about it, be obsessed about it, or even try to bring it back into memory. Of course not. But you have to be aware that it can happen - regardless of your attitude. The possibility will always be there once the sin has been committed - nothing can wipe away the possibility. Will that possibility spoil the future? Not more than the loss of a leg spoils the future - you can get a prosthetic, you can become very happy with it, but its function will still objectively be less than it would have been had you had your original leg in a good condition. I fully concur that having a good and hopeful attitude is good - in fact it is rational - but that isn't to say not to be aware of the objective situation. So all I said is that objectively my capacity for intimacy is more limited. Practically this doesn't mean I can't have a great relationship. Only that the relationship would be less than it would have been otherwise. But that's not a problem - I don't expect the impossible, and I am grateful for things. A good thing is a good thing, even if it's not the best. It's you who thinks that I am obsessed with "the best" to the point where I ignore other good things and refuse to see them - but this really isn't so.Why do previous encounters stay etched in your mind? Why do the spoil the specialness of the future? — TheWillowOfDarkness
No immoral act is trivial.envy can be a trivial, and hardly evil. feeling indeed. — John
Welcome to the forum, and thanks for sharing this! This illustrates how a sin that people so commonly trivialize - oh yeah, it's just porno, nothing bad - can actually destroy people's lives.I was raised in a Christian family, by Christian parents who had taken the commonplace wedding vows, done so by thousands of couples, here in the United States. With those vows came many things, none more important, however, than the agreement between both my parents to be utterly and completely faithful to each other. Were I to tell you all that such a vow between them was broken, I doubt anyone would think anything more than, "well, one or both of them was seeing and/or sleeping with another person, clearly." I would too, understandably, but that's not quite right. My father, in ill-health and frame of mind, turned toward viewing pornography as a means of releasing the many tensions in his life (to no fault of my mother). I didn't know that he had been up to this for as long as he had when I did, finally, realize the weight of the situation, nor even did my mother. I remember being greatly distraught (an understatement) as I slowly put together the pieces of what was going on. And when I did tell my mother one afternoon what my father had been doing, showing her the evidence, as much as that was awkward for me to do, she immediately concurred with my initial thought that this was adulterous, that he had dabbled in infidelity. In not receiving sexual satisfaction, or, to him, proper affection from my mother, he turned to pornography. — Heister Eggcart
Surely it's not as bad as adultery, but it is bad enough.I am not convinced that porn addiction should be counted as being as significant a betrayal as having sex with someone else. — John
When it comes to this there are sins and sins. Adultery is worse than pornography. In-so-far as someone has temporarily used pornography in order to avoid adultery, while that is clearly not good, it is still much better than having resorted to adultery - better to get to Heaven maimed than to be cast into hellfire. If a husband or wife really can't hold it - much much better that they fantasise to porn than they go and cheat. But I know now some folk here will reply: "oh yeah, but it's better to go cheat once and be done with it than to watch a screen" - false. The damage of pornography is bad - very bad. But adultery is infinitely worse.One of the reasons people get involved in extramarital relationships is an effort to get some energy back into their life. Whether it's moral or not, it sometimes works for the individual. People also masturbate alone and turn to pornography to try to extract some pleasure out of life, once work, childrearing, marriage, et al has become a treadmill. The thing about pornography and masturbation is that there are no performance demands--physically or emotionally. It's reliable. It's cheaper and easier than adultery. And much, much safer. — Bitter Crank
Because nothing compares to pornography - in pornography you can fulfil any fantasy, and it's so easy. Not to mention that nothing compares in terms of pure physical (not spiritual - very important) pleasure to pornography. — Agustino
People who sin significantly (I mean, real solid sinners) destroy their relationships with others, they cast themselves out of the community if they haven't already been cast out. — Bitter Crank
The morally incompetent are not going to suffer much from their sinful behavior. Only the morally competent are able to suffer from sin. — Bitter Crank
No immoral act is trivial. — Agustino
