In reading this point, I’m wondering where you make room for moral authority.
Hi Joan
My only moral authority is my partner.
Young people need guidance from parents and teachers, but I think we should question everything as we grown older. There’s an unfortunate tendency for prejudices to be passed on across generations, so one of the greatest lessons our parents can teach us is to have no unexamined beliefs. Reminds me of an old song by Graham Nash:
*You who are on the road must have a code that you can live by, and so become yourself, because the past is just a good bye. Teach your children well, their father’s hell did slowly go by, and feed them on your dreams, the one they pick’s, the one you’ll know by. Don’t you ever ask them why, if they told you you would cry, so just look at them and sigh and know they love you.
And you of tender years, can’t know the fears that your elders grew by, and so please help them with your youth, they seek the truth before they can die. Teach your parents well, their children’s hell will slowly go by, and feed them on your dreams, the one they pick’s, the one you’ll know by. Don’t you ever ask them why, if they told you you would cry, so just look at them and sigh and know they love you.*
The law of the land can inspire us but can also lag behind popular sentiment. Six years ago the government here in Spain made gay union legal. Most people, including me, had probably never really thought about it before. Two thirds agreed with the change, we realized it made our society fairer.
Interestingly of course, the vast majority here define themselves as Catholic yet went against the RCC, which opposed the change. The Church’s traditions perform a useful role as an anchor, but on this occasion a lot of folk jumped ship. They may get called cafeteria or secularized, but for them these days religion no longer has all the answers.
To be fair, the Baptist faith never even tried, it has little to say about morals except let your conscience be your guide, and I believe we can only form our conscience well by working things out for ourselves rather than letting others do it for us.
In Numbers 31 (raised earlier), I’d say the real lesson for us doesn’t involve any complicated apologetics to excuse Moses, but that he was just plain wrong to think God was on his side alone – it’s never a good idea to assume anyone knows the mind of God.
I would also point out that people do not typically make their moral decisions simply based on evidence, but on a variety of personal and social factors. With no moral authority, increasing moral chaos and corruption results.
By evidence, I meant something more than appeals to scripture, tradition, or some other form of authority. You’re right that personal and social factors play a big part, and when undecided we may place more credence in some than others (Pope Benedict’s theology is a personal favorite), but corruption often feeds off unwarranted trust.
Teach your children/parents well. 