uc pseudonym wrote: But honestly, how often is it more effective to kill someone than to run away?
uc pseudonym wrote:But having said that, I'll also point out that showing love to evil is an extremely powerful witness. As Christians, staying alive is not our highest priority, but rather to live lives that honor God.
You must remember that Jesus's entire purpose on Earth was to exactly to get crucified and die. While there is no passage that shows Jesus actually fought, he did have some of his disciples carry swords (of course, he healed the soldier who lost his ear to Peter), and the way he stood his ground during temptation by Satan could be seen as a kind of fighting.Vash is a plant wrote:I very close friend of mine was sexually harassed at her middle school. She fought back, doing whatever possible to protect herself. This is something that I also have to deal with at work, but not to the extent that my friend has. I was wondering, as a Christian, in such situations, is ok to fight back? I know Jesus didn't fight back when He was taken before the Jewish leaders and was beaten by the soldiers and ultimately when He was crucified. Should we follow the same?
All I can say is that you can never be sure how your reaction can affect a person. Perhaps meekness may encourage the evildoer. If that's so, I don't think you can be blamed for it because you didn't mean for it to happen. However, if fighting is th only way to prevent more evil from happening, I believe it is acceptable.Vash is a plant wrote:Should we let people hurt and violate us without fighting back? I know that not fighting back but showing love reguardless of what people do to us can be one of the strongest witness for Christ anyone can give. It's showing God's love to, probably, the extreme.
Sometimes, the best course of action is to get the hell out of Dodge. But you can only run away so many times. It is good that you are squeamish about exacting punishment of others, but you must remember that not everyone will be as noble-minded as you, certainly not your pursuer. When your back is against the wall, YOU HAVE TO TAKE A STAND. Dying for causes is all well and good, but there is nothing noble about dying as a victim.Vash is a plant wrote:I know how to fight and how to seriously hurt someone, even kill them, but personally, it's something I could never see myself using aside for the sake of protecting someone else. In fact, I was thinking about this last night after work, what would I do if a situation like that ever came up? At first I decided that, well duh, I'd fight back, brake his legs! However, I started to realize exactly what would happen to the person and finally couldn't see it as something I would do.
Any thoughts?
25 But if a man find a betrothed damsel in the field, and the man force her, and lie with her: then the man only that lay with her shall die.
26 But unto the damsel thou shalt do nothing; there is in the damsel no sin worthy of death:
Lionheart i disagree. A person who rapes others is still a person and even if the only people who ever existed were rapists, child molestors and murderers, Jesus would still have died to save all of them. A rapist, child molestor or murderer is worth every bit as much as you are worth. In Gods eyes stealing a single sweet from a sweet shop is every bit as bad as raping someone is.
lionheart wrote:I'm off to find some verses to disprove that. Be back later.
Vash is a plant wrote:I don't quite understand what you mean...
Vash is a plant wrote:That was the main thing I was thinking about last night. Also, in the Jesus Freaks books by DC Talk, there are accounts of people that have sacraficed their well being and lives just to not harm someone and to show them the love of God. There's one account of two women who were taken away for being Christians and even after their captors did such horrid things to them, even rape them, they still showed them love and kindness. If I remember correctly, one of them even became a Christian.
I never want to hurt anybody, friend or foe alike. If someone, however, is trying to hurt another, I will step in for the other person's sake, using what I know to perhaps save both. If someone were to attack me, I would try to get away, but not to the point of seriously injuring someone. (They may get a few bruises..) I agree that staying alive in this world is not at all our highest priority, but living God honouring lives.
frwl wrote:There are many times out there today where it is either your life or the life of an attacker.
lionheart wrote:A sex-offender automatically forfits any rights he may have had to his own safety the second that he makes his move.
lionheart wrote:But certain sins impact others more severally than others, and therefor the penalty for such a sin is the forfeit of your own life. I will stand by that belief
uc pseudonym wrote:I realize that we don't actually disagree greatly, so I hope that this is seen as a minor disagreement, not argumentative nitpicking. However, I do disagree with your statement. When (in the type of situation we speak of) is it absolutely necessary to take the other person's life in order to save your own?
frwl wrote:There are times, such as the time when my dad came to pick my sister and I (both very young at the time) up from my grandma's house at night. A man broke into his car and started taking his stuff. My dad, thinking it was just one of his brother-in-laws checking his car out, went up and started joking around with him, but when he realized that it was someone he didn't know and that he was trying to steal stuff, that's when the fight was on. My sister's life and my own were endangered in my dad's eyes at the time as long as that man was around, so my dad caught him cornered in the car and started attacking the man, trying to kill him. The thief pulled out a knife and stabbed my dad.
In the man's possition, he had that option: kill or be killed. No, my dad didn't die, but it was close. But there are times when you need to choose.
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