PabloSerna said:
" For Christians, however, that concern is due to our bodies being sinful."
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The Roman Catholic Church does not teach this, to be clear. Is this what you believe?
Yes and no. It's sometimes hard to parse my childhood influences from my adult study. I can remember countless altar calls that started with the idea that people carry an inherent sense of their own wrongness. It's a sense that we are incomplete, misaligned, out of place, or defective in some inexpressible way. I don't know how universal this subjective feeling is, but it seemed to work on a lot of people during the sermon. The follow up reveals that this uncomfortable situation is derived from our sinfulness. Our sin keeps us from being perfect and godly, and we have in inherent sense of this. This sensation should then be a driving motivation to become more godly and reduce this internal dissonance. To that extent I guess I believe this much.
As far as the physical body being sinful, that's a bit of a hodgepodge of New Testament of images such as "the sins of the flesh", and the Old Testament idea that nearly all bodily functions make someone ritually unclean and unfit to come near to God. We also have the whole idea regarding Adam and Eve and either original or ancestral sin, and the fundamental physical defectiveness that we have compared to them prior to their fall. So I don't necessary think physical bodies are sinful (a better word is probably unideal or imperfect) inherently. Jesus' resurrected body and the original bodies of Adam and Eve were not this way. But I do think that our current physical bodies are imperfect and flawed, and therefore sinful by that definition.
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