Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Carpathian vs. the sword, blindfold and scales of justice

Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email
20120821-justice-sword
Justice, blindfolded, with scales and sword (HT: Washington State)

Justice, classically, is often portrayed as a blindfolded lady carrying scales and a sword.

This represents the challenge of impartiality and responsible and fair evaluation of cases in light of facts, rights, value and values that must consistently lie behind the unfortunate reality that the state and its officers must wield the sword in defence of the civil peace of justice.

Otherwise, the state descends into incompetence or even the dark night of tyranny and its consequences: injustice, undermining of rights (especially for the weak) and loss of legitimacy that justifies a demand for reformation.

Thus, justice is inevitably a moral issue and therefore inevitably raises the question of the status of OUGHT in light of the IS-OUGHT gap. Thence — given that rights are binding morally grounded expectations that we be respected in terms of our lives, liberty, innocent reputation and more — we face the challenge that in the end there is but one truly solid answer as to the IS that grounds OUGHT.

An answer that was aptly summed up by the fifty-odd US Founders in the 1776 US Declaration of Independence:

When . . . it becomes necessary for one people . . . to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, [cf Rom 1:18 – 21, 2:14 – 15, 13:1 – 10], that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. –That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, –That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security . . . .

We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions [Cf. Judges 11:27 and discussion in Locke], do, in the Name, and by the Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States; that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.

All of this becomes highly relevant when we see how Carpathian reacted to Anthropic commenting on Rom 12 – 13 in a recent thread:

>>A, 17: I’d also point out that Romans 12 states that we are to leave revenge up to God, which is usually taken to mean in the afterlife. However, Romans 13 goes on to say that the government has been given the sword to act as God’s servant in punishing evil and rewarding good. Thus, leaving it up to God does not mean doing nothing. Rather, it means leaving the punishment on this Earth to those who have God given authority to punish on this Earth, plus God in the life to come.

C, 23:

[Citing A:] Rather, it means leaving the punishment on this Earth to those who have God given authority to punish on this Earth, plus God in the life to come.

This is a very frightening statement.

This is the type of thinking that leads fundamentalist groups to believe they have a right to kill infidels.

No one has a right from God to punish anyone.

No one has a right from God to tell anyone else what to do.

This instant leap to an invidious comparison of the Rom 13:4 principle that :

. . . [the civil authority] is God’s servant for your good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain. For he is the servant of God, an avenger who carries out God’s wrath on the wrongdoer.

. . . to the depredations of Islamist terrorists and the like reflects an unfortunately common secularist indoctrination in our day that instantly associates religious views with utter irrationality, inclination to violent oppression and worse.

Such fear-mongering blind prejudice, hostile (or in some cases even bigoted . . . ) contempt and projection, already need to be corrected. (Cf here, earlier at UD in reply to AS.)

But the matter gets deeper, as C kept on going in reaction to remonstrance:

>>No one has a right from God to punish anyone.

No one has a right from God to tell anyone else what to do.

This includes Christians, Muslims and anyone who believes God chooses sides in the affairs of humans . . . .

It is simply not acceptable to take any teachings from any specific holy book and claim that they are applicable to those who do not hold that specific holy book as being a true representation of God’s intent.

I do not bow to the authority of any religion and no one should be expected to . . . .

Religion should stay in churches and in the minds of men and women. It has no business in the laws of man.

Freedom of religion allows people to believe anything they want, not to act on those beliefs.>>

And, on and on.

For telling instance (and the reason this post is titled as above):

>>Do you not understand what the term “might makes right” means?

It means if that if I don’t agree with the wielder of that sword, it is completely irrelevant what I think or whether or not I am right.

If a Christian in a land where the laws are derived from a non-Christian holy book has problems with a law, and the Christians do not wield the sword, then that law is going to apply, regardless of whether it flies in the face of Christian teachings.

The same applies to non-Christians here.

Religion has no business in law-making.>>

The first problem here is that the instant leaping to the most extreme fear-mongering and demand for a lockout of the religious already speaks volumes.

But also, it is worth the while to note a key distinction between philosophy and worldviews-rooted analysis on the one hand (which can and does profitably discuss what we may term the God of the philosophers), and religions and their particular traditions on the other. In particular, it is a serious argument that we are morally governed, under the compelling force of OUGHT in recognition of our duties one to the other, and that this is rooted in our common human nature thus the dignity and rights that that common humanity confers, based on the Eternal One, our Creator who endowed us with that dignity and rights.

Indeed, that is exactly the stand of the US Founders in 1776.

So too, it is not surprising that — and this was cited at no. 2 in the very same thread of discussion (before C’s outburst) —  we saw from Locke citing Hooker using Aristotle, in his second treatise on civil government, Ch 2:

>>. . . if I cannot but wish to receive good, even as much at every man’s hands, as any man can wish unto his own soul, how should I look to have any part of my desire herein satisfied, unless myself be careful to satisfy the like desire which is undoubtedly in other men . . . my desire, therefore, to be loved of my equals in Nature, as much as possible may be, imposeth upon me a natural duty of bearing to themward fully the like affection. [–> Thus, we most easily perceive and regard this duty when owed to us, now we must see that others of like duty are owed the same . . . where our evident natural constitution, our surrounding world and our interior life join together in speaking to us through heart, mind and conscience, but are we inclined to listen?] From which relation of equality between ourselves and them that are as ourselves, what several rules and canons natural reason hath drawn for direction of life no man is ignorant . . . [[Hooker then continues, citing Aristotle in The Nicomachean Ethics, Bk 8:] as namely, That because we would take no harm, we must therefore do none; That since we would not be in any thing extremely dealt with, we must ourselves avoid all extremity in our dealings; That from all violence and wrong we are utterly to abstain, with such-like . . . ] [[Eccl. Polity,preface, Bk I, “ch.” 8, p.80]>>

And, even more relevantly [ cf. no 4 in the thread], Blackstone’s 1765 Commentaries on the Laws of England, famously observes:

>>Man, considered as a creature, must necessarily be subject to the laws of his creator, for he is entirely a dependent being . . . consequently, as man depends absolutely upon his maker for every thing, it is necessary that he should in all points conform to his maker’s will. This will of his maker is called the law of nature. For as God, when he created matter, and endued it with a principle of mobility, established certain rules for the perpetual direction of that motion; so, when he created man, and endued him with freewill to conduct himself in all parts of life, he laid down certain immutable laws of human nature, whereby that freewill is in some degree regulated and restrained, and gave him also the faculty of reason to discover the purport of those laws . . . These are the eternal, immutable laws of good and evil, to which the creator himself in all his dispensations conforms; and which he has enabled human reason to discover, so far as they are necessary for the conduct of human actions. Such among others are these principles: that we should live honestly [NB: cf. Exod. 20:15 – 16], should hurt nobody [NB: cf. Rom 13:8 – 10], and should render to every one his due [NB: cf. Rom 13:6 – 7 & Exod. 20:15]; to which three general precepts Justinian[1: a Juris praecepta sunt hace, honeste vivere. alterum non laedere, suum cuique tribuere. Inst, 1. 1. 3] has reduced the whole doctrine of law [and, Corpus Juris, Justinian’s Christianised precis and pruning of perhaps 1,000 years of Roman jurisprudence, in turn is the foundation of law for much of Europe].>>

Why was all of this brushed aside in such an urgent fury to lash out at and lock out the religious from the public square?

