Patriarch of Moscow against global heresy "of Human Rights”

  • Thread starter Thread starter Seamus_L
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
S

Seamus_L

Guest
In his Sunday homily, Kirill attacks attempts worldwide to pass laws that guarantee the "right to any choice, including the choice to sin”. “The consequences could be apocalyptic,” he warns. m.asianews.it/index.php?art=37022&l=en
My admiration for Patriarch Kirill continues to grow.
 
As the US Declaration of Independence says:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
Our rights come from God and these do not include the right to sin.
 
God bless Patriarch Kirill

We need more people to stand up against the secular perversion of human rights
 
As the US Declaration of Independence says:

Our rights come from God and these do not include the right to sin.
The Declaration was a manifesto, and ceased to have any legal standing with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. Neither the Articles of Confederation nor the US Constitution made “sin” a legal classification, and by and large the US inherited English Common Law, with one of its core principals being “that which is not forbidden is allowed”. Seeing as some of the English colonies had had some rather notorious run ins with people legislating sin, the Founding Father’s were rather keen to keep notions of enforced or imposed religious virtue out of the running of government.

But do continue demonstrating your desire for Christian Sharia.
 
But do continue demonstrating your desire for Christian Sharia.
There is no such thing as Christian sharia.

Besides, it’s certain secular liberals and atheists who resolutely defend sharia law activists, even at the expense of feminism and gay rights.
 
There is no such thing as Christian sharia.

Besides, it’s certain secular liberals and atheists who resolutely defend sharia law activists, even at the expense of feminism and gay rights.
What atheist defends Shariah, and how is making “sins” crimes not imposing religious laws?
 
Alot of sins in America used to be illegal, and I’d guess that 99 pct of the population would not have believed we were living under so called ‘Christian Sharia’ because of it.
 
I am not surprised that the Patriarch considers natural, inalienable rights to be “heretical”.

After all, the idea of ‘individual rights’ inhering by nature within the human person on account of his or her God-given dignity originated with the medieval canonists of the Gregorian Reform movement within the Western Church.

When all is said and done, the order of the day in Muscovy has never been limited government and individual ownership of property but despotic imperialism with a Christian veneer. The Republic of Novgorod was a notable exception but sadly it too eventually succumbed to the iron fist of Muscovite militarism in the fifteenth century, when the Grand Prince of Moscow decimated the Republic, annexed it to his rule and declared himself “Tsar of all the Russias”.
 
Alot of sins in America used to be illegal, and I’d guess that 99 pct of the population would not have believed we were living under so called ‘Christian Sharia’ because of it.
I’m sure they were, but one by one, many of those laws disappeared or were struck down.

Beyond that was always the problem in a religiously diverse country like the United States was that what one denomination declared to be sinful, another would not, so “sins” were never universally banned, and the notion of liberty being the freedom to swing one’s fist, providing it didn’t make contact with someone else’s nose, became the standard by which laws were measured and applied.

How would that work in a Catholic country, for instance? Would you ban condoms and birth control pills? Would there be a level of sin that was permitted, or a level of sin that was banned? Much better to treat people like adults, and if they commit “sins”, then that is between them and their alleged Maker.
 
How would that work in a Catholic country, for instance? Would you ban condoms and birth control pills? Would there be a level of sin that was permitted, or a level of sin that was banned? Much better to treat people like adults, and if they commit “sins”, then that is between them and their alleged Maker.
According to Catholic doctrine, (1) civil authority’s power comes from God and (2) exists to serve the common good. With regard to the first part, this means civil authority cannot pass laws or take means contrary to God’s law (they do not have authority to do this). While God has given civil authority the power to punish sin, He Himself tolerates sin in the world, so toleration of sin can also be justifiable.

With regard to the second part, whether a particular sin is punished or tolerated depends on which will better serve the common good given the circumstances. In general, a more pluralistic society calls for a broader tolerance than a more unified one.

