[MD] Christian Ethics and U.S. Law
pholden at davtv.com
pholden at davtv.com
Wed Jan 24 11:47:42 PST 2007
Quoting Arlo Bensinger <ajb102 at psu.edu>:
> [Platt]
> Where are homosexuality and not keeping the sabbath crimes?
>
> [Arlo]
> You've used "Christian ethics" as support for why homosexual marriage
> should be illegal. Wouldn't the same stance call for making doing
> business on Sunday illegal? Why not?
>
> [Platt]
> But your constant attack on Christian ethics flies in the face of
> religious tolerance, something the Founding Fathers tried to build into law.
>
> [Arlo]
> When I have attacked Christian ethics? This is about legislating one
> particular ethical system. What the "founders" did was create a legal
> system based on Reason, not on God. You have yet to prove how our
> legal system derives from the Bible, other than saying the "founders"
> said "God" once and a while. This begets the question, can't you
> believe in God and create laws based on reason? In other words, just
> because some of them claimed to be "Christian" does not mean the
> basis for the legal system they developed derives from Biblical law.
> Indeed, it doesn't. "Religious tolerance" itself is a humanist stance
> built on reason. What "God" do you know of that preached respect and
> tolerance for other's people's foreign "gods"? "Christian ethics" is
> quite clear, "Have no other God before me". Hardly "religious tolerance".
>
> [Platt]
> Just shows how frustrating it can be to try to legislate morality,
> and how easy it is for those who rail against religion to exhibit hypocrisy.
>
> [Arlo]
> Kindly point out where I have "railed against religion"?
>
> [Arlo previously]
> No, I'm saying if _you_ want to legislate "Christian ethics", this is
> what it would entail. You can't pick small pieces, ignore the rest,
> and then claim you support law "based on Christian ethics".
>
> [Platt]
> I don't know why not. Take the best and leave the rest. We do it all the time.
>
> [Arlo]
> A good philosophy, but not one based in "Christian ethics". Where did
> God, for example, say "take the best and leave the rest"?
>
> [Platt]
> I don't support the Christian Coalition any more than I support the
> PC Nazis. Both are cut from the same cloth -- intolerant.
>
> [Arlo]
> Fair enough.
>
> [Arlo offered Pirsig's statement]
> "And yet, although Jefferson called this doctrine of social equality
> "self-evident," it is not at all self-evident. Scientific evidence
> and the social evidence of history indicate the opposite is
> self-evident. There is no "self-evidence" in European history that
> all men are created equal. There's no nation in Europe that doesn't
> trace its history to a time when it was "self-evident" that all men
> are created unequal. Jean Jacques Rousseau, who is sometimes given
> credit for this doctrine, certainly didn't get it from the history of
> Europe or Asia or Africa. He got it from the impact of the New World
> upon Europe and from contemplation of one particular kind of
> individual who lived in the New World, the person he called the
> "Noble Savage." (LILA)
>
> [Platt]
> I'm no Biblical scholar, but didn't Jesus imply if not actually say
> that we're all God's children and so equal?
>
> [Arlo]
> Jesus told people to do Good works, regardless of the "faith" or
> social position of the recipient. But still left God's Grace only for
> those who converted.
>
> [Platt]
> You assign to the Founding Fathers the same seriousness as football
> players? Arlo, I'm nonplussed.
>
> [Arlo]
> I don't deify people. The founders were people. They got some things
> right, and some things wrong. Some things very right, and some things
> very wrong.
>
> [Platt]
> What I don't understand is you want to take the Bible literally yet
> lecture that we shouldn't take words metaphorically. Perhaps you can
> clear up my confusion.
>
> [Arlo]
> This is not my position, Platt, it appears to be yours. What I have
> said is that if you want to claim legislation based on "Christian
> ethics", and you literalize parts of that into law, it seems odd that
> you'd ignore the rest, especially the most important parts. All I've
> suggested is to go one way or the other. If you want "Christian
> ethics" to be your basis for government, you can't pick and choose.
> Otherwise you're not basing your government on "Christian ethics" but
> on selected parts to control others. Now, you can take the whole
> thing as metaphor, but then you can't legislate bits and pieces as
> literal truth.
>
> Now, you can say you've abstracted FROM Christian ethics, those
> ethical stances that you feel best order society. But then you are
> right back to law based on reason, with God tossed in here and there
> for authority. In other words, your bits and pieces do not derive
> from the mandate of the Christian God (who would be appalled that you
> are taking bits and pieces) but from your reason. God is just
> paper-authority. Something we can do without.
>
> [Platt]
> A slave owns nothing except what is granted to her by her master. Is
> this your idea of an ideal society?
>
> [Arlo]
> Without property ownership, there is no "master" as no one own
> property. You are talking about "controlled ownership", not an
> abolition of property ownership altogether.
>
> Like I said, ownership entails a mutual agreement to limit my freedom
> in order to give you exclusive freedom. When you buy a lake, the rest
> of us are very much "less free". The more property gets fenced off,
> the less freedom we all have. And all this is in exchange for a small
> bit of "exclusive freedom".
>
> [Platt]
> American Indians enslaved (owned) their captives. And traded what
> they owned for rifles and other white man goods.
>
> [Arlo]
> Perhaps we should start a new thread, "Property and Freedom"?
>
> [Platt]
> And where are the Indians today?
>
> [Arlo]
> Exterminated in large part and forced to live in otherwise unwanted land.
>
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