First, because of a now deeply ingrained, indoctrinated ignorance about and/or distortion of the major contribution of the Judaeo-Christian tradition to the rise of modern liberty.

Second, there is a deep rooted ignorance of the inevitability of the roots of rights, justice and law being moral, putting the IS-OUGHT GAP and its resolution in the IS that grounds OUGHT at the centre of reflection on law. (Those who ignore, denigrate or undermine that connexion undercut the foundations of the very justice they claim to advocate.)

Third, in our day, there is a linked failure to properly appreciate the significance of natural moral law for the foundations of justice, which is intelligible to the reasonable and responsible man Hooker and Aristotle discussed.

SB picked that thread of thought up aptly, at No 41:

>>Carpathian,

Do you not understand what the term “might makes right” means?

Yes, and it should be avoided at all costs. In keeping with that point, the role of religion can be overplayed or underplayed. Both radical theocracy, which you rightly fear, and radical secularism, which you don’t seem to fear enough, are to be avoided.

The Declaration of Independence explained it in just the right proportions: Natural rights come from the “Laws of Nature” and “Nature’s God.” Not from any individual expression of religious beliefs, at one extreme, and not from a secular state, at the other extreme

With that standard, everyone, including leaders of the state are bound to, and accountable to, the “natural moral law,” which defines which laws are just and unjust. Accordingly, the civil laws are supposed to be informed by that same natural moral law, which holds everyone accountable, including the lawmakers.>>

Anthropic adds, just as aptly, at No. 43:

>>C 23

“No one has a right from God to tell anyone else what to do.”

This isn’t a college dorm bull session, C, where you try to justify cheating on an exam — or a girlfriend.

As any grownup knows, society absolutely depends upon people respecting the laws. Yes, those funny things that tell people what to do. Don’t steal, don’t lie, don’t murder, for instance. They apply to everyone, including those who don’t believe that God gave the Ten Commandments — that’s where they came from.

Yes, our society historically does claim a right from God to prohibit people from doing these things. Plus slavery, rape, and child abuse.

If these prohibitions are simply man-made constructions, then they can be changed willy-nilly, as they have no basis that must be respected. As the late Yale Law Prof Arthur Leff put it, man-made law is always subject to the grand “Sez who?” Divine law is not.

Professor Leff, an agnostic, had no theological ax to grind. He just pointed out that, without an ultimate Lawgiver, laws have no basis beyond the cultural consensus of the moment. We might feel that torturing babies for entertainment is wrong, but that’s just our opinion.

Leff ultimately concludes that good and evil really do exist. However, he is frustrated because, without an “unevaluated Evaluator”, there is no ultimate basis for that knowledge.

Ironically, you end up sawing off the branch you are sitting on. Your claim to individual freedom to do as you please only has traction in a society that has a high regard for human dignity & worth. Historically that’s pretty rare.

In fact, historically it has arisen only in Judeo-Christian cultures which regard mankind as being made in the image of God. Without that God-based idea, no one has any reason to honor your choices.

Just ask any North Korean.>>

This brings us to the background but highly relevant issue that evolutionary materialist scientism and secularism undermine recognition of responsible, reasonable freedom, and force the conclusion that might and manipulation make ‘right.” So, it is quite natural for those whose thought is in thralldom to such, to equate the sword with raw force, and (having missed the point of justice) build agendas of manipulation, control and domination.

If you doubt me, note here the implications of Prof Provine’s keynote remarks at the U Tenn 1998 Darwin Day celebration:

>>

Naturalistic evolution has clear consequences that Charles Darwin understood perfectly. 1) No gods worth having exist; 2) no life after death exists; 3) no ultimate foundation for ethics exists; 4) no ultimate meaning in life exists; and 5) human free will is nonexistent . . . . 
 
The first 4 implications are so obvious to modern naturalistic evolutionists that I will spend little time defending them. Human free will, however, is another matter. Even evolutionists have trouble swallowing that implication. I will argue that humans are locally determined systems that make choices. They have, however, no free will . . . . Without free will, justification for revenge disappears [–> notice, the fallacious equation of justice with revenge] and rehabilitation is the main job of judicial systems and prisons. [NB: As C. S Lewis warned, in the end, this means: reprogramming through new conditioning determined by the power groups controlling the society and its prisons. On where that may all too easily end up, ask the ghosts of the Gulag Archipelago.] We will all live in a better society when the myth of free will is dispelled . . .>>

On the contrary, when responsible, rational freedom informed by natural moral law is undermined, reason and justice will increasingly be driven out of the public square by those whose credo implies that might and manipulation make ‘right’ or ‘truth’ or ‘justice.’

As, is patently happening all around us.

