In the closet - no more. We have been, are, and are to do and - TopicsExpress



          

In the closet - no more. We have been, are, and are to do and be - for us-all. The only one responsbile is Me. Period. I cant turn back time - that I regret. Now is now, based on past time and acts: https://youtube/watch?v=5G4O5AMSevc Blame me, no one else. Temptation’s Sin Taking From Another Temptation is the desire to perform an action that one may enjoy immediately or in the short term but will probably later regret for various reasons: legal, social, psychological (including feeling guilt), health-related, economic, etc. Temptation is something that allures, excites, and seduces someone. Infatuation can also lead to temptation as someone might do something for lust in spite of ones better judgment. Temptation also describes the coaxing or inducing a person into committing such an act, by manipulation or otherwise of curiosity, desire or fear of loss. Informally, temptation may be used to mean the state of being attracted and enticed without anything to do with moral, ethical obligation or consideration. A) Something that tempts, entices, or allures. B) The fact or state of being tempted, esp. to evil. C) The act of tempting; enticement or allurement. In the context of religion, temptation is the inclination to sin. It Ties To Crime Criminal Psychology Temptation, in a loose sense, describes behaviors indicating a lack of self control. Can I Get Away With “It”? And Not Get Caught? Temptation Temptation mirrors greed, one of the lethal seven. The seven deadly sins, also known as the capital vices or cardinal sins, is a classification of vices (part of Christian ethics) that has been used since early Christian times to educate and instruct Christians concerning fallen humanitys tendency to sin. In the currently recognized version, the sins are usually given as wrath, greed, sloth, pride, lust, envy, and gluttony. Selfish greed, also known as avarice, cupidity or covetousness, is like lust and gluttony; it’s the sin of craving excess, extra or more. This nature too often leads to the “taking” of something from another, at another’s expense (victim). This social problem is universally addressed by simple criminal laws that instruct on how the civilized are expected to behave. Criminal sin divides into two categories: venial sins, in which guilt is relatively minor, and the more severe mortal sins. A mortal or deadly sin is believed to destroy conditions of equity, grace and charity from within, thus leading to the Christian-Catholic threat of eternal damnation. According to Christian-Catholic’s moral law, the seven deadly sins are not discrete from other sins, but are instead the origin (capital comes from the Latin caput, head) of the others. Vice, embodied in the seven, can be either venial or mortal depending on the situation; the key seven are called capital because they engender other sins, other vices.
Posted on: Sun, 18 Jan 2015 22:36:03 +0000

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