It must be noted that the 10 commandments are distinct from the Levitical laws. We know the difference between temporary disciplines and permanent moral commandments based on the revelation of God through the Church.
Take the commandment to “Keep holy the Sabbath day”. The Church has changed the day from Saturday to Sunday and has changed the rules for what can and cannot be done on that day. It has changed the rules about men uncovering their heads in Church; Jews don’t Christian men do. Despite all these changes you are claiming that the Commandments are permanent? You have a very strange idea of permanent.
First of all, you have no positive evidence that humans are temporary.
All scientists, even YEC scientists, agree that there was a time when there were no humans. If humans had a start then there was a time without humans therefore humans are temporary. Remember the Kalaam argument, “Everything that has a beginning also has an end”? Humans individually and collectively had a beginning.
Secondly, this boils down a a division between teleology and metaphysical naturalism. Buddhism does not propose anything beyond the material particular, and is almost exactly the same as atheism in this respect.
Complete and utter rubbish. Please look up all the immaterial beings proposed by Buddhism: mahoragas, pretas, kinnaras, gandharvas, devas/gods, Mara, Yama and all the Bodhisattvas: Maitreya/Mettaya, Manjushri, Avalokita and so forth. There are immaterial Buddhist heavens and hells. Your ignorance of Buddhism is leading you into error. Buddhism is not a metaphysical naturalism.
Under this system, morality has no real nature, only being a convention. In a teleological system, the particular has a purpose which usually entails a universal.
You are misunderstanding karma. It does not have a purpose, but it is more than a convention. You
will suffer the consequences of your actions. Karma is as real as gravity. There is no purpose to gravity, yet it exists and is more than a convention. Similarly for karma.
So, the question is not so much whether morality is short lived or permanent, but rather between whether morality is objectively real or whether it is just convention.
This is a false dichotomy. The answer lies between the two. It is not objectively real in the sense which I suspect you mean. It is more than convention. It is as real as the force of gravity.
Looking at the overall philosophical position, you acknowledge that the war crimes of the Nazis could be morally justified in some different set of particulars, perhaps far in the future.
I do no such thing. It is you who keep harping on about the Nazis. What the Nazis did was wrong at the time they did it.
Using the Kalama sutta, I find that Buddhism fails because it potentially legitimizes anything given the proper circumstances, even if those circumstances are not in the here and now.
Irrelevant. Is the Bible wrong because in the past it was used to legitimize burning witches to death? I am using the Kalama sutta, and Buddhist scripture in general, to determine my morality here and now, that is all. There is a lot more in Buddhist scripture than just the Kalama sutta.
Because God’s nature is permanent, and that is the source of everything.
God changes along with everything else. An unchanging God cannot either create or sustain a changing world:On the first day God said “Let there be light,” and on the second day God said “Let there be light,” and on the third day God said “Let there be light,” and on the fourth day …
If God says different things on different days then God is changing and cannot be permanent.
That’s not what I asked. I asked what would happen if the future particulars involved something like Soviet Russia. I’m not asking about the here and now. I am asking about the possible future.
What is the name of the third cousin twice removed of the man who shot the poisoned arrow into you and what is that cousin’s shoe size?
Many (but not all) things change with time. Therefore, to refuse to consider possible future problems is not conducive to human well-being at all. Merely acting in the present is not enough, for we need to plan for the future.
We only need to plan for our current lifetime, one step at a time completes the journey.
Do you think “spiritual euthanasia” is an apt term for Buddhism, given its teleological end?
No. We cannot kill what does not exist. We can realise that what we thought existed actually does not and that we have been mistaken. Realising the truth after a time spent in error is not euthanasia of any kind.
rossum