Nate (post: 1479672) wrote:And to me, that seems arrogant and self-centered...which are not qualities that are particularly positive or lauded in Christianity. You don't care about hurting others, you only care that you get to do what you want. This seems extremely against what Christianity teaches, which is to deny the self and look to others and love them.
While offending others can be a positive thing (as noted with the example of Paul), it's not a matter of "Well if I'm offending something I'm doing something right," which is false logic, nor is it okay to say that offending people is fine no matter what.
As far as I'm concerned, unless someone is offended because you're doing what God says, you're doing something wrong.
Nice little cut out from my conversation there. Again, I see no moral impediment by using the word targeting. It's about as offensive as the word intentions in my book, and thus of no alterable qualities whatsoever and I would debate anyone who saw offensive qualities with it. If defense of position by merit is suddenly unchristian, then we have fallen very far. On that same note, Jesus said a great deal of politically incorrect things by modern standards. I don't consider Jesus to be especially unchristian, and it goes to far more a provocative standard than any of the words I've posted so far. I am sure he offended a great deal of people and as you said, that is not necessarily a bad thing. For there is a line between the politically correct and censorship that seems fragile on occasions, and while censorship is not inherently evil it DOES move towards the unsustainable and redundant as soon as it reaches the point of anti-swear laws. As swearing is deemed offensive by many and continuously attempted removed, and sometimes even passed by courts of law. Thus catering for the comfort of a few by the price of limiting many. If I saw a happy Hanukkah sign and somehow felt offensive, I do not think it would be a christian thing for me to do to lobby to have it removed for secular or religious purposes. I'd wish the people a happy Hanukkah, yet, around campus if you put up a cross it would likely be taken down by people with the very same mentality as posted above. While this is more act than word-based. It goes into my point that there are some things that should not appear offensive to anyone. Such as the word targeting.
I am not insensitive just because I set standards nor am I arrogant because I do not automatically presume the intentions of anyone to be well-weighted. Same argument I would use if someone asked me to take down a cross because it offended them somehow. I embrace multiculturalism way before I embrace imposed unification, sadly, a lot of PC decisions cater to the latter or selectively caters to specific groups.
So no, I don't always budge when there is no reason to do so. Sometimes, what people take offense from is on error from their part. Seeing how PC decisions are hugely objective, I would say it depends on a case to case basis, but I hold no decisions by a social elite to be cannon just because group X, Y and Z said it would be a good idea.