We must wake up and seek sound reformation, before it is too late. END

Comments
Silver Asiatic @11
The extent of the similarity is why the researchers were surprised. That’s the point.
The question to ask is “why were they so surprised?” Did they have anything more than a “gut feeling” of what they’d find? I bet not. That’s one of the thrills of doing science: you get surprised every now and then. Creationists just don’t get that. sean s.sean samis
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
03:10 PM
3
03
10
PM
PDT
Mapou @4
Anybody who knows anything about optimizing systems will tell you that they all suffer from the same fatal flaws. Optimizers invariably get stuck in a local maxima or minima.
If an entire creature is optimized in a stable environment, this would be possible, it may even happen on occasion, but neither of those requisites are usually met. Parts of creatures are optimized, but not the entire creature; and their environment is never stable. This prevents dead-end equilibria in most cases. Parts of a system can optimize without trapping the entire system in any local maxima/minima.
This creates a search space so huge that ...
Unfortunately for you, evolution does not use a computer, it just does what it does. If you tried to simulate the creation of a snow flake, it would take longer and consume vastly more energy than it does in real life. sean s.sean samis
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
03:09 PM
3
03
09
PM
PDT
kairosfocus Regarding your #66; let me paraphrase your own words: Pardon, but do you not see that your insistent attempt to deny the truth of Christianity’s past says about you? You refer to my comments as denigration; but you cannot say my comments are false. What does it say about you that you regard the truth as denigrating? Should we lie so you can be happier? I am sure you will say “No!” but that means the harsh truth will be spoken. Indeed, it is obvious that we “stand under moral government” in the sense that moral imperatives bind us all. And it is certainly true that these moral imperatives are expressed in the community through upholding the civil peace and justice. You say that we have an “intuitive sense” that this is true; a sentiment I have no serious quibble with. But that only confirms that there’s no need to believe in a deity, much less a specific deity for us to know that we are obligated by moral imperatives. Our experiences in the world tell us this. Our intuition (which I take as an expression of subconscious experiences) tells us this. We no longer need a divine source, we know there is a natural source which is more than sufficient. This is not to say your God does not exist, but that your God need not be a micromanager. Much of what you write about the import of justice tempering the people and the democratic impulse toward anarchy is quite correct. But none of these problems require a theistic solution, much less a specifically Christian solution. One does not need a deity to see the truth of this, or the way forward toward peace, justice, and liberty. In your #68 you lament the “Failure to recognise the great Christian contribution to our civilization...”. I recognize it, but I cannot exaggerate it as I think you do. Democracy and liberty are part of the modern world because Christians looked OUTSIDE of Christianity for ways to tame their divisive impulses. They did not cease to be Christian, and they did find ways to make their religion compatible with the non-Christian ideas they adopted. But let us not forget that they did look outside Christianity, and found much to admire and use. In #69 you wrote at length about the Library of Alexandria and the martyrdom of the pagan scholar Hypatia. This is true: Christianity did not make people worse, but it did not make them better either. Hypatia was murdered in A.D. 415. Christianity had been legal for more than a century, and yet it was not hard at all for Christian demagogues to whip up a violent attack on this woman. Christianity might not have been worse than what preceded it, but it was certainly not better. In the intervening 1600 years, Christianity did not distinguish itself morally. That’s worth a thought or two. sean s. SS/Onlookers, kindly again see the above, which adequately addresses what is needed. KFsean samis
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
02:48 PM
2
02
48
PM
PDT
Barry, As a summary of my prior comments, I grade your #65 as an F. The comments I wrote say nothing about modernity, the scientific revolution, or worldviews. These terms are not used and the concepts are not implied. Recast as questions (about modernity, etc.) those questions would be valid; rendered as assertions your comments are simply false and fabricated concerns. The comments I wrote say nothing about rejecting anything in favor of something else. Borrowing ideas or adopting institutions is not equivalent to giving anything else up. Poor effort on your part. As an expression of your fears and prejudices, your # 65 works; as a cogent and ethical response it is a utter FAIL. And “They walk among us folks”? This is just sad. sean s.sean samis
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
11:26 AM
11
11
26
AM
PDT
F/N: Let us do a clip on the Library at Alexandria, to balance some common views. Food for thought: http://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2010/06/the-perniciously-persistent-myths-of-hypatia-and-the-great-library >>The Perniciously Persistent Myths of Hypatia and the Great Library by David Bentley Hart 6 . 4 . 10 . . . . The tale of a Christian destruction of the Great Library ”so often told, so perniciously persistent”is a tale about something that never happened . By this, I do not mean that there is some divergence of learned opinion on the issue, or that the original sources leave us in some doubt as to the nature of the event. I mean that nothing of the sort ever occurred. Rohter almost gets the matter right when he remarks that “Roman-era chronicles, as well as later works, suggest that at least part of the library was destroyed when Julius Caesar invaded Egypt in 48 b.c. , and that Christians were responsible only for the damage done in Hypatia’s time to a secondary ‘daughter library,’ which may also have been attacked by Muslim conquerors in the seventh century a.d. ” But, in fact, there is not a single shred of evidence”ancient, medieval, or modern”that Christians were responsible for either collection’s destruction, and no one before the late eighteenth century ever suggested they were. The Great Library of Alexandria is one of the more fascinating mysteries of late antique civilization. It enters history already as something largely legendary. Even Strabo, who died around a.d. 23, knew of it only as a tale from the past. We know that it had been built as an adjunct to the Great Museum in the Brucheium (the royal quarter of Alexandria) in the first half of the third century b.c. Its size, however, is impossible to establish. The estimate in ancient texts varies wildly, between 40,000 scrolls”for the ancient world, an astounding but still plausible number”and 700,000”which is almost certainly impossibly high. And, as of yet, archaeologists have failed to find the remains of any building sufficiently large to have sheltered a collection on either scale. Whatever the case, as Rohter says, various ancient sources report that the library was destroyed, either in whole or in part, during Julius Caesar’s Alexandrian campaign against Pompey in 48 or 47 b.c. If any part of it remained in the Brucheium, it would probably have perished when the museum was destroyed in a.d. 272, during Aurelian’s wars of imperial reunification. It was certainly no longer in existence in 391. Rohter is right that there was perhaps a “daughter” library, which may have been located in the grounds of the Serapeum”the large temple of the Ptolemies’ hybrid Greco-Egyptian god, Serapis”placed there either in the late third century b.c. , or in the late second century a.d. , when the Serapeum was restored and expanded. At least, there is good evidence that scrolls were at certain points kept among the temple complex’s colonnades. And, in fact, the Serapeum was destroyed in 391. After a series of riots between the pagan and Christian communities