"This capability is not based on intelligence or logic per se…but rather on the inherent goodness written on their heart by God."
**Where does this come from, and why are 98% of the posters on this forum convinced that this is true? I mean when the phrase “the inherent goodness written on their heart by God” is used within any context. I have an intense aversion to this concept as I understand it. What does “goodness written on the heart” really mean?
Limerick **
We live in a fallen world–we are not “perfect.”
Consider that there is certain information written which God wrote on our hearts, as it says in the Bible. In order to fully be able to use that information, we have to learn to use the sense which allows us to perceive that information, our conscience.
Consider it like a physical sense, say that of sight. One thing that really amazed me when my oldest was very little was that she spent some time checking out patterns on material. She felt them with her fingers. She *saw *variations, and she *felt *that they were inherent in the material. She had to learn that just because she saw a variation didn’t mean that there existed some difference, that the item could be smooth. And children go through a lot of that.
Consider too, that a person who is born blind but whose sight is restored at a much later age, say as an adult, has to “learn” to see. He has to learn about perspective so that he can pick up a glass. The same thing happens to me when I get new glasses: they say my eyes have to adjust to the new glasses, but this is a process of my learning to see with the new glasses.
In the same way, we have to learn how to use our consciences. Those of us who are lucky have parents and others around us who help us learn this. They say things like, That’s wrong; how would you feel if…; etc.
Sadly, some of us do not have as much help, and that causes some to have badly formed consciences. Sin also clouds the conscience, just as doing something dangerous with one’s eyes like staring at the sun clouds our ability to see.
I have used the sense of sight to illustrate this, but one might object to the imperfection of this analogy. I used sight because it is commonly understood. The imperfection in the analogy can be answered with the idea that grammars are written in our minds, but this is a less-known and less-understood phenomenon. However, facts like that a pidgin language becomes a true language when the children learn and use it at a very young age and impose grammar on it, and various grammatical features are always linked, show that we are born with a sort of reservoir of grammar. So we are born with morality “written on our hearts.”
For when the Gentiles, who have not the law, do by nature those things that are of the law; these having not the law are a law to themselves: Who shew the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience bearing witness to them, and their thoughts between themselves accusing, or also defending one another,