The way I read what the Russian Patriarch is saying, he is talking about a positive right to sin–the Catholic Church also teaches against this (see CCC 1740 and 2108). But we do not therefore teach that the state has an absolute power to punish sin or religious error. Man’s conscience is ultimately between him and God, but since he lives in a society, and since his actions have social consequences (both temporal and spiritual), civil authority can intervene when the common good is at stake. As such, this power is limited by what is necessary to advance and defend the common good (the Catholic conception of the common good has objective criteria which includes, among other things, the objective moral order and man’s spiritual well-being. As such, it will be different than a positivist or naturalist conception to greater or lesser degrees depending on the facts).

This is why Pope Paul VI gave a rather broad appeal to civil authorities with respect to contraception, without demanding any specific actions–it will vary by the circumstances:
Paul VI:
  1. And now We wish to speak to rulers of nations. To you most of all is committed the responsibility of safeguarding the common good. You can contribute so much to the preservation of morals. We beg of you, never allow the morals of your peoples to be undermined. The family is the primary unit in the state; do not tolerate any legislation which would introduce into the family those practices which are opposed to the natural law of God. For there are other ways by which a government can and should solve the population problem—that is to say by enacting laws which will assist families and by educating the people wisely so that the moral law and the freedom of the citizens are both safeguarded.
 
murder is both a crime and a sin.

kind of refutes the idea that making a sin a crime is “the same thing as sharia”.

that is of course unless the atheist believes we should not make murder a crime. then the atheist would at least be internally consistent.

in the defense of the atheist, maybe he was being imprecise in the way he formulated his accusation of sharia coming from of Jesus Christ.
 
murder is both a crime and a sin.

kind of refutes the idea that making a sin a crime is “the same thing as sharia”.

that is of course unless the atheist believes we should not make murder a crime. then the atheist would at least be internally consistent.

in the defense of the atheist, maybe he was being imprecise in the way he formulated his accusation of sharia coming from of Jesus Christ.
One can formulate an argument against murder without the Ten Commandments. What I’m referring to is this hatred and fear of secularism and desire to impose religiously motivated laws on people, often via thinly veiled references to “natural law” or to protecting social order.

What saddens me about this attitude from some Catholics, in particular, is that many of the notions of secularism and liberty grew out of the abuse Catholics received for centuries in Protestant countries. Religious freedom in the US grew in part as a response to the bigotry of the Test Act.

And yet, having won their rightful place as equals, now suddenly it’s a franchise that needs to be closed. If you’re a homosexual or someone whose religion falls outside some nebulous line, or you believe governments ought not promote any particular religion or impose it’s tenets, well it’s okay to support to laws that attempt to reduce someone else’s rights, or give Christianity some special edge. And if you question it, well you’re part of an evil cabal of perverts and atheists trying to destroy Christianity. It’s a persecution complex as a deflection mechanism.

As to the Russian Orthodox Church, it spent decades as little more than the Kremlin’s puppet, and so it remains today. In a way, save for the actual persecutions in 1920s and 30s, that’s all it has ever been, a last vestige of Caesao-papism. I get the feeling some Western Christians wouldn’t be terribly upset if the same thing happened here, though obviously with their sect at the top of the food chain… you know, for society’s good.
 
I get the feeling some Western Christians wouldn’t be terribly upset if the same thing happened here, though obviously with their sect at the top of the food chain… you know, for society’s good.
Not me!
 
Beyond that was always the problem in a religiously diverse country like the United States was that what one denomination declared to be sinful, another would not, so “sins” were never universally banned, and the notion of liberty being the freedom to swing one’s fist, providing it didn’t make contact with someone else’s nose, became the standard by which laws were measured and applied.
Freedom is in no way judged by that. Try not baking a cake for a same sex wedding and see how free you are in most states. The new sins are just as ferociously punished as the old. But at least the old sins usually were actual sins. The old order may have been too severe. The new order is just insane.
 
Freedom is in no way judged by that. Try not baking a cake for a same sex wedding and see how free you are in most states. The new sins are just as ferociously punished as the old. But at least the old sins usually were actual sins. The old order may have been too severe. The new order is just insane.
Well, first off, I won’t defend that view. I don’t think any baker should be forced to put any message on a cake they don’t want to, and in this particular collision of liberties, I think freedom of religion should trump the opposition. So you won’t have me defending the “baker” cases.