True - just like some are born with no arms and legs and still manage to live a happy life (Nick Vujicic for example). Others lose a leg and still manage to live happy lives afterwards. I agree with all that. But that doesn't mean one should lose a leg - in fact one should do everything they can not to. It's a harm - regardless of whether it can be overcome - which definitely decreases from their potential in life. A decreased potential doesn't mean that they are cursed to an unfulfilling existence - it just means that their capacities will be lower. But they can still live fulfilled lives and maximise whatever capacities they still have left.I can't say that people never recover from it and from there live happily ever after — Hanover
I disagree with you, but of course you are entitled to believe otherwise.I also think there are plenty of folks who don't have any (and I mean any) ill effect from pornography or prostitution. — Hanover
This I more than disagree with. Virtue is the key to happiness. No that's wrong. Virtue is happiness itself. "Happiness is not the reward of virtue - but virtue itself" - Benedict de Spinoza. Virtue is precisely that which fulfils the telos of the human being - which harmonises all his desires and ensures that no contradictory - or harmful pattern - exists. That everything is working towards the individual's well-being. But of course, you give no argument for your statement, so I will not rush to say more.They go from cradle to grave no more or less happy or fulfilled than the most vice-free person — Hanover
I only kept in touch with one, who was struggling with a drug addiction last time I spoke with him. He also had some child with a woman he wasn't married to, nor was he in an active relationship with, much less married. So no - I don't think so.I would imagine many of your friends who visited prostitutes have married, had kids, remained faithful and every thing else. — Hanover
I don't need to show how that is measured for it to be true that I am a better person than I was. Similarly I don't need to tell you how to go about measuring the temperature of the water to know that the water is hot.You can insist your resistance made you a better person, but you'd be at a loss to show how you measure that. — Hanover
Again - the harm from such behaviour is irrecoverable. You cannot bring it back. That's like saying "I wouldn't necessarily include a chapter on being careful to preserve your bodily integrity. People who lose a leg learn from their mistakes and still manage to live good lives" - that's just stupid. You should give advice on how to live a good life - not on how to overcome obstacles once you get into them - that's stupid. You prevent first, and only secondly deal with curing if you really have to. Imagine I told you "yeah go naked outside, you'll get a cold, but you'll learn from it" - that's not advice, but the lack of it.If I were writing a book on how to be fulfilled and satisfied, I wouldn't suggest that lying, cheating, stealing, screwing around, or watching porno was the path to success, but I wouldn't necessarily include a chapter on avoiding sexual vice. The truth is that most who engage in sexual behavior that does not lead to happiness simply learn from their mistakes and stop. — Hanover
Or vice. It's really the same thing.In other words, a lot of marriages fail because of incompetence. — Bitter Crank
This I more than disagree with. Virtue is the key to happiness. No that's wrong. Virtue is happiness itself. — Agustino
Is that stupid or is it stupid to analogize watching pornography with losing a leg?That's like saying "I wouldn't necessarily include a chapter on being careful to preserve your bodily integrity. People who lose a leg learn from their mistakes and still manage to live good lives" - that's just stupid. — Agustino
And so I know a person who did in fact visit prostitutes when he was young. He has been married for over 20 years and they have a very successful daughter. So what now?I only kept in touch with one, who was struggling with a drug addiction last time I spoke with him. He also had some child with a woman he wasn't married to, nor was he in an active relationship with, much less married. So no - I don't think so. — Agustino
I'm pretty sure we can measure the temperature of water.I don't need to show how that is measured for it to be true that I am a better person than I was. Similarly I don't need to tell you how to go about measuring the temperature of the water to know that the water is hot. — Agustino
And how is what you say different? It's also dogma. Except that you provide no argument for it, and merely expect me to accept it. You strung a sentence together, without any appeal to experience or reason. That's nothing but dogma.Again, this is dogma. Obviously if you proclaim virtue the highest of all goods, then those who have the most of it will be the best. The rest of what you say is just mindless repetition of what you've already said: those who adhere to the virtues you find virtuous are the bestess. What constitutes virtue is largely defined by you (like don't watch pornography) and once it falls into that class, you've just got to do it. — Hanover
Good for you, I'm not disputing it.And so I know a person who did in fact visit prostitutes when he was young. He has been married for over 20 years and they have a very successful daughter. So what now? — Hanover
