V
vinessa
Guest
In our RCIA class we talked about moral complexities and the stages of moral development. We had 2 seminarians in our group also, so their learning is quite current and the discussion was very good.
We talked about how moral questions often don’t resolve neatly into black or white, and that being Catholic is about more than just “obeying the rules”. For example, to the Pharisees, Jesus sinned when he healed on the Sabbath, because it was “against the rules.” Obviously our Lord thought differently.
The seminarians told us that priests are now being taught to support the process by which moral decisions are made, and to help guide people deeper, or further along in the stages of development, where the complexities and ambiguities we all often face are more faithfully addressed.
So I was wondering, how do you all deal with morally complex or ambiguous situations, where it’s damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t?
What brings this to mind at the moment is the Vatican’s call to be better and more caring stewards of this awesome and blessed green planet (adding ecological degradation to the sin list) – and how that doesn’t resolve neatly or cleanly with the prohibition on contraception. Both are concerned with Theology of Life – but what do you, or we, do when one call collides with the other?
In the NY Times green news today, I read the following which really struck me:
By 2050 or so, the world population is expected to reach nine billion, essentially adding two Chinas to the number of people alive today. Those billions will be seeking food, water and other resources on a planet where, scientists say, humans are already shaping climate and the web of life.
That’s only 40 years away, and surely we’re not blind to the math. It’s adding 38% more people in only one generation, when already (today) there isn’t enough clean or potable water for everyone.
Now, we could pray for a loaves and fishes deal… Or we could close our eyes and pretend that having an unlimited number of children won’t “really” impact our planetary resources… Or we could practice contraception more thoroughly and ignore the impact on our spirits, and the seeds of selfishness, arrogance and independence that would grow in us as a result…
How do you make decisions when a situation is morally complex or ambiguous? What is your process? Do you self-justify or fall back on “rules” (like not healing on the Sabbath)? What happens when you pray? And how do you feel when you’ve finally decided, knowing that since neither decision was “right”, whichever decision you make, by definition, is wrong?
I’m curious to hear.
Thank you, and God bless.
We talked about how moral questions often don’t resolve neatly into black or white, and that being Catholic is about more than just “obeying the rules”. For example, to the Pharisees, Jesus sinned when he healed on the Sabbath, because it was “against the rules.” Obviously our Lord thought differently.
The seminarians told us that priests are now being taught to support the process by which moral decisions are made, and to help guide people deeper, or further along in the stages of development, where the complexities and ambiguities we all often face are more faithfully addressed.
So I was wondering, how do you all deal with morally complex or ambiguous situations, where it’s damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t?
What brings this to mind at the moment is the Vatican’s call to be better and more caring stewards of this awesome and blessed green planet (adding ecological degradation to the sin list) – and how that doesn’t resolve neatly or cleanly with the prohibition on contraception. Both are concerned with Theology of Life – but what do you, or we, do when one call collides with the other?
In the NY Times green news today, I read the following which really struck me:
By 2050 or so, the world population is expected to reach nine billion, essentially adding two Chinas to the number of people alive today. Those billions will be seeking food, water and other resources on a planet where, scientists say, humans are already shaping climate and the web of life.
That’s only 40 years away, and surely we’re not blind to the math. It’s adding 38% more people in only one generation, when already (today) there isn’t enough clean or potable water for everyone.
Now, we could pray for a loaves and fishes deal… Or we could close our eyes and pretend that having an unlimited number of children won’t “really” impact our planetary resources… Or we could practice contraception more thoroughly and ignore the impact on our spirits, and the seeds of selfishness, arrogance and independence that would grow in us as a result…
How do you make decisions when a situation is morally complex or ambiguous? What is your process? Do you self-justify or fall back on “rules” (like not healing on the Sabbath)? What happens when you pray? And how do you feel when you’ve finally decided, knowing that since neither decision was “right”, whichever decision you make, by definition, is wrong?
I’m curious to hear.
Thank you, and God bless.