of Alexandria”Alexandria was the most extravagantly violent city of the antique world, and riots were something of a revered civic tradition”a number of Christian hostages had been murdered inside the Serapeum, which led the Emperor Theodosius to order the complex demolished (though he excused the murderers, inasmuch as the Christians they had killed were now considered martyrs, and any act of vengeance would have detracted from their witness). And so a detachment of Roman soldiers, with the assistance of an eager crowd of Christians, dismantled the complex”or, at any rate, the temple within it. As it happens, we have fairly good accounts of that day, Christian and pagan, and absolutely none of them so much as hints at the destruction of any large collection of books. Not even Eunapius of Sardis”a pagan scholar who despised Christians and who would have wept over the loss of precious texts”suggests such a thing. This is not surprising, since there were probably no books there to be destroyed. The pagan historian Ammianus Marcellinus, describing the Serapeum not long before its demolition, had clearly spoken of its libraries as something no longer in existence. The truth of the matter is that the entire legend was the product of the imagination of Edward Gibbon, who bizarrely misread a single sentence from the Christian historian Orosius, and from it spun out a story that appears nowhere in the entire corpus of ancient historical sources. Which brings me to Hypatia. I do sometimes wish the poor woman’s memory could be left in peace. She’s been the victim of such sordidly sentimental nonsense over the past few centuries that it’s almost impossible to appreciate her for what she was, or to disentangle the tragedy of her death from the ideological rants that typically surround its telling. She was, all the evidence suggests, a brilliant lecturer in Platonic thought, a trained scientist, and the author of a few mathematical commentaries. Despite the extravagant claims often made on her behalf, however, there is no reason to believe she made any particularly significant contributions to any of her fields of expertise. She was not, for instance”as she has often been said to have been”the inventor of either the astrolabe or the hydrometer. It is true that the first extant mention of a hydrometer appears in a letter written to Hypatia by her devoted friend, Synesius of Cyrene, the Christian Platonist and bishop of Ptolemais; but that is because Synesius, in that letter, is explaining to her how the device is made, so that she can arrange to have one assembled for him At the time of her death, she was probably not even the beautiful young woman of lore; she was in all likelihood over sixty. She was , however, brutally murdered”and then dismembered”by a gang of Christian parabalani (a fraternity originally founded to care for the city’s poor); that much is true. This was not, however, because she was a woman (female intellectuals were not at all uncommon in the Eastern Empire, among either pagans or Christians), or because she was a scientist and philosopher (the scientific and philosophical class of Alexandria comprised pagans, Jews, and Christians, and there was no popular Christian prejudice against science or philosophy). And it was certainly not because she was perceived as an enemy of the Christian faith; she got on quite well with the educated Christians of Alexandria, numbered many among her friends and students, and was intellectually far closer to them than to the temple cultists of the lower city; and the frankest account of her murder was written by the Christian historian Socrates, who obviously admired her immensely. It seems likely that she died simply because she became inadvertently involved in a vicious political squabble between the city’s imperial prefect and the city’s patriarch, and some of the savages of the lower city decided to take matters into their own hands . . . . Think of it as an ideal Marxist allegory. It may seem unimaginable to us now that Christians from the lower classes in late antique Alexandria could have conspired in the horrific assassination of an unarmed woman and a respected scholar, but, as it happens, that was how Alexandria was often governed at street level, by every sect and persuasion. In the royal quarter, pagans, Christians, and Jews generally studied together, shared a common intellectual culture, collaborated in scientific endeavor, and attended one another’s lectures. In the lower city, however, religious allegiance was often no more than a matter of tribal identity, and the various tribes often slaughtered one another with gay abandon. The chasm between the two worlds could scarcely have been vaster. Hypatia was a victim of what might fashionably be called a social contradiction”one that none of the science, philosophy, or religion of the time had ever done anything to resolve.>> Worth a thought or two. KFkairosfocus
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
08:40 AM
8
08
40
AM
PDT
BA, yes. A simple summary as at 60 above suffices to show what influences were pivotal, and what factors had to be in place antecedent to sustainable, large scale democracy. The times, places and trend lines make it plain as to what was at work. It is time that such was recognised for what it is. Yes, Christendom had its many sins and challenges (especially in trying to address civilisational collapse and barbarian invasions . . . just you try that for yourself and see if you can do better, maybe try a wargame or two . . . ) but that is by no means the whole story. Failure to recognise the great Christian contribution to our civilisation even as one goes hither and yon to give credit to anything and everything else, speaks volumes, sad volumes. KFkairosfocus
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
08:27 AM
8
08
27
AM
PDT
sean samis: The rise of liberty and democracy comes out of a deliberate effort to borrow heavily from Pre-Christian political practices; especially Republican Rome and the Grecian democracies. Other influences included the bureaucratic foundation left by the Roman Empire, as well that of pagan Scandinavians and their concepts of individual liberty and meritocracy. The former was entwined with Roman Catholicism, literate and with a common language, so they were both adopted together. The religious hierarchy also helped preserve lines of communication across the politically fractured continent, while providing a sense of a common European identity.Zachriel
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
08:23 AM
8
08
23
AM
PDT
SS, Pardon, but do you not see what your insistent attempt to denigrate, dismiss and edit out the major Christian and broader Hebraic or Judaeo-Christian contribution to the rise of modern liberty and democracy says about you and those like you? If you don't I suggest you ponder the summary at 60 above. Also, let me cite the Dutch in 1581 as they declared independence reflecting Vindicae:
. . . a prince is constituted by God to be ruler of a people, to defend them from oppression and violence as the shepherd his sheep; and whereas God did not create the people slaves to their prince, to obey his commands, whether right or wrong, but rather the prince for the sake of the subjects (without which he could be no prince), to govern them according to equity, to love and support them as a father his children or a shepherd his flock, and even at the hazard of life to defend and preserve them. And when he does not behave thus, but, on the contrary, oppresses them, seeking opportunities to infringe their ancient customs and privileges . . . then he is no longer a prince, but a tyrant, and the subjects are to consider him in no other view . . . This is the only method left for subjects whose humble petitions and remonstrances could never soften their prince or dissuade him from his tyrannical proceedings; and this is what the law of nature dictates for the defense of liberty, which we ought to transmit to posterity, even at the hazard of our lives. [–> note the direct parallel to the preamble, US Const] . . . . So, having no hope of reconciliation, and finding no other remedy, we have, agreeable to the law of nature in our own defense, and for maintaining the rights, privileges, and liberties of our countrymen, wives, and children, and latest posterity from being enslaved by the Spaniards, been constrained to renounce allegiance to the King of Spain, and pursue such methods as appear to us most likely to secure our ancient liberties and privileges [–> note the direct parallel to the US DoI].