Yes, only that we don't need to measure it in order to know it's hot, which is my point.I'm pretty sure we can measure the temperature of water. — Hanover
You've presented an argument as to what is required for happiness, which is adherence to virtue, which you then define as including adherence to various traditional social norms. You have the burden or proving your case because you made the argument. Your appeal to experience limits the application of your argument to you, considering my experience varies from yours.And how is what you say different? It's also dogma. Except that you provide no argument for it, and merely expect me to accept it. You strung a sentence together, without any appeal to experience or reason. That's nothing but dogma. — Agustino
If your argument is that the abandonment of virtue (as you define it) leads to unhappiness, then my counterexample of someone who has abandoned that virtue yet is not unhappy disproves your argument.Good for you, I'm not disputing it. — Agustino
You can objectively measure heat, not happiness, which is my point, making your analogy of happiness to heat disanalagous.Yes, only that we don't need to measure it in order to know it's hot, which is my point. — Agustino
Yes, happiness is more like hotness, not something "measured", thus making my analogy correct. You measure temperature, not "hotness". I don't need to tell you how to measure happiness in order to know I am better now than I was back then. Just like even if I don't know how to measure temperature, I can still say if the water is hot.You can objectively measure heat, not the happiness, which is my point, making your analogy of happiness to heat disanalagous. — Hanover
I don't want to prove it to you. You have the wrong impression. I'm challenging you. Are you up to the challenge? It seems you only want me to prove it to you - while you don't do anything. I don't care if you believe me or not. But it's certainly in your interest to investigate and find out what true happiness and true love is. If you want to, then bite the bait, and play the game under equal rules. We're in the same boat - not one to prove and the other to examine. Do you really have no passion for it?If your argument is that the abandonment of virtue (as you define it) leads to unhappiness, then my counterexample of someone who has abandoned that virtue yet is not unhappy the your argument has been disproven. — Hanover
Yes I have presented an argument very well said. Where is yours? You keep your tail out of the game, and you point fingers at others, that's where it is ;)You've presented an argument as to what is required for happiness — Hanover
No immoral act is trivial. — Agustino
Surely it's not as bad as adultery, but it is bad enough. — Agustino
The morally incompetent are not going to suffer much from their sinful behavior. Only the morally competent are able to suffer from sin.
— Bitter Crank
I would argue that the apparent malice associated with the deed would increase the sinner's ostracism, but even a clueless sinner is going to find himself cast out, although perhaps he won't understand why. — Hanover
happiness is more like hotness, not something "measured", — Agustino
That is impossible, because being depressed, being grieving, being frustrated - all these are lacking in virtue. It is a virtue to be joyous, happy and content. It's not like virtues are just being pious, courageous, loyal, etc. That's why in Christianity for example, being anxious is a sin. You have a duty to rejoice in creation.A virtuous person might not be at all happy. He might be grieving, he might be very depressed, he might be very frustrated, all sorts of things. He might feel very guilty and inadequate, despite his virtue — Bitter Crank
That's why in Christianity for example, being anxious is a sin. You have a duty to rejoice in creation. — Agustino
“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 4Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted. 5Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.… — Matthew 5:4
Nope - I can care less how he is. All I am concerned about is that justice is done. And jealousy is a response to an occurence. The way you treat jealousy is very strange. — Agustino
But this doesn't mean that I will somehow brush over a mistake, and refuse to admit it, refuse to see the wrongness of it, and the eternal harm that it has done - this has absolutely nothing to do with it. In fact, refusing to see its eternal harm is precisely what does in fact ruin future relationships. As Spinoza said, loss is eternal. But just because loss is eternal doesn't mean that if we have lost we should keep on losing... imagine if you lost a leg... what will you do, go ahead and lose the other also? But there's many many people - and I've had many friends - who have made similar mistakes. — Agustino
Firstly you need to make the distinction between an ideal - and the actual situation. Yes the actual situation can be different than the ideal, no one disputes this. But one can still judge the actual situation as inferior to the ideal (which it necessarily is, hence why something acts as ideal). This is not to say that one shouldn't be exceedingly grateful for the actual situation - or refuse it simply because it doesn't reach up to the ideal. — Agustino
