Not many shades of gray for adultery
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The seventh commandment of God to us, “You shall not commit
adultery,” sets forth an ideal: to live a more and more fully human
life. Many humorous stories about this commandment circulate within
the Episcopal Church. A serious one has God reading the Decalogue to
angels before giving it to Moses. About this commandment, the angels
say, “Lord, you have made mortals only a little lower than the
angels, but you have also made them only a little higher that the
beasts. It is too hard to ask them to be sexually faithful.” To which
God replies, “If they cannot be faithful with one another in sexual
matters, how will they be faithful in their spirits and souls with
me?”
Love for our most beloved is to be as faithful, as enduring, as
passionate as God’s love for us. Our bodies matter so much to God
that God came among us as one of us and lived a fully human life and
died a fully human death. Our bodies matter so much to God that as
God raised Jesus from the dead, so God promises to raise us from
death to a life beyond our human imaginations.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
In Islam, adultery is considered one of the cardinal sins. It is a
gruesome violation of God’s law. It has a devastating effect on the
perpetrator, his or her family and the society at large. The Koran
describes the adulterers as the aggressors against themselves and
against their societies. A healthy family is one which the husband
and wife are deeply committed and faithful to each other.
IMAM MOUSTAFA AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational
of Orange County
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