Next, Locke c 1690 citing Canon Hooker in Ch 2 of his 2nd treatise on civil Govt:
. . . if I cannot but wish to receive good, even as much at every man's hands, as any man can wish unto his own soul, how should I look to have any part of my desire herein satisfied, unless myself be careful to satisfy the like desire which is undoubtedly in other men . . . my desire, therefore, to be loved of my equals in Nature, as much as possible may be, imposeth upon me a natural duty of bearing to themward fully the like affection. From which relation of equality between ourselves and them that are as ourselves, what several rules and canons natural reason hath drawn for direction of life no man is ignorant . . . [[Hooker then continues, citing Aristotle in The Nicomachean Ethics, Bk 8:] as namely, That because we would take no harm, we must therefore do none; That since we would not be in any thing extremely dealt with, we must ourselves avoid all extremity in our dealings; That from all violence and wrong we are utterly to abstain, with such-like . . . ] [[Eccl. Polity,preface, Bk I, "ch." 8, p.80]
Also, Blackstone in his Commentaries on the Laws of England, c 1765:
Man, considered as a creature, must necessarily be subject to the laws of his creator, for he is entirely a dependent being . . . consequently, as man depends absolutely upon his maker for every thing, it is necessary that he should in all points conform to his maker’s will. This will of his maker is called the law of nature. For as God, when he created matter, and endued it with a principle of mobility, established certain rules for the perpetual direction of that motion; so, when he created man, and endued him with freewill to conduct himself in all parts of life, he laid down certain immutable laws of human nature, whereby that freewill is in some degree regulated and restrained, and gave him also the faculty of reason to discover the purport of those laws . . . These are the eternal, immutable laws of good and evil, to which the creator himself in all his dispensations conforms; and which he has enabled human reason to discover, so far as they are necessary for the conduct of human actions. Such among others are these principles: that we should live honestly [NB: cf. Exod. 20:15 – 16], should hurt nobody [NB: cf. Rom 13:8 – 10], and should render to every one his due [NB: cf. Rom 13:6 – 7 & Exod. 20:15]; to which three general precepts Justinian[1: a Juris praecepta sunt hace, honeste vivere. alterum non laedere, suum cuique tribuere. Inst, 1. 1. 3] has reduced the whole doctrine of law [and, Corpus Juris, Justinian’s Christianised precis and pruning of perhaps 1,000 years of Roman jurisprudence, in turn is the foundation of law for much of Europe].
Yes, the original image for justice was indeed a goddess in the Greco-Roman pantheon. Which fits in with the putting up of a divine source for every important thing. (They did not know him who is Justice himself; but when they learned of him on the credible evidence of the resurrection of the long prophesied messiah, they turned to him in ever increasing numbers.) And, which testifies to the intuitive sense that we stand under moral government, expressed in the community through upholding the civil peace of justice. When it comes to mob rule, mobs and riots are always a problem, and one that every culture of significance must manage; such as we have seen again and again in recent years and as we have seen across history. And in that context, justice must temper the people power impulse, or democracy disintegrates into anarchy and chaos inviting the strong man or warlordism and clan feuds. KFkairosfocus
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
08:08 AM
8
08
08
AM
PDT
I summarize Sean Samis @ 64: "Modernity, including liberal democracy and the scientific revolution, grew out of Christian Western Europe and nowhere else, because Christian Western Europe rejected its Christian worldview in favor of a pre-modern pagan worldview." They walk among us folks.Barry Arrington
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
07:58 AM
7
07
58
AM
PDT
In further response to kairosfocus @58
...I suggest you go re-read the history of the rise of modern liberty and democracy as a globally significant factor over the past half millennium.
I am familiar with it. After the horrors of the religious wars into the early 17th century, western Europeans searched for an alternative to their penchant for slaughtering each other. The rise of liberty and democracy comes out of a deliberate effort to borrow heavily from Pre-Christian political practices; especially Republican Rome and the Grecian democracies. These did not grow from Christian doctrines or theology but from Pagan cultural practices. Christianity’s contribution to this process can be summed up as their willingness to go OUTSIDE their own practices and belief systems and borrow extensively from non-Christian sources. sean s.sean samis
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
07:12 AM
7
07
12
AM
PDT
KF @ 60 That was an excellent overview - thank you for sharing it in context of your personal experience also.
As the American experiment succeeded and as Britain and its colonies continued a more gradual emergence, that started a trend that spread. But it should be realised that the main global spread of Democracy is the past 100 – 200 years, and indeed the past several decades of the post colonial then post cold war era . . . de facto World War III, and it has overlapped slow-burn World War IV with the rise again of radical IslamISM.
I could question this to some degree, at the same time. The American experiment has been successful and 200 years is a remarkable longevity for a political system. At the same time, we do see the weaknesses in American democracy now, and they're traced to things you cited. First, a successful democracy requires an educated public -- but more importantly, as every little issue emerges for debate and voting, the public has to spend more and more time on political education. This causes fatigue and people soon surrender their vote to representatives who they think will "do the right thing" - so the populace doesn't have to think about politics. This has not been successful. More importantly, the American experiment succeeded for the reason you gave - it possessed a unified spiritual and intellectual culture (post-Reformation British) with centuries of Christian restraint built into the character of the people. So, when there were calls for freedom and liberation, this was not interpreted as anarchy. But the very same culture that provided enlightened liberty (and the benefits of prosperity for many who were oppressed otherwise), has ended up being destroyed by unbridled liberty, individualism, subjectivism and the breakdown of the church communities that were the founding-organizations of the nation. It's interesting, that the revolution of 1776 not only put off oppression by the colonial power, but in America it created a wedge between British culture and the 'rebels'. So, the new American culture tried to be non-British -- and therefore was cut off from the heritage of the past. This left the door open for a new, secular culture to emerge. We see the results of this today - the new culture can redefine anything and legislate anything. Islam merely walks into the vacuum left by this collapse. Islamic religious, moral and social culture is highly integrated with politics -- so it has all those strengths. The American culture has little, except money and military force, to stop it. There is very little counter-acting Christian culture to replace Islam (if the day ever came when that conflict was more open) except for Evangelical Christians who remain a minority in the population and who have not (yet) proven to be unifying in terms of political strength or cultural change.Silver Asiatic
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
06:18 AM
6
06
18
AM
PDT
StephenB @59
How would you protect against mob rule?
