Hello, JC,
Thank you for your response.
The worshippers of Baal, along with many other ancient (and some less ancient) cultures have held similar views to the one articulated in "Peace Child." But what does this tell us? It could mean that my argument of intrinsic principals is simply not correct. It could also mean that they rejected all forms of light (true information) that God sent them and they became hardened to such an extent that virtue and honesty became repugnant to them.
Before responding here - for the sake of clarity, could you flesh out what you mean by "
intrinsic principles"? Intrinsic to what, exactly?
Playing the cultual "get out of jail free" card eschews personal responsibility. Anyone can claim the reason they abuse their children is because their own father abused them. I say they abuse their children because their hearts are evil, regardless of their upbringing.
I find the issue to be potentially more complex. Are such hearts necessarily evil, or may they be fundamentally damaged? The human psyche is not invincible, and even human choice is not illimited. Heaven knows that we are dust, and is justly merciful.
Emmet, I have four older siblings (three brothers, one sister) and we all grew up in the same culture with the same parents. My brothers are not Christians, yet my sister and I are. I'm not even sure, to this day, if my own parents are Christians. My childhood indoctrination was opposite to what I currently believe and live by. You might argue that I learned Christian principals after reading some books on the subject. However, you've probably read many of those same books. I read the gospels and it changed my life. Bertrand Russell reads the same writings and says, "Rubbish!" What then does it boil down to if not one's upbringing and education? Show me a child from an abused home who shoots up his school and I'll show you a child who grew up in worse circumstances and gives his life to rescue his enemy from drowning.
So if we are to take the subject group of the five siblings in your family, we may find that you have a relatively common pool of influences. We will also find, upon closer examination, that you have had a diversity of experiences:
e.g., different teachers, different intimates, different exposure to media, even different individual experiences with your own parents. We may also find some manner of difference in body chemistry, especially since you are not all of the same gender.
How are we to determine, then, which differences in behavior/character are a product of external formation, and which are a matter of intrinsic inclination, and which are an outcome of culpable human choice? The matter is staggeringly complex, and serves as ample justification for why God is the arbiter of human souls, and we are not.
kaufmannphillips: I wasn't making an appeal to authority. As for the "highest authority" of "a created being"... pray tell, what single thought do you have that swimmeth not in the matrix of your human mind?
JC: I believe our Creator gave us a mind to engage in thought and, therefore, we possess the ability to reject lies in favor of truth. But the truth itself can be discovered a number of ways. God is not limited in that respect. However, one can't say truth isn't truth simply because it's ascertained through using our minds.
We possess some capacity for thought and discovery, yes. What we do
not possess is is an infallible ability to discern truth.
So truth is truth regardless of whether or not our minds have apprehended it, but we cannot
ascertain that our minds have rightly apprehended any truth, because our minds are subject to fallibility. And neither you nor I can know anything better than a human can know it - so human fallibility casts its shadow over even an appeal to (what is "known" about) the highest authority.
kaufmannphillips: And what solitary thing do you perceive that passeth not through the filter of human perception?
JC: I perceive that killing you because you disagree with me would be an evil and hideous act before God. I also perceive that taking a bullet for you or any of your loved ones without a second thought might please God as well. Could these perceptions be filtered out? Let us hope not.
Rather, let us hope that they be filtered as God sees fit.
(Cf. Numbers 25:6-13)
kaufmannphillips: So whatever you have to say, and whatever I have to say, it all passes through the eye of the human needle, and we should not pretend otherwise. Where, then, shall we find "objective foundation"?
JC: We have the light of conscience and the light of revelation. Both can be corrupted to suit one's evil desires and both can be adhered to in persuit of seeking truth and pleasing God.
And despite intention or motivation, both can be misapprehended, thus betraying truth.
Humans are only capable of subjective knowledge - that is, they can only possess human knowledge. Thus, humans cannot be certain that their thoughts correspond to an objective foundation.
kaufmannphillips: One may just as well ask: Why wouldn't these principles originate in the reflections of the human mind?
JC: They could, but possible doesn't equate to probable. Someone outside of the limitations of the physical world had to have given us rational minds. In other words, the fact that we even have a rational mind should tell us there's a rational creator.
It is highly probable that the rational mind was a product of design, but even "highly probable" doesn't equate to "certain." Occasionally, random matters give the illusion of design.
Besides which, the design of the human mind does not validate every principle that swims within it as a faithful reflection of the genius of God. The human mind is capable of imagining much.
Reason and logic exist, whether or not we choose to engage in such things. If that's true, they must be objective and will not depend on culture, education or upbringing. Rather, logic and reason exist because those are laws that have been set in place.
And what guarantee have we that human logic or reason corresponds to objective reality? Human history has supplied plenty of "logical" and "reasonable" concepts that have been overturned or exposed as lacking.
I also see no reason why God would make the physical world act on a constant, and yet make moral choices completely subjective. If our choice to do good or evil simply boils down to culture and experience, then no one could be held responsible for evil acts... except the Creator. I'm not so arrogant as to posit such a notion about the one who made us.
I am not stating that God has no standards. But human knowledge and understanding is by definition subjective, and God weighs the character of our choices in light of the resources we have had available to us - both within ourselves and without, and both for better
and for worse.
Shlamaa,
Emmet