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Torrent v.2 said:You are twisitng my words.
I never said recreational use. I said medicinal.
You then respponded by saying recreational use is bringing it into your body sinfully.
I said it is NOT SIN TO BRING IT INTO YOUR BODY medicinally.
The only sin is abusing it.
The implication of your statement ("abusing it") seems to be that substances are innocuous in and of themselves (which in general seems to be the line of reasoning of Castor when he wrongly cited the I Corinthians passage about sexual immorality), and if things are innocuous in and of themselves then it stands to reason that you are allowing for substances to be used (like cigarettes) for recreational purposes. I understand that cocaine may have medicinal purposes, as marijuana might as well, and haven't objected to that use. You are the one who raised the concept of medicinal use of substances. Prior to that the conversation had been about the acceptance of alcohol and cigarettes on the basis that they weren't sinful to use unless they were abused. Well, cigarettes easily can be shown to be highly addictive, and harmful to the body. As such, the passage about not joining your temple to sinful activities is relevant.
torrent said:Do you agree with that? Do you agree that cocaine can be used correctly and therefore not sinfully?
I've NEVER said that cocaine is sinful in and of itself, so of course I'd say that it may be used lawfully (speaking Biblically, not politically or legally). That has nothing to do with the argument at hand, in which people were saying that the I Corinthians passage has no relevance to the notion that it may be sin to introduce certain substance into your body.
Chuckbob said:Why does everything have to be connected to something else? It's apples and oranges.
You're a lawyer, right? We are discussing the passage of I Corinthians where Paul says that he will not allow anything to master him, and in the same context he speaks about not allowing ourselves to be tainted with the sexual sin of a prostitute. The link between the two is not merely coincidental. Anything, whether sex, drugs, or rock and roll