Like the Christian mob that burned the library in Alexandria? the Christian mobs who butchered Jews in the middle ages? the Christian mobs who murdered indigenous peoples all over the world? the Christian mobs who lynched blacks in America? Whatever might protect us from mob rule, it ain’t Christianity.
It doesn’t ignore anything. The Judeo-Christian view is compatible with any political system that recognizes the inherent dignity of the human person.
Like Jim Crow laws? And apartheid? Hmm. The claim I was responding to was not that the Judeo-Christian view “is compatible with” democracy; the claim was that ONLY “a Judeo – Christian anthropology” can serve as a foundation to democracy; which is a false claim.
Aquinas recognized that point in the 13th Century.
... so it took more than 1300 years for SOME Christians to discover that Christianity opposes Tyranny? As I said...
The natural moral law is the only way to differentiate between a just or unjust civil law. Do you know of any other way? If so, please share it.
You’ve seen my alternative many times, and have yet to respond to in in any meaningful way. And in the context of your other comments, you again tie your “natural moral law” to Christianity, which makes it religious. sean s.sean samis
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
05:21 AM
5
05
21
AM
PDT
kairosfocus @58
PS: While you are at it, please take a stab at explaining the typical sculptural representation of justice.
The typical sculptural representation is of Justitia or Lady Justice. She is a PAGAN Roman goddess of Justice equivalent to the PAGAN Greek goddesses Themis. She is a personification of the moral force in judicial systems. The scales of justice represent truth and falsehood. The Romans appear to have added the blindfold to indicate impartiality. sean s.sean samis
July 28, 2015
July
07
Jul
28
28
2015
05:19 AM
5
05
19
AM
PDT
SB (attn SS): Recall also that once populations move beyond a small city state, to govern democratically and stably i/l/o the civil peace of justice, you need adequate communications both physical and informational, thus the printing press and a broad base of literacy and elementary education including basic civics. You also need sufficient of an agricultural and trading base and wider economy that things like famine are rare relatively speaking. (Absent that, governance inevitably falls to a governance-leisure class that has relative education, wealth and stability advantages. If you are lucky, that class is relatively open. Where, frankly as far as that goes, a monastic class that is open and relatively merit based allied to a heavy cavalry armoured warrior class -- that implies major costs, expenses and a massive investment in training -- restrained by a code of protecting the peasantry was a reasonable solution in the teeth of the circumstances after the collapse of the W Roman Empire. Where, the rise of longbowmen, pike men and musketry was a later, democratising force as a soldier is much cheaper than a knight or a cataphract etc. Under such circumstances the societal challenge is to keep chaos, collapse, invasion and mass death to disease at bay and it is unlikely to have any great knowledge base to work from.) How do I know this? Post slavery, across a bit over 100 years, that was the challenge facing the anglophone Caribbean, esp Jamaica. Free villages backed by dissenter churches in the main, schools based in the village church, subsistence farming with cash crops, growing literacy and experience with community organisation laid a base for local self government and independence. And, though there are big problems, the region as a whole has managed not to fall into chaos and despotism. As you rightly highlight, that further demands a critical mass or general consensus on worldview and social agenda, with an emphasis on grounding and guarding the civil peace of justice. Which puts natural moral law and its core principles at the pivot. The practical import of all of this is that democracy (as opposed to mob rule and rule by a narrow elite of first class citizens constituting a ruling class) in large scale societies based on a broad based or universal franchise was not feasible until the widespread existence of printing, paper or the equivalent, a books trade, a literate public of primary level education and the existence of regular newspapers. Also, a military technology that could allow a peasant to become a successful soldier or sailor, providing adequate defence based on a modern army and navy. With, a culture dominated by a worldview that sustains responsible freedom under natural law based civil codes and also a sound work ethic. The first time and place in history where that was met was reformation era Northern Europe, especially the island of Great Britain -- and we should recall that after the Black Death pandemic, the 100 yr wars and decades of civil war then the Tudors and King James and co, the breakthrough point was the glorious revolution of 1688, which at last created stability and a theory that guided what would emerge. Then, this spread to North America in the colonies of Britain. So, it is no surprise that modern liberty and democracy were hammered out there and in extensions in Australasia. Where, the second breakthrough was the American Revolution starting with its DoI and its successful Constitution. And, it is no surprise that the Judaeo-Christian tradition was the dominant shaping tradition, as I took time to document here on in context, also in the parallel thread: https://uncommondescent.com/religion/carpathian-and-ilk-vs-the-first-amendment-to-the-us-constitution/ for the case of 1st amdt, US const. As the American experiment succeeded and as Britain and its colonies continued a more gradual emergence, that started a trend that spread. But it should be realised that the main global spread of Democracy is the past 100 - 200 years, and indeed the past several decades of the post colonial then post cold war era . . . de facto World War III, and it has overlapped slow-burn World War IV with the rise again of radical IslamISM. Democratisation in substance -- as opposed to mob rule manipulated by political messianism and/or cronyism or even mafia-ism -- is a process that is far from finished. I should note that electronic communications starting with telegraph, were vital to the feasibility of a continent-spanning democracy, as pioneered by the US, Canada and Australia. Beyond this zone of the English-speaking peoples, democracy spread by example and rising aspiration of peoples who saw a better way. And, of course, in the aftermath of the collapse and discrediting of major alternatives such as fascism and marxism and the like. But in these cases, there is an ongoing challenge of cultural consensus and in-the-bones, absorbed- with- mother's- milk intuitive understanding of democratic civil society. In short, democratisation takes generations of cultural transformation, and is easily hampered by political messianism and fundamentally undemocratic and unsound ideologies and worldviews that undermine responsible rational freedom and free enterprise based productivity. Where also, of course the rise of evolutionary materialist scientistic radically secularist ideology and statist political messianism with ruthless nihilistic factions and linked family breakdown in the core lands of the founding of modern constitutional democracy, is a warning flag. For, the core premise of democracy is responsible, rational freedom in a community that understands, promotes and guards the civil peace of justice. When therefore I see attempts to denigrate what drove the rise of modern liberty and democracy in the nation-state, I take it as a very serious sign indeed. I wonder if some of those so busily trying to discredit the Judaeo-Christian heritage would think if they saw someone who could not bring himself to acknowledge that black people or predominantly black communities had ever done anything good or a significant contribution to progress, but instead was forever dwelling on a litany of the sins of black individuals and communities, and always sought to find another source to praise for any progressive contribution. With, continual resort being made to fears of blacks seizing power and imposing abusive domination. I am sure such would immediately and rightly cry racism. As, say, we could see in Apartheid era South Africa. In that light, as a black man and Christian, I find myself compelled to highlight a clear pattern of anti-Christian animosity and even bigotry. Even as Apartheid era South Africa was the last bastion of institutionalised racism. So, the pattern we have been seeing trips serious warning flags. It is time for fresh and more soundly balanced thinking. KFkairosfocus
