M
melensdad
Guest
I know all 3 of those passages, they all refer to laws that restrict our moral duties to follow our faith, but where specifically does it say we are obligated to fight for change of what is perceived to be an unjust law that may not be a direct impediment to our worship, to human dignity, etc?
You wrote:
Look again at the gun laws of Indiana & Illinois and again at the Catechism of the Catholic Church. We are morally obligated to defend our lives and our families lives from harm and from an agressor. In fact it says it is our grave duty to do so. In Indiana, and 47 other states, I am allowed to do that. However in Illinois (and also Wisconsin) I am forbidden from doing that with a weapon. Illinois & Wisconin are the only two states in the Union that forbid licensed carry of weapons.
Let me pose this. And let me preface it by stating that the Catechism of the Catholic Church clearly states we are obligated to defend our own lives and the lives of our families, that said, I live in Indiana, at the Indiana/Illiniois state line. In Indiana it is LEGAL to own and carry a concealed handgun for protection of yourself & your family. Across the roadway, my Illinios neighbors live where it is ILLEGAL to do the very same.
Are you saying that defending your life in Illinois is IMMORAL while defending your life in Indiana is MORAL?
Or are you saying that the CCC can only be used to apply morality in lands where it is legal to apply that morality Clearly it is moral to defend your life in Indiana but illegal to defend it in Chicago so therefore the CCC is flawed?
Or, within the state of Illinois, in Will County (the southern border of Chicago) it is legal to have a handgun in your house to defend yourself, but it is Illegal to do the same within boundaries of Chicago. The mere possession of the gun in Chicago can get you arrested. So a perfectly legal item on one side of the street is an illegal item that will get you jailed on the other side of the street.
Is it your argument that MORALITY is decided by your physical location?
Now if you are saying that morality is not based on physical location, then you are saying that the gun laws of Illinois are unjust. Therefore all Catholics, based on your comment, are obligated to fight for less stringent gun laws in Illinois because allowing more access to guns by honest citizens is required by your statement:
You wrote:
Let me add that if you believe a law is unjust, you have a responsiblity to work to have it changed
What I am questioning is the above statement you made.Look again at the gun laws of Indiana & Illinois and again at the Catechism of the Catholic Church. We are morally obligated to defend our lives and our families lives from harm and from an agressor. In fact it says it is our grave duty to do so. In Indiana, and 47 other states, I am allowed to do that. However in Illinois (and also Wisconsin) I am forbidden from doing that with a weapon. Illinois & Wisconin are the only two states in the Union that forbid licensed carry of weapons.
Let me pose this. And let me preface it by stating that the Catechism of the Catholic Church clearly states we are obligated to defend our own lives and the lives of our families, that said, I live in Indiana, at the Indiana/Illiniois state line. In Indiana it is LEGAL to own and carry a concealed handgun for protection of yourself & your family. Across the roadway, my Illinios neighbors live where it is ILLEGAL to do the very same.
Are you saying that defending your life in Illinois is IMMORAL while defending your life in Indiana is MORAL?
Or are you saying that the CCC can only be used to apply morality in lands where it is legal to apply that morality Clearly it is moral to defend your life in Indiana but illegal to defend it in Chicago so therefore the CCC is flawed?
Or, within the state of Illinois, in Will County (the southern border of Chicago) it is legal to have a handgun in your house to defend yourself, but it is Illegal to do the same within boundaries of Chicago. The mere possession of the gun in Chicago can get you arrested. So a perfectly legal item on one side of the street is an illegal item that will get you jailed on the other side of the street.
Is it your argument that MORALITY is decided by your physical location?
Now if you are saying that morality is not based on physical location, then you are saying that the gun laws of Illinois are unjust. Therefore all Catholics, based on your comment, are obligated to fight for less stringent gun laws in Illinois because allowing more access to guns by honest citizens is required by your statement:
you have a responsiblity to work to have it changed
Again, let me cite the most recent study published in the Harvard Law Review that clearly states that MORE GUNS = LESS MURDER and MORE GUNS = LESS CRIME. Therefore, since we oppose crime and murder on moral grounds, we need to fight for loose gun laws, at least if I apply your logic to gun laws.