My friend and I always say "okay!" to each other in a particular way because of a song that used to come on during our pole dance classes. At the time, the studio played a lot of Kesha Radio on Pandora, so think Kesha's TikTok era. The kinds of songs that came on that station were Starships by Nicki Minaj and Good Girls Go Bad by Cobra Starship and Cheap Thrills by Sia and DJ Got Us Fallin in Love by Usher/Pitbull, just to give you the flavor.

I remember nothing about the song except that it's got a fast tempo dance beat maybe 120 bpm and every 8 count (maybe every other), a girl or girls in the background say "OKAY!" I don't know any other words or sounds, and the name of the song does not contain the word okay.


If I Tell You Say I 39;m Okay I Lied Mp3 Download


Download Zip 🔥 https://shoxet.com/2y3DtZ 🔥



This is a great moral dilemma for me, because, if lying is okay sometimes, then when does it become a sin? And if it is never okay, then does that mean that we cannot lie to protect someone from being wrongfully hurt?

I am glad people are mentioning the midwives in Exodus and Rahab lying. I want to reiterate that both the midwives and Rahab were blessed for their actions. We have established the fact that telling the truth is not always necessary. Now to answer the question people have been asking: When do I know it is okay to lie?

Skip forward a few thousand years, and Jesus tells us that obeying the greatest commandment looks like loving the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength and your neighbor as yourself. And that is going to look like worshiping Him only, preserving truth and justice, preserving the sanctity of human life, and being faithful in all our relationships, etc..

I know for myself, if telling the truth ever endangers my life, even though it would be incredibly scary and hard, I would want to tell the truth. Heaven is a better place anyways, right? So why do we try so desperately to stay here? Especially if staying here requires us to do something God hates.

If Nazis had showed up at my door while I was keeping Jews it is more a fear of the Nazis to tell them a lie than to tell them the truth. If you tell them the truth you are trusting God completely to keep yourself and the Jews safe, there is only faith and hope to rest on in that situation. But if you lie, then you are not trusting in God, but instead are fearing the Nazis as if they controlled everything and had more power than the God who made them. The God who gives them life and breath and everything.

Hey Trent, I just wanted to say thank you for asking this question. I must admit when I saw the question I inwardly (and outwardly) slumped and thought, seriously do we really have to cover this? This discussion has always made me feel really uncomfortable. But I cannot tell you how much I have been blessed by having to think through all this. Having to think through and study for these questions is helping me be stronger by forcing me to know my convictions and beliefs. ? God bless.

Here is something my father, who has been working in the military and law enforcement for over 25 years, has been constantly reminded my siblings and me lately. Whenever you are threatened, you do not, under any circumstances, owe the person threatening you anything. If you are in a school or on a college campus, and someone runs in with a gun telling you to stand up if you are a Christian, you do not have to do anything. You do not need to listen or respond to that mentally retarded and evil person, unless the Holy Spirit is moving you to stand. It is the same way with someone coming up behind you in an empty Wal-mart aisle and pressing a gun up against your back, whispering to not make a noise and to walk straight out the door to their car. Are you going to listen? I should hope not! Instead, you would wrench away and run in zig-zags down the aisle, screaming as loud as you could the whole way. You have alerted the rest of the people in the store, and it is almost impossible for anyone less than a sniper to critically hit a moving target. You do not owe that person anything, especially your compliant obedience. Man should hold no power whatsoever on our decisions or actions, only God.

My husband of 20 plus years has not been diagnosed with dementia. I have been considering seeking a diagnosis. As joint owners of a business in which he has been the intellectual force our small team is suffering from his diminishing skills but lacl of recognition of the fact. From reading all of the comments it seems there is no point In seeking a diagnosis. Continuing with my practical plans to extracate us both and retire at whatever cost seems to be my only solution in hope that removing the stress as he is unable to complete projects, in the field in which he is a respected expert, become beyond him. I am sad to hear that there is so little assistance we are in our 60s, this could be a long and lonely journey.

People who believe lies are not okay tend to be more religious or moral. The Bible has some things to say about dishonesty (read this POST to find out more) and examples to help us understand this answer from a Christian view. We will touch on that later.

