And I’m afraid that this is where these conversations always end up. It always runs thus:
- A Christian says that morality in the form of the Golden Rule and love your neighbour etc are specifically based on Christian teachings.
- Someone else points out that these were taught long before Jesus and gives numerous examples.
- The reply is that it doesn’t matter. Jesus (or God) established this morality within said cultures long before Christianity came upon the scene.
So it appears that Buddhism, Jainism, Islam, Hinduism etc etc are all based on Christian morals anyway. As are the morals of any unbeliever. In fact, everyone gets their morals from the Christian God. Goddidit.
Which begs the question: What on earth was the point in asking the original question?
Let’s attempt to state this in as objective a manner as possible.
A universe that has been specifically designed by a moral agent with a purpose that is extensible to all the moral or free agents that abide within it provides a consistent basis for the ethical judgements made by those creatures.
On the other hand, a universe that is simply the result of the unguided but determined reactions of its material constructs has no purpose that can function as a basis for the ethical judgements of creatures inhabiting it. (Cannot derive an
ought from an
is)
In the first kind of cosmos, moral purpose is embedded in the cause and order of the universe itself because it was designed by a moral agent. In the second, ethical beliefs cannot be derived from “the way things are” because ultimately the causal order underlying reality is itself amoral. Therefore, in this case, ethical thinking can only be subjectively derived by the moral agents abiding inside the universe since nothing about the universe itself provides a moral structure.
What is being argued here is that only a monotheistic framework provides a moral structure to the entire cosmos because only this kind of theistic understanding holds morality to be a foundational aspect to the universe itself. The universe is a moral place because the One responsible for it and all there is is ultimately a moral being. An atheistic understanding of the universe as simply “being there” cannot appeal to the universe itself for its understanding of moral “good” since the universe is ambivalent in this regard.
Let’s be clear, a theistic view of the universe provides, in principle, a moral foundation built into the intentional purpose behind the existence of all that is. An atheistic view must concede this and argue that there is no such moral foundation and must rely on a purely subjective, at the human level, ground for ethics.
Hopefully, that much is clear. The implications are that atheistic morality has a “built in” restriction in terms of derivation from a strictly “human” level rather than having the possibility of being grounded within the larger context of ultimate purpose. You can raise a hue and cry over that difficulty and attempt to blame “Christianity” for the ethical handicap built into your belief system, but that is the metaphysical reality you will have to face.
As to other “gods,” it seems very clear that gods incapable of cosmic creation do not, therefore, have the moral authority to dictate to creatures living in the universe what the moral landscape of that universe should be like. So even if these other gods actually did exist, they would, in principle, lack the moral authority of the monotheistic God who is the Source of all being.
What it comes down to, then, is if the monotheistic God of Christianity, Islam and Judaism does exist, there is no question that his moral authority supercedes that of any created thing existing within what is essentially his “world.” His game, his rules.
A corollary to this would be do we really know what his “rules” are? Perhaps they are much more subtle than our current understanding grasps. Much as some of us grapple with and possibly misinterpret Kant’s “rational” portrayal of ethics, it is very likely that we might misunderstand the moral nature of God’s purpose for us and the universe.
This could very well be the reason why different religions have a slightly different take on what God’s moral will actually is. Certainly, if disagreements can be raised about the purely human understanding of ethics as defined by a brainiac like Kant, then it would seem expected that the more complete moral landscape of God would have discrepant views, especially given that we are not all perfect moral agents, but often contentious precisely because of a lack of will to be such.
Even given discordant ethical positions, the question then to be asked is, “Which is the correct view?” Surely that is to be preferred over the optional, “Therefore, no correct view is possible.”