Corolinth wrote:
I was unaware that you could claim to follow a religion, ignore its teachings and rules, and furthermore go out of your way to hide the fact that you're ignoring its teachings and rules, and still be considered pious and faithful.
I hate to break this to you, but yes, as a matter of fact you can do that when you're part of a denomination that itself is a result of people repeatedly breking off forming new churches and making new rules. That argument works fairly well for Catholicism because it has set, defined teachings and rules, but there is no consistent Pentecostal doctrine; it's a conglomoration of generally similar churches.
Furthermore, you're making a false dilemma. Yes, you can break certain rules and still be generally pious and faithful. That's rather the point of Christianity. Church rules such as interpreting "modest dress" as long skirts for women are not inherently sinful to break; that's how Catholics get dispensations from Church rules. Since Pentecostals don't have a hierarchy or bishops or the same views on church leaders authority or even really consistent doctrine they just have to give themselves a dispensation and avoid creating an issue in church by advertising it.
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I suppose it's okay because she can just ask Jesus to forgive her sins later.
Failing to wear a skirt is not a sin according to the Bible. The Bible calls for "modest dress"; it's merely a standard of that particular denomination.
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Wasn't there supposed to be some parable about how it's not that easy, and you had to do more than just pay lip service and actually start walking the walk? Seriously, if your religion believes it's wrong for women to wear pants, how **** hard is it to not take a fencing class? Monty's not teaching American History I, here.
Because that's not her religion; it's her denomination. Furthermore it's a Biblical interpretation in a denomination that generally takes the Bible quite literally.
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And of course her parents can't possibly be at fault in any way, because the Bible says to honor them.
Since there's nothing going on wrong here other than your sense of being offended at people following religious views you don't adhere to, no they aren't at fault because ther's nothing to be at fault for.
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So what I'm really saying is the hypocrisy of Christianity knows no bounds. Not just this girl. You are making allowances and excuses for someone because they happen to claim to pray to the same invisible man as you do, where you have previously voiced your disapproval for the exact same actions and beliefs when carried out in the name of a different invisible man. Someone slapped the Christ label on it, and somehow it became okay.
No I'm not making any special allowances. I'm pointing out that A) as usual you're making proclaimations about Chrsitianity when you really don't know wht you're talking about B) you're creating a false dilemma and C) there's absolutely nothing wrong with people following their own conscience about church rules and teachings. They don't have to satisfy you about jack ****; including your definition of hypocrisy that's constructed solely so you can look down your nose at people who believe sometihng you don't.
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Or, perhaps cast in another light, because the story came from Monty it must obviously be biased with an agenda against Christianity. That isn't very different from all the ***** about Fox News I've read on this board in days past. Why should it be any more acceptable when you do it?
Or, maybe I said nothing of the sort and you're just making up bullshit and then asking "well why is it any different?" I have no problem believeing the facts he presented are true. I ahve a problem with you acting like you get to sit there and call people hypocrits for not being perfect in a religion whose entire point is that you can't be perfect and with rules whose nature you evidently don't understand beyond what lets you take cheap shots.
Edit: Since you're likely to just keep on making up bullshit and ignoring what I say to protect your sacred cow of Christian hypocrisy, let's have a little lesson in theology. First off, don't give me any more **** about defending people because they believe the same thing as me. I'm not Pentecostal; I think a lot of their theology is overly legalistic, historically and biblicly ignorant, and contradictory. That doesn't, however, mean that I think Pentecostal people are insincere in believeing it, or that just because they may not adhere to my or your idea of how they should adhere to their own doctrine (which, quite frankly, they know better than either of us) that they're necessarily hypocrites. Everyone is a hypocrite at some point; some people more often than others, There's nothing about religious hypocrisy that makes it any worse than any other, nor calls for special castigation, nor gives the nonreligious any moral superiority in castigating it.
First of all, Jesus gave authority to the Church in Mathew 16:19 and 18:18 and their surrounding discussion to decide earthly church matters that hadn't been given an explicit Scriptural command or one from Him:
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Matt 16:19 “I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven." NIV
Mat 18:18 "I tell you the truth, whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.”
When it comes to matters like requirement for modest dress, mandated explcitly and implicitly in a number of places throughout the NT and OT such as 1 Timothy 2:9 and 1 Peter 3:3-5, that is a highly subjective matter. What exactly is "modest" isn't discussed and since clothing in general changes greatly, as do other factors such as temperature and weather from place to place, and modesty is not merely a function of square nches of skin covered, someone has to decide what it means. In my church (Lutheran) it means "don't look like a streetwalker or a male stripper or something". In the Pentecostal church it means "women should wear long skirts."
However, this isn't an ironclad rule that needs to be followed legalistically to the letter. Jesus castigated people in a number of places for enforcing the letter of the law unmercifully, and regularly castigated the Pharisees for hypocritical legalisms.
Furthermore, there's a limit on church authority to make rules. Aside form the fact that they can't make rules that contradict Scripture, there's limitations on it. Romans 14 discusses not making unnecessary rules at length, especially verse 13:
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Therefore let us stop passing judgment on one another. Instead, make up your mind not to put any stumbling block or obstacle in your brother's way.
and 1 Corinithians in chapters 8 through 10 discusses things that are not inherently sinful but may be a stumbling block for one's brother.
So: When this girl wears sweat pants to class she is not sinning by either violating any biblical command, nor by violating the authority of her church to rule on matters like modest dress. The rule is a general principle, and just because it doesn't make specific exceptions for situations like taking a shower, having sex with ones' spouse, or going to Monte's class doesn't mean she is violating it. By hiding it from others in her church all she is doing is avoiding placing a stumbling block, or making an issue of it. Should they be making an issue of it? No, they shouldn't but once again people aren't perfect and if your standard for Christians is perfect Christian behavior at all times, then I'd like an explaination as to why you don't seem to hold anyone else to a standard of perfect adherence to their own morals at all times either. Just because other people are imperfect and may misunderstand what she is doing or may not have thought this through does not make it ok for her to rub their noses in it.
Finally, the fact of the matter is that this thread is about what happens in Muslim/Arab countries and, as usual, it's a bum-rush to see who can be the first to start saying "but... but... Christians!" Amazingly, no one seems to make any effort to point out the similarities to Islam when the topic is Christianity in the first place. That wouldn't support the "trash Chrisitianity at every opportunity" agenda, now, would it?
The real fact of the matter is that you know jack-all about this girl and probably Monte hasn't sat down with her and had a calm, honest conversation about her beliefs. Just because you've found some legalism by which you can accuse her of hypocrisy doesn't mean that she is; it means you don't really understand Christianity and are just looking for an excuse to rant about it.