Otherright
Otherright
A friend and I were talking yesterday. Over the past couple months, he's started attending a church regularly, and is very happy with what he's learning and is quick to discuss and learn more, which I happily oblige.
We were on the discussion of tattoos, as he's trying to justify having several, when the topic took a quick twist. In January, he'd had an affair and somehow his marriage survived. The conversation went so:
He: I know what I did earlier this year was wrong.
I: You knew that when you were doing it.
He: Yeah, but it was adultery, and....
I: Man, I'm not judging you for that. I don't know the whole story and its not my life.
He: Well, you were married once before, so technically, every time you lay in bed with your wife, you are committing adultery.
I had to close my eyes for a second and take a breath, to maintain. I slowly leaned in to make sure I had his attention when I replied, "Don't put me in your boat because you feel guilt about what you did. Deal with that between you and God."
I didn't really get the chance to say anything about scriptural divorces, or mention the fact that I was divorced before I started dating again, or really carry on the conversation. Because he said something else, that I didn't quiet hear because of what instantly came out of my mouth.
I ended the conversation with, "Yeah, well, you can take your fairy tale rulebook and shove it up your self-righteous ***." I then walked away for a few moments to get some composure and came back and said we needed to change the conversation.
So, here's the deal: I feel that dogma can lead to suffering as it can, such as in this situation, make you judge others, create anger between friends, make you feel guilt, etc. By applying rules that extend beyond what one would call a Natural Law of Man,where we deal with one another in a way that is unnatural, that is through these additional rules.
What's your take, do dogmas cause more harm than good?
We were on the discussion of tattoos, as he's trying to justify having several, when the topic took a quick twist. In January, he'd had an affair and somehow his marriage survived. The conversation went so:
He: I know what I did earlier this year was wrong.
I: You knew that when you were doing it.
He: Yeah, but it was adultery, and....
I: Man, I'm not judging you for that. I don't know the whole story and its not my life.
He: Well, you were married once before, so technically, every time you lay in bed with your wife, you are committing adultery.
I had to close my eyes for a second and take a breath, to maintain. I slowly leaned in to make sure I had his attention when I replied, "Don't put me in your boat because you feel guilt about what you did. Deal with that between you and God."
I didn't really get the chance to say anything about scriptural divorces, or mention the fact that I was divorced before I started dating again, or really carry on the conversation. Because he said something else, that I didn't quiet hear because of what instantly came out of my mouth.
I ended the conversation with, "Yeah, well, you can take your fairy tale rulebook and shove it up your self-righteous ***." I then walked away for a few moments to get some composure and came back and said we needed to change the conversation.
So, here's the deal: I feel that dogma can lead to suffering as it can, such as in this situation, make you judge others, create anger between friends, make you feel guilt, etc. By applying rules that extend beyond what one would call a Natural Law of Man,where we deal with one another in a way that is unnatural, that is through these additional rules.
What's your take, do dogmas cause more harm than good?