Is that what you would say if you were me? — Agustino
Well there is something I can do - turn him in to the police. But what would motivate me doing something about it? Jealousy. So clearly "not being able to control the situation" isn't a part of jealousy. It may very well be that the jealous person has ample ways to control the situation. But he would still feel jealous. In fact, even if I was a king or emperor, and John did that, I would still feel jealous. But I probably would be able to control the situation very well - send the police to get him, throw him in jail, and get back what was mine.That's an outright lie. The fact he took your money and has used it make a purchase, which he is now rubbing in your face, is exactly what matters. It is all about how he is in the situation. He wronged you and there is nothing you can do about it. In you mind, an outrageous loss which must be undone (despite that being impossible). — TheWillowOfDarkness
Maybe I would say that if I knew there was no chance to get it back. I would initially feel jealous in that case, but I would soon understand that there's nothing I can do about it, and the feeling would wane.For contrast, you don't sit back and say: "Well, my money has been taken and I won't get it back. At least John is enjoying his new car." You covet a different John. John shouldn't just ought to have been different, he must be, else the world cannot make sense. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Okay but I'm not debating that. I agree that past mistakes don't mean someone continues to lose. But they do mean that someone has lost, and that loss they carry with them - hence the sin is eternal. If I lost a leg, I carry that loss with me.To say past sins don't spoil one's future is not to ignore them. It's to say mistakes of the past doesn't mean someone continues to lose. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Here you are wrong. It's a loss in one's capacity for intimacy (not complete loss, I didn't say that) but rather a decrease in it. It's like losing some functionality in your leg. You've lost it. If now you want to use that specific functionality to the same degree, you can't.The loss of a past partner does not amount to loss with a future partner. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The loss of the past is present - that's why it is eternal.In your guilt and jealousy, you confuse the loss of the past for the present. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Sure I never claimed otherwise.You are the one who failed in the past, not any future partner and your relationship with them — TheWillowOfDarkness
This is just false now.Instead of taking the eternal harm of sin seriously, that is, understanding it as your mistake which can't be redeemed, you take it out on others. Your loss becomes something you bludgeon others with--"our relationship isn't as good as it could be, etc., etc."-- as a means of quelling your distaste for your inferior self. — TheWillowOfDarkness
No it's not to think we ought to have a different world. Not at all. In fact, if we were to think that, we could never be grateful. But we are grateful for the current goodness that is in our lives precisely because we realise we don't deserve any other world. This doesn't mean though that we don't recognise and differentiate what is good, what is better, and what is evil and worse.That's precisely the distinction we cannot make. To do so is to keep on losing. It's to think we ought to have a different world than we do. The expression that, if we had the option, we would pick the world we are not in, a world without what we care for in the present. No doubt the present may be inferior in some way (missing legs, loss relationships), but it must be the world we ought to have. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Did I say not to be content with our present inferiority? That would be just arrogance towards God - a great sin.We must be content in our present inferiority-- we must love, no less than we did before loss, those we share the world with. Otherwise, we love the image of a perfect self that never exists more than anything in the world. — TheWillowOfDarkness
This is not true since it's never her fault. It's my fault - clearly - so how can she be blamed? Her capacity for intimacy, assuming she has not sinned is unaffected. Furthermore, in the spiritual connection between partners more than just the capacity plays a role. Analogically, some people may have a weak leg, but they train it so much to make up for that weakness. Likewise, openness to intimacy, and knowledge about how to relate are important factors (next to the capacity for intimacy) for both partners. And lastly - the connection can be perceived differently - even in quality - from one partner to the other. If one has sinned more, they (the one who has sinned, not the other one) will likely perceive it as lesser.I'm pointing that is what you are saying. This is what I mean about blaming the women. You take your eternal loss and say it means she has failed-- that she has a lesser connection merely because you were with other people in the past. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The point was that Jesus' Sermon on The Mount had a different purpose - it wasn't advice on how to live a Christian life. It wasn't meant to say "you should be poor in spirit, you should mourn, you should be meek" - but rather that those categories of people were more likely to enter the kingdom of Heaven. Furthermore, it talks nothing - and I mean nothing - about anxiety. It doesn't say "blessed are the anxious" does it? — Agustino
