B
Betterave
Guest
So what you are saying here is that the serpent’s act of tempting Eve was morally praiseworthy. The principle you are implying is that if I can present someone with an occasion of sin, I should do so, since this gives that person more freedom. Right?This presents an interesting ethical dilemma
Your obligation is actually to promote what we may call Christian thinking and behavior. If you believe in the Catholic God then you believe he gave man free will, and that righteous conduct was not imposed. Yet, free will can not exist in the absence of knowledge. So when, for example in the case of birth control, you keep information from someone; it denies them the actuality of free will. You are in essence placing yourself above God. For God does not deny the liberty off our personal consciousness.
It seems the proper Christian action is to provide all information and then advocate for the actions and positions you believe to be most virtuous.
This view betrays a profound misunderstanding of the Christian notion of freedom. Promoting structures of sin stirs up our disordered desires and reduces our authentic freedom, which is only found in the cultivation of virtue. Cultivation of vice is destructive of true freedom.
p.s. MarkAnthony: that is one reason why they “don’t have a right”. The more general reason is that the purpose of government is to promote the common good, not to promote structures of sin or indifference towards it.