July 27, 2015
July
07
Jul
27
27
2015
11:52 PM
11
11
52
PM
PDT
anthropic
On what basis can we say a democracy is better than a tyranny? Why SHOULD the people have any say at all? The only answer comes from a Judeo – Christian anthropology which says that individual humans are created Imago Dei, and the government is not. Resent it all you wish: The basis for democracy, human rights, and limited government power is the deity of the Bible.
sean samis
This is wrong on so many levels. It completely ignores the existence of democracy in many non-Christian and pre-Christian cultures; from Ancient Greece to Precolumbian America.
No, it doesn't. It defines the difference between a good democracy (grounded in natural law) and a bad democracy (mob rule). How would you protect against mob rule?
It completely ignores the near-total absence of democracies among Christians until about 1300, and their rarity until modern times. The biblical imperative for democracy is another one of those Christian fundamentals that took many centuries for Christians to even notice much less put into effect.
It doesn't ignore anything. The Judeo-Christian view is compatible with any political system that recognizes the inherent dignity of the human person. Aquinas recognized that point in the 13th Century. Tyranny of any kind, whether of the majority or minority, does not. What world view would you recommend as a standard for forming a political system? Atheism/materialism/secularism? Pantheism? Islam? Deism? Christianity? Buddhism? Hinduism? Please be specific and explain your answer.
Finally, it ignores the practical justification for democracy: the burden of bad leadership falls most heavily on ordinary people; it is only just that they get to choose their leaders. Government by elites or aristocrats have no record of being even a whit better; never mind that of thugs.
What matters is whether or not government respects the people and gives them a voice. It doesn't matter which form it takes as long as it promotes justice, which is defined by God's laws. The natural moral law is the only way to differentiate between a just or unjust civil law. Do you know of any other way? If so, please share it.StephenB
July 27, 2015
July
07
Jul
27
27
2015
05:24 PM
5
05
24
PM
PDT
SS, I suggest you go re-read the history of the rise of modern liberty and democracy as a globally significant factor over the past half millennium. KF PS: While you are at it, please take a stab at explaining the typical sculptural representation of justice.kairosfocus
July 27, 2015
July
07
Jul
27
27
2015
03:11 PM
3
03
11
PM
PDT
anthropic @56
On what basis can we say a democracy is better than a tyranny? Why SHOULD the people have any say at all? The only answer comes from a Judeo – Christian anthropology which says that individual humans are created Imago Dei, and the government is not. Resent it all you wish: The basis for democracy, human rights, and limited government power is the deity of the Bible.
This is wrong on so many levels. It completely ignores the existence of democracy in many non-Christian and pre-Christian cultures; from Ancient Greece to Precolumbian America. It completely ignores the near-total absence of democracies among Christians until about 1300, and their rarity until modern times. The biblical imperative for democracy is another one of those Christian fundamentals that took many centuries for Christians to even notice much less put into effect. Finally, it ignores the practical justification for democracy: the burden of bad leadership falls most heavily on ordinary people; it is only just that they get to choose their leaders. Government by elites or aristocrats have no record of being even a whit better; never mind that of thugs. sean s.sean samis
July 27, 2015
July
07
Jul
27
27
2015
01:26 PM
1
01
26
PM
PDT
S 53 "The government in a democracy is presumed to derive its legitimacy and authority from the expressed will of the governed." Then you reject the Bill of Rights and the rest of the Constitution, which deliberately limits the authority and legitimacy of the "expressed will" of the governed. By your criteria, it is okay to send the Jews to the ovens if Hitler wins the election. It is okay for Southerners to keep black slaves so long as a majority are in favor. And in some Muslim lands, it is okay to keep girls uneducated since that is the will of the people. Bad as these examples are, they aren't even the fundamental issue with your criteria. On what basis can we say a democracy is better than a tyranny? Why SHOULD the people have any say at all? The only answer comes from a Judeo - Christian anthropology which says that individual humans are created Imago Dei, and the government is not. Resent it all you wish: The basis for democracy, human rights, and limited government power is the deity of the Bible. By trying to sever that connection, you are right back where Carpathian is seated, busily sawing through the tree limb that both of you sit upon.anthropic
July 26, 2015
July
07
Jul
26
26
2015
03:23 PM
3
03
23
PM
PDT
F/N: Notice the continued refusal to actually address the issue of the nature of justice as symbolised by that blindfolded lady bearing scales and sword. KFkairosfocus
July 26, 2015
July
07
Jul
26
26
2015
07:11 AM
7
07
11
AM
PDT
Seversky, the issue of reformation in the face of a wrongful majority shows the pivotal importance of justice as key to legitimacy. Justice and rights show the issue of our being under moral government, and this then raises the issue of grounding OUGHT beyond might and manipulation make 'right.' Unless our interior life is a grand delusion, we are under government of ought, and that points to the grounding of Ought. After centuries of debate, there is just one serious candidate, the inherently good creator God, a necessary and maximally great being and root of reality, worthy of ultimate loyalty and the reasonable service of doing the good in accordance with our evident nature. So, ethical theists are very on target to point to the importance of nationhood and government under God. Which is exactly what we may read in the 2nd paragraph of the US DoI, the charter for modern liberty and democracy. A state paper, and one of great historical impact. KFkairosfocus
July 26, 2015
July
07
Jul
26
26
2015
07:07 AM
7
07
07
AM
PDT
anthropic @ 47
Pardon me for quoting myself: “So does this mean that Paul teaches obedience to a state that rewards evil and restrains good? Such a state is clearly in rebellion against God. Since it directly defies God’s purposes, and all real authority comes from God, then it has no real authority.”
The government in a democracy is presumed to derive its legitimacy and authority from the expressed will of the governed. I strongly resent and reject any claim that such authority can only come from the alleged approval of the deity of one particular faith. There have been - and are - religious regimes every bit as tyrannical as secular. It is hubris to imagine that a claimed belief in Christianity makes one proof against all-too-human failings. The only measure of true Christians, in my view is whether they are observed to practice the cardinal virtues of their faith such a as charity, compassion and humility.Seversky
July 26, 2015
July
07
Jul
26
26
2015
06:19 AM
6
06
19
AM
PDT
Rom 2:5 But because of your hard and impenitent heart you are storing up wrath for yourself on the day of wrath when God's righteous judgment will be revealed. 6 He will render to each one according to his works: 7 to those who by patience in well-doing seek for glory and honor and immortality, he will give eternal life; 8 but for those who are self-seeking[a] and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness, there will be wrath and fury. 9 There will be tribulation and distress for every human being who does evil . . .kairosfocus
