One of my friends was in her ethics philosophy class yesterday and said that her teacher was talking about how there is a moral code that is “above” God and that God Himself follows. Then the teacher said that this is what the Catholic Church teaches…can anyone explain this philosophy to me and what does the Church actually teach about were morality comes from?? thanks for any help
Your friend’s ethics teacher is getting at the Euthyphro dilemma. See here for an introduction to it:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euthyphro_dilemma
There are a number of way Christianity can respond to it, Divine Command Theory, mentioned in this thread is one of them (and the big philosophers go into weak command theories, and strong command theories). Some argue the dilemma is false and believe in the tertium quid, that morality is not arbitrarily grounded in God’s Will or in something outside of God, but in God’s own Nature. (Moreland)
Another article:
“Christians need not fear Plato on this score. When Euthyphro’s dilemma is applied to Christianity, it mischaracterizes the Biblical view of God. Goodness is neither above God nor merely willed by Him. Instead, ethics are grounded in His holy character. Moral notions are not arbitrary and given to caprice. They are fixed and absolute, grounded in God’s immutable nature.”
(kind of a Divine Nature Theory)
str.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=5236
Or, as Steve Lovell concluded in ‘C.S. Lewis and the Euthyphro Dilemma’ (2002)
“Thus the dilemma can be shown to be a false one. God indeed commands things which are good, but the reason they are good is because they reflect God’s own nature. So the goodness does not come ultimately from God’s commandments, but from His nature, which then results in good commandments.”
So there are a bunch of good arguments for taking on the E. Dilemma in favour of Christiainty. Unfortunately, some of the Christian apologetics sites don’t post the essays in full as they did when I linked to them in another thread. Some Christians use Divine Command Theory to deal with the Euthyphro Dilemma, others use other arguments. It is quite impossible to deal with all the arguments in one post, unfortunately.
I think that is what the teacher was trying to touch upon. Just posting for info. sake and not for argument. I don’t like engaging in arguments during Lent.
