@seoulsearch I didn’t mean to have the attitude you said. I apologize for giving that impression. I guess my only thing was that drinking alcohol is something we do for fun, recreationally. It’s not something absolutely needed in our life. We all have to use money, we all have to eat, and sadly there is no way in our modern society to never not see a sexually themed or suggested photo/ad/tv show.
We all have struggles, and many I can’t say it wouldn’t be immensely difficult to deal with.
@ArtsieSteph -- I apologize as well if I took your post out of context. That's honestly how it came across to me and I am sorry that I misunderstood. I enjoy your posts and think you are a very sweet person.
I understand that alcohol is optional and that other temptations are hard to avoid.
Just the other day, I went to pick up groceries and there was a young lady who was only wearing about 1/4 of a shirt. Not only was it an extreme crop top, but it looked like it was missing a large chunk of fabric. Let's just say that I don't know if she was worried about getting the coronavirus, but she sure wasn't worried about getting pneumonia! I can see why guys would have a rough time with things like this everywhere, even if they were able to avoid ads and entertainment (and I know women struggle with these things as well.) But God still tells us to keep working to control our thoughts.
The thing about money and food is that while we do have to eat and spend money (and some things, like costs for school, etc., can be a bit out of our control,) what bothers me is that I hear people judging others but seemingly being blind to their own bad choices.
I don't mind when people complain to me about their own struggles. We all fight with weight or money or whatever else to some degree.
But what makes me sad is when people look at anyone who, in this example, drinks alcohol and automatically assume they're an out-of-control drunk. (Please note that the following examples are NOT about anyone here on CC -- I'm thinking of people I have run into in the past.)
If I hear someone judging a person for something in their own life and then they turn around and say, "Well, I know I can't save money and I'm always broke, but I can't help it." And yet, if you go to their house, you will see shelves full of movies, music, and whatever elsethey may collect all over their room. Or the person who complains to me about not having any money while holding a Starbucks coffee (sometimes with nails they just got at a salon) and checking their $1000 phone (while a phone may be somewhat necessary these days, one that costs that much isn't.)
Or sometimes I'll hear someone at work complain about a fellow employee's life choices, and then they will tell me how much they wish they could lose weight, but yet on breaks, they're always eating fast food, cookies, and chips.
The part that bothers me isn't that they have these problems -- we all do. But what bothers me is that they want sympathy for their own bad, sometimes really, really bad choices, but then point to someone else and think, "SINNER!!!" Because as you pointed out, we don't need alcohol to live. But there are also a ton of junk foods and overpriced versions of products we don't need to eat or buy in order to live either, and I'm not sure why people somehow think it's ok when they eat or buy completely unnecessary or harmful things but yet if someone drinks alcohol, they're totally off the rails.
It would be like me looking at anyone with an ice cream cone and automatically assuming they MUST be an out-of-control slob, or anyone with a take-out coffee MUST be horribly wreckless with money, or that anyone with a someone sexy picture on their phone (whether a real person or an anime character) MUST be a hopeless porn addict.
I struggle with food as much as the next person (and probably a lot more), which is how God taught me to try to look at things from other's points of view. For health reasons, I am supposed to avoid sugar as much as possible and most carbs.
How successful am I at actually doing this? Not very, especially with certain junk foods. If I have them in the house, I will eat nothing but chips, candy, and pizza for days or even weeks on end. The only way I can halfway prevent this is to not buy it in the first place and also try to avoid eating out most of the time.
I understand how you and Socreta feel about alcohol because I used to have similar feelings about it as well.
But one day, I was talking to a guy at church and I can't remember how the topic came up, but he mentioned that he was a recovering alcoholic, and that for him, he can't stop drinking once he gets started, so he was trying his best to just not start at all.
And then it hit me. God seemed to tap me on the shoulder and say, "You know how you feel about things like sugar, pasta, and rice? How would you feel if stuck to what you know is best for you and could NEVER have them again? This young man has a similar attraction to alcohol. So when you're tempted to judge someone like that, think of how much you have to fight every day to even just cut back, let alone cut out, foods like sugar and carbohydrates."
Just as alcohol isn't something necessary for our lives, neither are sugar or refined carbs. It's a choice.
All I'm saying is, everyone has an area where in which we consistently make the wrong choices, and I do this every single day.
Why should any of us be so quick to want leniency on our own struggles, but condemn the next person for theirs? (Especially when they might not even have a problem in the first place.)