Join For His Glory for a discussion on how
https://christianforums.net/threads/a-vessel-of-honor.110278/
https://christianforums.net/threads/psalm-70-1-save-me-o-god-lord-help-me-now.108509/
Read through the following study by Tenchi for more on this topic
https://christianforums.net/threads/without-the-holy-spirit-we-can-do-nothing.109419/
Join Sola Scriptura for a discussion on the subject
https://christianforums.net/threads/anointed-preaching-teaching.109331/#post-1912042
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AgreedImagine if a man did that in front of 5 year old girls. Someone could press charges and someone would go to jail. It's not about nudity, it's the principle. Innocence is something that society should respect. The mother shouldn't have changed in front of those boys..
Very good point.Imagine if a man did that in front of 5 year old girls. Someone could press charges and someone would go to jail. It's not about nudity, it's the principle. Innocence is something that society should respect. The mother shouldn't have changed in front of those boys..
Are you serious? Did you read the article? The woman was in a dressing room! If I am in a male dressing room and some other guy walks in with his 5 year old daughter and she sees me naked, you honestly believe I should go to jail for that? I don't think so. You are talking more like if this occurred in a public place where undressing is prohibited. If this woman didn't want her kid to see another woman undressing, she should have figured out some way to not take him into a changing room! This was the mother's fault, not the fault of the woman changing her clothes in a room designated for changing clothes.Imagine if a man did that in front of 5 year old girls. Someone could press charges and someone would go to jail. It's not about nudity, it's the principle. Innocence is something that society should respect. The mother shouldn't have changed in front of those boys..
Imagine if a man did that in front of 5 year old girls. Someone could press charges and someone would go to jail. It's not about nudity, it's the principle. Innocence is something that society should respect. The mother shouldn't have changed in front of those boys..
Read it again Obadiah ... i believe Vaccine it talking about the way thing go not what should be.. As in the women teachers who are not held as accountable as the men teachers when those lines are crossed....Are you serious? Did you read the article? The woman was in a dressing room! If I am in a male dressing room and some other guy walks in with his 5 year old daughter and she sees me naked, you honestly believe I should go to jail for that? I don't think so. You are talking more like if this occurred in a public place where undressing is prohibited. If this woman didn't want her kid to see another woman undressing, she should have figured out some way to not take him into a changing room! This was the mother's fault, not the fault of the woman changing her clothes in a room designated for changing clothes.
Are you serious? Did you read the article?
If I am in a male dressing room and some other guy walks in with his 5 year old daughter and she sees me naked, you honestly believe I should go to jail for that?
This was the mother's fault, not the fault of the woman changing her clothes in a room designated for changing clothes.
Read it again Obadiah ... i believe Vaccine it talking about the way thing go not what should be.. As in the women teachers who are not held as accountable as the men teachers when those lines are crossed....
Claudya the climate here in the USA is way to anti-male my guess it that is what Vaccine is thinking about... It needs to find a balance...
Naw. If a father (e.g. a single dad) takes his five year old daughter (who is too young to go to the girls' change room on her own) to the men's change room with him and some other man quitely changes clothes in the other corner of the room, what would that oher man go to prison for? I doubt he broke any law by changing clothes in a change room.
And as for the innocence of the little boy in the article, his mother has probably done greater damage to his innocence by making that fuss in front of him than the other woman by changing her cloths.
the climate here in the USA is way to anti-male my guess it that is what Vaccine is thinking about... It needs to find a balance...
Having studied some law and being a retired cop who dealt with many indecent exposure complaints I know that where I worked nudity is not a criminal offense unless it can be shown that it was done for illegal sexual purposes or done to offend someone. (This is similar in all states.) The woman in the article did neither of these things. What they are calling the "communal" area in these dressing rooms in the US is not a "no nudity" area. The cubicles are simply provided for those who are more modest, and are much more common in ladies changing rooms than in men's. (Yes, I've been in plenty of both.) It is common knowledge that if you are anywhere in a designated changing room such as described in the article, you are free to change your clothes. It doesn't matter who else is there to see it. This is not legally considered a sexual offense and is not a chargeable action. Common sense has to step in somewhere, and common sense says if you don't want your kid to see a woman changing her clothes, don't take him into a women's changing room....(however, the woman in that article didn't commit a sexual offense, neither would a man in the reversed case. Or at least I can't imagine she did, but some American states have some funny laws )
Once again, I think perhaps you either misunderstood the article or didn't read it in it's entirety. This was not in a public restroom. This was in a room at a public pool that is specifically designated for changing your clothes. That makes a big difference.In my whole life I've never seen a naked men in public restrooms.
Once again, I think perhaps you either misunderstood the article or didn't read it in it's entirety. This was not in a public restroom. This was in a room at a public pool that is specifically designated for changing your clothes. That makes a big difference.
Having studied some law and being a retired cop who dealt with many indecent exposure complaints I know that where I worked nudity is not a criminal offense unless it can be shown that it was done for illegal sexual purposes or done to offend someone. (This is similar in all states.) The woman in the article did neither of these things. What they are calling the "communal" area in these dressing rooms in the US is not a "no nudity" area. The cubicles are simply provided for those who are more modest, and are much more common in ladies changing rooms than in men's. (Yes, I've been in plenty of both.) It is common knowledge that if you are anywhere in a designated changing room such as described in the article, you are free to change your clothes. It doesn't matter who else is there to see it. This is not legally considered a sexual offense and is not a chargeable action. Common sense has to step in somewhere, and common sense says if you don't want your kid to see a woman changing her clothes, don't take him into a women's changing room.
LOL. When you're a street cop in a big American city you'd be surprised at what kind of places your work takes you! Really surprised!Now I'm wondering what you were doing in ladies' changing rooms
I'll feel much safer now knowing that street cops maintain law and order in ladies' changing rooms.LOL. When you're a street cop in a big American city you'd be surprised at what kind of places your work takes you! Really surprised!