That is impossible, because being depressed, being grieving, being frustrated - all these are lacking in virtue. It is a virtue to be joyous, happy and content. It's not like virtues are just being pious, courageous, loyal, etc. That's why in Christianity for example, being anxious is a sin. You have a duty to rejoice in creation
I was referring to that specific quote.Sure it does. — Bitter Crank
Yes but poverty of spirit isn't a characteristic of those who are admitted into Paradise, but rather that these folk are more likely to develop the characteristics required. And the passages that follow make it clear that anxiety is to be avoided, thus clarifying this point.You are contradicting yourself. If people want to spend eternity in Paradise, and there are certain characteristics of those who are admitted to Paradise, then it would make sense to develop those characteristics. — Bitter Crank
I am not, I myself have had anxiety and depression in the past - although it might look that way - it's the necessary discourse I have to adopt in a liberal-progressive environment, because the liberal-progressive attitudes are so permissive to sin that my harshness is merely a remedy and counterbalance to that. If I was talking to Christian folk I probably wouldn't be having such a discourse. But in this environment - where, let me remind you, we have people who suggest that adultery and/or pornography aren't even sins, where we have folk who suggest that marriage should be banned - in this environment, the moral harshness is, I think, a good antidote. If you don't know, then I think it's important to note that us two are very probably the only two Christians here. So it's good to finally have another brother around ;)It seems that you're under the illusion that one can always choose whether or not to be anxious or depressed. — Heister Eggcart
You need to make the required distinctions. For example, in that case above you wouldn't feel anxious - you'd feel afraid - and there's a big difference between the two. You would indeed feel frustrated and powerless, and you will feel hatred. Those are perfectly justified (and indeed, you are right, it would be a vice if you didn't feel them) - anxiety is not. Anxiety is used precisely to denote that kind of fear which is simply paralyzing - totally not useful. For you, in that scenario, it would be very useful to be afraid. That's the natural reaction of the human body, and it would make you do whatever you can do in order to escape and protect your loved one.To be anecdotal for a moment, say that my best friend and I were abducted, and I had to watch on, powerless as she was tortured and raped. Would I be unvirtuous were I to feel the least bit frustrated, hateful, or anxious? — Heister Eggcart
Yes so will I probably - but this doesn't say much. It's not about not having anxious thoughts - it's about the reaction we have when we do. I will always have anxious thoughts for example - it's the way I've always been. But I learned to control them - having the thoughts is invisible from the outside for me - because I just have no reaction to having them. I ignore them. So yes, I probably always had anxious thoughts - but I most certainly didn't always have anxiety. And this distinction is very important. So I applaud your efforts, it sounds to me that you are taking exactly the right path, nothing wrong with that. So good job! :)As much as I try, and as much as I do at times cultivate positive results from my work, depression and anxiety is something I'm always going to live with. I can't rewrite my life so I didn't have to experience what I have. — Heister Eggcart
Absolutely, and neither do I condemn effort in the scope of moral improvement.Does Paul, as you say, command us to not be anxious? Absolutely. But he doesn't condemn the heart that fights their sin. Paul implores us to be aware of our shortcomings and not to dwell in apathy. — Heister Eggcart
We are not saved by works - that is true. We are saved by faith. Buuuuuuuut - and this is the point that is often missed - this faith does necessarily result in works.Frankly, rereading what I first quoted from you above makes me think of you as distinctly unchristian. — Heister Eggcart
So too, faith by itself, if it is not complemented by action, is dead. But someone will say, “You have faith and I have deeds.” Show me your faith without deeds, and I will show you my faith by my deeds. You believe that God is one. Good for you! Even the demons believe that, and shudder! — James 2:18
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