Home > categories > Minerals & Metallurgy > Polyester Cloth > Do people chose to wear blended fabrics, or are they born with an urge to defy God?
Question:

Do people chose to wear blended fabrics, or are they born with an urge to defy God?

Why would someone wear a mixed fiber fabric when god has prohibited it?

Answer:

It has been scientificaly proven that there is a chemical produced in the hypothalamus which blocks the desire to wear blends of wool and linen. Some people's brains do not produce this chemical and therefore have an uncontrolable desire to do so. One of the populations most highly prone to this are the Scots. The condition is so common that their culture has created the Kilt - a blended wool-linnen garment worn over the loins and without underwear. -
No, I think the problem stems from the exorbitant cost of buying clothes in natural fibres like cotton or silk (which you would never mix). Also, the clothing manufacturers seem to be in cahoots with the polymer manufacturers given the quantity of polyester garments being churned out. Intelligent people don't have a predisposition to wear blended fabrics out of an urge to defy God. However, I concede there are a lot of people who give the impression they are born with an urge to defy God by denying he exists. P.S. How did tartan cloth get mixed with linen when the poor Scots could barely afford to pay their taxes to the English, never mind buy wildly expensive imports? Sheep aplenty there were (after the indigenous people were forcibly evicted in order to make way for the four-legged cash crop of wool) but I wasn't aware that they mixed linen with the wool. I'm very curious about this (because I am Scottish). Check out the link below - tartan was made only from wool.
We are under the covenant of grace, not legalism. Jesus fulfilled the law (however, those who reject Him will still be judged by the law).

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