- Nov 7, 2012
- 177
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I want to know the opinions of members here: Is there a risk among non-smokers to have a false sense of morality?
Obviously smokiing is a visible evil, one sees it, smells it, you know smokers because you can see them and possibly smell it on their clothes. So some people, some I have met, have a judgmental and discriminatory attitude toward smokers. I suspect that deep down inside they have a sense of morality and that smoking in being harmful is an immoral thing. But what is not seen, on the other hand, is the inward struggle of every man. Each of us deals to greater or lesser degrees with a whole host of improprieties that the Bible calls out and condemns, asking us to give up those behaviors in order to become like our Father. So some can easily go on with spiritually blinded eyes and never confront the issues that tempt them the most. It is very easy to do so because on the flesh leve we don't want to confront or even admit of those things. It's why so many Christians are viewed as being hypocrites because they can't see their failings that even a blind person off the street could see. They go on ina false sense of morality and tend to view others with more visible failings as those carrying a mote their eyes, when they themselves have beams in their eyes.
It is easy to get sucked into this false sense of morality because we forget that what we see is not the full story. Not even half of the story, as we are all multi-dimensional characters and also we have spiritual realities of a world beyond our own that many times people forget about.
(By the way I am a smoker and am not right now not dealing with thoughts of not quitting).
What do you think?
Obviously smokiing is a visible evil, one sees it, smells it, you know smokers because you can see them and possibly smell it on their clothes. So some people, some I have met, have a judgmental and discriminatory attitude toward smokers. I suspect that deep down inside they have a sense of morality and that smoking in being harmful is an immoral thing. But what is not seen, on the other hand, is the inward struggle of every man. Each of us deals to greater or lesser degrees with a whole host of improprieties that the Bible calls out and condemns, asking us to give up those behaviors in order to become like our Father. So some can easily go on with spiritually blinded eyes and never confront the issues that tempt them the most. It is very easy to do so because on the flesh leve we don't want to confront or even admit of those things. It's why so many Christians are viewed as being hypocrites because they can't see their failings that even a blind person off the street could see. They go on ina false sense of morality and tend to view others with more visible failings as those carrying a mote their eyes, when they themselves have beams in their eyes.
It is easy to get sucked into this false sense of morality because we forget that what we see is not the full story. Not even half of the story, as we are all multi-dimensional characters and also we have spiritual realities of a world beyond our own that many times people forget about.
(By the way I am a smoker and am not right now not dealing with thoughts of not quitting).
What do you think?