At the same time, this means of enforcing gays’ civil liberties grows out of the Civil Rights Acts of the 1960s, which wiped out Segregation by essentially making it impossible for any shopkeeper to ban African-Americans from their establishments. So it’s not as if there isn’t precedent for this legislative imposition on private commerce.

There are always going to be clashes of liberties, and courts and legislators are going to have to strike a proper balance. I don’t envy any of them their jobs, but in this particular case I believe imposing speech on a baker is going too far, particularly as there are solutions to the problem that would require no legal or legislative solution at all (I’m a firm believer that the law should only be invoked as a last resort). The idea that someone could be forced to put any message on a cake or a t-shirt or be forced to print anything the didn’t agree with, or worse, produced a crisis of conscience just strikes me as an abuse of power.
 
I’m sure they were, but one by one, many of those laws disappeared or were struck down.

Beyond that was always the problem in a religiously diverse country like the United States was that what one denomination declared to be sinful, another would not, so “sins” were never universally banned, and the notion of liberty being the freedom to swing one’s fist, providing it didn’t make contact with someone else’s nose, became the standard by which laws were measured and applied.

How would that work in a Catholic country, for instance? Would you ban condoms and birth control pills? Would there be a level of sin that was permitted, or a level of sin that was banned? Much better to treat people like adults, and if they commit “sins”, then that is between them and their alleged Maker.
Even within the same denominational families, or even individual churches, what are “sins” are not always universally agreed on. Even in a church as dogmatically centered as the RCC what constitutes a grave sin per church teaching isn’t even always agreed to be a sin by members of the church (as evidenced by the fact well over half of Catholics in the west support same sex marriage and a large minority support abortion despite church teaching on both matters).
 
So what happens if my god gives a different list of sins than your god? Who wins? Is the god with the most supporters the winner? Is there no protections for the worshipers of a minority god?

How is this not a form of Sharia?
 
There is no such thing as Christian sharia.

Besides, it’s certain secular liberals and atheists who resolutely defend sharia law activists, even at the expense of feminism and gay rights.
Our Jewish and Muslim brothers are good people. And proper Sharia law and Torah law…like Proper Canon law…treats all people as equals. That being said we face a challange… ISIL for example does not correctly practice Sharia law and ISIL claims to be practicing Sharia law. In Iraq probably as I type this message their are heroic Arab Christians and Muslims in Iraq and Syria teaming up together in the fight for freedom. I think that some people can be bad…but I try to steer clear of painting large groups of people with a broad brush…this is exactly what ISIL does wrt how ISIL views Shias and Christians. I do agree that some Atheists are bigoted against religion, but let us keep in mind that many Atheists are noble people who donate money to charity.
 
What atheist defends Shariah, and how is making “sins” crimes not imposing religious laws?
Hi aclausen,

As a Catholic I defend Torah Law and Sharia law. I think that the best way to defeat the bigoted religious groups like ISIL is not only via military methods…but also by Muslims and non Muslims loudly and on an often basis responding to ISIL that ISIL is wrong about Sharia and that proper sharia law provides full equality to all people…just as it was in the Arab Islamic Golden age when Atheists such as Al Marr’ari flourished and was treated as an equal. I can go back hundreds of years, I can go back to the so called “dark ages” to find you Muslim majority countries where Atheists had amazing success.

So even if you are an Atheist…I think you can see where I am trying to come from. My proposal to you is that even if you are not religious…can you at least see the logic in how I disagree that ISIL practices proper Sharia?

Even if you disagree with me…can you see the positive logic in how I am saying that proper Sharia law treats everyone equally. …

If a Atheist asks a Muslim *"doesn’t Sharia law make non Muslims unequal to Muslims? *And then the Muslim says, no Sharia law treats non Muslims as full equals…this is a beautiful thing and this is how many Muslims would react just as many Catholics would say proper Canon law treats everyone as equals. Hey we are in this world together with the Muslims…lets Christians work together with the Muslims in fight the against ISIL and other bigoted groups.

I don’t like to see nice people have their feelings hurt, and its a fact that there are friendly Jews who will say Torah law treats everyone equally, and there are friendly Muslims who say that Sharia law treats everyone equally. I refuse to criticize the noble teachings of the three religions of Abraham. But I will always criticize bigotry, whether its from someone who identifies as religious or non religious.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top