Mainstream Claim: “Jesus says lust = adultery.”
Response:
No. Adultery destroys families; a glance doesn’t. Jesus isn’t equating sins—He’s exposing self-righteousness.
Mainstream Claim: “Jesus is raising the moral standard.”
Response:
He’s not raising the standard—He’s removing the self-righteous shield people hide behind: “I never committed adultery.”
Mainstream Claim: “The eye-plucking language means avoid lust.”
Response:
Removing one eye doesn’t remove lust. Jesus uses impossibility to force a symbolic reading: remove self-righteous perception.
Mainstream Claim: “Then why the right eye and right hand?”
Response:
Because they symbolize your presumed righteousness—how you see yourself and what you think you achieve morally.
Mainstream Claim: “But Jesus hardly talks about sex.”
Response:
Exactly. Because the theme isn’t sex—it’s covenant loyalty vs. spiritual pride. Sexual language is the metaphor.
Mainstream Claim: “The hell warning means lust is deadly.”
Response:
The danger isn’t lust; the danger is refusing to amputate pride. Gehenna is for the self-righteous, not the tempted.
Mainstream Claim: “This seems allegorical.”
Response:
It’s more literal than the mainstream view. The body parts aren’t literal—but the self-destruction of pride is.
Mainstream Claim: “Jesus is teaching moral avoidance strategies.”
Response:
If so, He gives terrible advice. Instead He targets the root: break the illusion of your purity, and the lust issue collapses by itself.
Mainstream Claim: “Why adultery language then?”
Response:
Because in Scripture adultery = spiritual unfaithfulness. Jesus is calling out covenant betrayal through self-righteousness.
CORE SUMMARY
Jesus isn’t attacking the sexually weak; He’s attacking the spiritually proud.
The real “eye” and “hand” to remove are the organs of self-righteousness, not the organs of sight or touch.