In another article, the APA presented information that suggests telling the truth more often when you have the chance to lie or just telling fewer lies improves your mental and physical health. This is great news! So, even if telling a lie is okay, you will receive some benefits from not telling lies.

I know this post is not about how much, how often and what types of lies people tell, but the data we get from research can help us know what humans believe about lying. So far we are seeing that most people believe lying is at least justified in some situations, but many people still see it as totally wrong.

They invented a system that they alone were masters of so that they could appear to be telling the truth, when in fact, they were not and Jesus condemns and rejects that sort of dissimulation out of hand. He commands his disciples to tell the truth, straight up, with no equivocation, no deceit, no fingers crossed behind their backs.

The New Testament thus preserves the general rule and the recognized exception with respect to submission to government, but does any such exception exist with respect to telling the truth? That was the question I received, on multiple occasions last Sunday, and the answer, I believe, is that it does.

In Exodus 2 there is a story about a group of women who lied to their governing authority so as to thwart an attempt at genocide. The King of Egypt commanded the Hebrew midwives to kill all the male babies born to the people of Israel but the Hebrew midwives feared God and refused to do what the King had commanded and were called to account for so doing. The Bible records the dramatic scene as follows:

Putting this all together we might state the situation in the following terms: the people of God are required to tell the truth, without equivocation or deceit, in every situation, except when doing so would result in the death of innocent people. This would not apply to testifying in court, as the Magistrate does not bear the sword in vain, but it would apply to situations such as Christians were presented with during the Holocaust and to situations now being faced by Christians in places like Afghanistan and North Korea.

I wasn't a liar until I started working for a company with a toxic senior management team. It is common knowledge that they tell lies about their own schedules (working from home, showing up late, taking long lunches, etc.). Now I think it only fair that I do the same.

Having gone to culinary school, and worked in both front and back of house, I can tell you that the term allergy will get you more attention and is better understood. Staff ears can hear the word allergy. In culinary school we spent five minutes on food allergies and cross contamination. It might have been less had I not pushed the topic. When I was a teen working foh I got not training in this area. So, I always say allergy.

"I don't dig into people's private lives. I never have." Ross Perot's brief statement on ABC News in July 1992 was meant to end allegations that he secretly investigated his presidential campaign volunteers. The allegations ended, but not the way Perot intended. Within hours, irrefutable evidence appeared that proved Perot had hired others to probe his people's pasts. By the next day, there was no question on anyone's mind: Ross Perot lied.

So what? It wasn't the first time a politician lied and it won't be the last. Sometimes a lie, a false statement made with deliberate intent to deceive, seems the perfect response: a brother lies about his sister's where-abouts to the drunken husband threatening to harm her, a doctor tells a depressed patient that he has a 50-50 chance of long-term recovery when she is confident he'll live only six months, a son gives his late mother's estate to the poor after promising to honor her demand that the money be placed in her coffin. When trying to do the right thing in a difficult situation, perfect honesty may seem second best next to values like compassion, respect, and justice. Yet many philosophical and religious traditions have long claimed that rarely, if ever, is a lie permissible. What, then, is the truth about lying?

Lies are morally wrong, then, for two reasons. First, lying corrupts the most important quality of my being human: my ability to make free, rational choices. Each lie I tell contradicts the part of me that gives me moral worth. Second, my lies rob others of their freedom to choose rationally. When my lie leads people to decide other than they would had they known the truth, I have harmed their human dignity and autonomy. Kant believed that to value ourselves and others as ends instead of means, we have perfect duties (i.e., no exceptions) to avoid damaging, interfering with, or misusing the ability to make free decisions; in other words - no lying.

Altruistic or noble lies, which specifically intend to benefit someone else, can also be considered morally acceptable by utilitarians. Picture the doctor telling her depressed patient that there is a 50 percent probability that he will recover, when in truth all tests confirm the man has only six months to live. The doctor knows from years of experience that, if she told this type of patient the truth, he would probably fall deeper into depression or possibly commit suicide. With the hope of recovery, though, he will most likely cherish his remaining time. Again, utilitarianism would seem to support the doctor's decision because the greater good is served by her altruistic lie. 2351a5e196

free download bible amharic version

big time rush 24 7 download

mahjong time epoch download

nibe uplink download

word to pdf converter crack free download