July 26, 2015
July
07
Jul
26
26
2015
03:50 AM
3
03
50
AM
PDT
John 3:19 And this is the judgment: the light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil. 20 For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his works should be exposed. 21 But whoever does what is true comes to the light, so that it may be clearly seen that his works have been carried out in God.”kairosfocus
July 26, 2015
July
07
Jul
26
26
2015
03:48 AM
3
03
48
AM
PDT
Eph 4:17 Now this I say and testify in the Lord, that you must no longer walk as the Gentiles do, in the futility of their minds. 18 They are darkened in their understanding, alienated from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, due to their hardness of heart. 19 They have become callous and have given themselves up to sensuality, greedy to practice every kind of impurity. 20 But that is not the way you learned Christ!— 21 assuming that you have heard about him and were taught in him, as the truth is in Jesus, 22 to put off your old self,[f] which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires, 23 and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, 24 and to put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness. 25 Therefore, having put away falsehood, let each one of you speak the truth with his neighbor . . .kairosfocus
July 26, 2015
July
07
Jul
26
26
2015
03:47 AM
3
03
47
AM
PDT
Matt 6:22 .. Sermon on the Mount . . . “The eye is the lamp of the body. So, if your eye is healthy, your whole body will be full of light, 23 but if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light in you is darkness, how great is the darkness!kairosfocus
July 26, 2015
July
07
Jul
26
26
2015
03:45 AM
3
03
45
AM
PDT
Isa 5:20 Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter! 21 Woe to those who are wise in their own eyes, and shrewd in their own sight! 22 Woe to those who are heroes at drinking wine, and valiant men in mixing strong drink, 23 who acquit the guilty for a bribe, and deprive the innocent of his right! [ESV]kairosfocus
July 26, 2015
July
07
Jul
26
26
2015
03:43 AM
3
03
43
AM
PDT
Pardon me for quoting myself: "So does this mean that Paul teaches obedience to a state that rewards evil and restrains good? Such a state is clearly in rebellion against God. Since it directly defies God’s purposes, and all real authority comes from God, then it has no real authority." Now consider the following: "The U.S. Department of Justice announced plans to investigate the group that produced undercover videos showing Planned Parenthood employees admitting that they harvest and sell organs ripped from the bodies aborted babies. Politico reported the news of the coming DOJ investigation earlier today: JUSTICE TO PROBE CENTER FOR MEDICAL PROGRESS — While congressional committees investigate Planned Parenthood’s practices, the Justice Department agreed to look into whether the group that released the sting videos obtained the footage legally. In response to a request by House Democrats, Attorney General Loretta Lynch said Wednesday afternoon that Justice would “review all of the information and determine what the appropriate steps moving forward would be.” Planned Parenthood has staunchly defended its practices and claims that the Center for Medical Progress illegally obtained its footage, then excessively edited it to misrepresent what the organization does. The DOJ investigation of the Center for Medical Progress, which, unlike Planned Parenthood, is not in the business of killing healthy, viable unborn babies in order to sell their organs for cash, was announced after several Democratic lawmakers called for the organization to be targeted" See more at: http://americanactionnews.com/articles/doj-goes-after-first-ammendment-and-pro-life-supporters#sthash.Uori011R.dpufanthropic
July 25, 2015
July
07
Jul
25
25
2015
10:51 PM
10
10
51
PM
PDT
Goodusername and StephenB, thanks for the thoughtful replies. SB, you make a very important point: We cannot simply take one statement out of context on such a complex subject. Context is vital, as is the testimony of other scriptures, as I tried to point out. I agree that the normal situation is that Christians are to obey legitimate authority. If, however, the authority commands what God forbids, or forbids what God commands, Christians have a duty to disobey. Otherwise, the state is God. GU, even if all we had on the subject of legitimate authority was Paul's letter to the Romans, it still wouldn't justify blind obedience to the state. He makes it perfectly clear that the state is under God -- a servant -- and that its purpose is to restrain evil and reward good. No twisting, no distortion. That's what Paul says. That is precisely the context for his statements about authority being established by God. So does this mean that Paul teaches obedience to a state that rewards evil and restrains good? Such a state is clearly in rebellion against God. Since it directly defies God's purposes, and all real authority comes from God, then it has no real authority. Not only does this logic comport well with Romans 12 & 13, it also is consistent with scriptures dealing with these issues. Rahab hiding the spies, the wise men ignoring King Herod's instructions, Peter's response in Acts ("We must obey God rather than men." -- thanks, SB), all fit this pattern.anthropic
July 25, 2015
July
07
Jul
25
25
2015
10:30 PM
10
10
30
PM
PDT
Carpathian: If abortion is deemed “illegal” by a church, that “illegality” applies only to the members of that church. Sure, but they have every right to advocate for its abolition, and elect representatives that represent their views. In the case of abortion, however, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled there are privacy issues involved, and that the government has little say before viability. We used the example of murder. A politician might advocate for a law against murder on religious grounds citing Exodus, another might support the law on practical grounds, another for strictly political reasons because that is what her constituents want. All of these are valid political reasons, and as the law has a valid secular purpose, it should pass muster with the courts.Zachriel
July 25, 2015
July
07
Jul
25
25
2015
12:40 PM
12
12
40
PM
PDT
anthropic
The scriptures are replete with examples of people who either went along with established authority to do evil (think Judas and the Sanhedrin) or defied established authority to do good (such as Rahab the prostitute hiding the spies). The former are condemned, the latter praised.
Right you are--on both counts. Clearly, Roman's 13 is the default position, exhorting Christians to submit to legitimate authority. However, as you seem to imply, that standard is not being met when man is being asked to submit to sin, or to support a radically sinful regime. As St. Peter said, “Whether it is right in the sight of God to give heed to you (the state) rather than to God, you be the judge; for we cannot stop speaking about what we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:19–20). Later, the rulers confronted the apostles again and reminded them of their command to not teach about Jesus, but Peter responded, “We must obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29). On the other hand, one cannot use this rationale as an excuse to justify disobedience to legitimate authority on the grounds that mistakes are sometimes made. Obedience is the normal and proper reaction to the authority of a legitimate government. So, the big question is this: Is it Scriptural to establish a rule of self government as a response to tyranny, which clearly does not qualify as a legitimate, God ordained, political system. In this context, I would argue that we must understand both St. Paul and St Peter in context and answer with a resounding, "yes." We cannot simply read one section of Scripture and hope to grasp the complexities or political morality. Any form of government, including a representative republic, is Scriptural if it is based on moral principles, especially the proposition that God grants natural rights based on the natural moral law, which all citizens, leaders first, are bound to submit.StephenB
July 25, 2015
July
07
Jul
25
25
2015
12:04 PM
12
12
04
PM
PDT
1 2 3 4

Leave a Reply