What gives us the right to interfere with secular laws?

  • Thread starter Thread starter LemonAndLime
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
If society does not promote healthy morals, where is this home foundation supposed to come from? :confused:
Nothing stops parents with views different from that of the greater society from raising their children with those values. Just because something is legal does not mean it has to be promoted in the home. Smoking is legal, but many parents raise their children not to do it.
 
There was nothing “random” about my comment. You stated a belief you held - which I suspected was the case - and I referenced it specifically. I appreciated that you admitted your position, even if you may have been concerened about opening yourself up to ridicule in doing so. I applaud you for that.
Yes, its random. This entire scenario is in your head.
 
Either that, or everyone would simply behave better.

I am old enough to have lived in this “horrifying world” where swearing in public was illegal, and thus, not often done. Where cohabiting was illegal, and thus, only rarely done. Where homosexual behaviour was illegal, and thus, only rarely done. Where it was expected that every father would take his family to Church or synagogue every weekend, and thus, it was (mostly) done. Where it was illegal to transact unnecessary business on the Sabbath, and thus, it was simply not done. In which it was illegal to possess pornography, and thus, at the very least, pornography was not available at candy stores for children to look at while buying candy, and did not appear in advertising.
You’ll pardon me for saying so, but, while you may have found it a good experience, the same was not true of everyone. The restriction of things like cohabiting and homosexual behavior may have discouraged people from doing these things, but they did happen. They also did damage to people who, finding those things moral, were kept from living according to their consciences by the law. While I agree that some things are better kept where children can’t get at them (such as pornography; the only time I’ve seen pornography on sale is when I walked into what I thought was a magazine shop one day and was immediately asked for ID, so I don’t know how it’s available for children at the candy shop), I do not believe that it is right to deter these things simply because one believes they are wrong religiously. After all, we are also talking about an age in which women were expected to keep house–so not doing so “simply wasn’t done.”

Also, what makes you think people would behave better? Prostitution is illegal, but it isn’t dead. Illegal drugs are doing quite well. Sometimes, even, laws against a thing just make it thrive. Remember Prohibition?
In the year that I turned eight years old, they took the Lord’s Prayer and the National Anthem out of the schools, and the decline from that point onward was very steep - by the time I was twelve, I could have bought pornographic magazines at the candy store on a Sunday, if I had wanted to for some reason - just as twelve year olds today can do.
I’m interested in knowing where the purchase of pornography doesn’t require an I.D. If you simply mean magazines with racy pictures, that has been around for at least as long as this country.
I don’t know if we were any freer back in those days, but I do remember that my parents didn’t interfere too much with my doings - as long as I went to school at the proper times, and did whatever homework they sent me home with, I was free to do whatever I wanted. I could stay in the park until the street lights came on, and play pretty much any games I wanted to play. I could study any subjects I wanted to in school, and most people were good and kind to me.
Most people were good and kind to me in school, as well, and I grew up after a good many other developments occured. At any rate, I think it is important to remember, that, even if a law does not affect you personally, it can still cause harm to another. Homosexual activity wasn’t “rarely done” when it was illegal; it was done secretly, and often not safely.Cohabitation happened; it just was kept quiet. As for working on the Sabbath, I’m actually interested in how and why that law was instituted.
 
Nothing stops parents with views different from that of the greater society from raising their children with those values. Just because something is legal does not mean it has to be promoted in the home. Smoking is legal, but many parents raise their children not to do it.
Where are parents who have a moral foundation supposed to be produced from, if society is not producing them?

Today, we still have the memory of a time when morals were part of the fabric of society. In twenty years, when my generation is gone, there will be nothing left in the well of memory for parents to draw from. Parents won’t be able to know what is moral, and what is not moral, because they will not have any personal memory of such a thing, and they won’t know anybody who has, who can advise them.

What then?
 
Where are parents who have a moral foundation supposed to be produced from, if society is not producing them?

Today, we still have the memory of a time when morals were part of the fabric of society. In twenty years, when my generation is gone, there will be nothing left in the well of memory for parents to draw from. Parents won’t be able to know what is moral, and what is not moral, because they will not have any personal memory of such a thing, and they won’t know anybody who has, who can advise them.

What then?
I think you may be overstating the decline of our society. These parents will have learned from their parents, who in turn learned from their parents. The children raised with morals will know other children who have been raised with the same morals–people with morals aren’t so rare they don’t know other people who have them. I grew up in a society in which a lot of things immoral were considered cool, but I don’t hold to them, and the credit is not entirely on my parents, but it is partly there. They, also, were raised in a society which, though they say it was more moral, contained a great many moral evils. Children are fully capable, in growing, of retaining their moral values and passing these on to their children. The fact that “society” may not support these morals does not mean that no people in society do. Society is a vague enough term without forgetting that there are a good many moral people even in what they consider an immoral society.

Also, in a thread with a religious base, I find it odd that the church is not factored into your scenario. Even if it doesn’t mandate what people can do, it’s not going to up and disappear.
 
Also, in a thread with a religious base, I find it odd that the church is not factored into your scenario. Even if it doesn’t mandate what people can do, it’s not going to up and disappear.
The average person in society doesn’t think very much about the Church. They certainly don’t go, which means they never hear sermons, and most of them don’t read newspapers, meaning they never hear what the Church has to say on particular issues.

I run into more than one person a day who thinks that Oprah Winfrey is “very spiritual.”
Society is a vague enough term without forgetting that there are a good many moral people even in what they consider an immoral society.
Let us not confuse “moral” with “nice.”

There are plenty of nice people around - very few of them are actually moral. A great many of them would cheerfully kill your grandmother rather than pay taxes to get a doctor to cure her of whatever ails her - smiling pleasantly and making cheerful conversation the whole while.
 
There are plenty of nice people around - very few of them are actually moral. A great many of them would cheerfully kill your grandmother rather than pay taxes to get a doctor to cure her of whatever ails her - smiling pleasantly and making cheerful conversation the whole while.
Isn’t that the truth.
 
Also, what makes you think people would behave better? Prostitution is illegal, but it isn’t dead.
Being paid for sex is not illegal. Communicating for the purposes of prostitution is illegal, but almost impossible to prove, and almost never prosecuted.

Other illegal activities enjoy success because, number one, there is a market for their products (which means that there are a lot of immoral people buying these things) and number two, they enjoy a kind of status in society where either they are quietly approved of, or people are afraid of them, and in either case, nobody reports them.
I’m interested in knowing where the purchase of pornography doesn’t require an I.D. If you simply mean magazines with racy pictures, that has been around for at least as long as this country.
You can pick up Playboy or Hustler at any 7-11 or Mac’s Milk, and if you say you’re getting it for your Dad (assuming you’re a minor), they’ll sell it to you. Maybe those are considered “racy magazines” rather than pornography these days, but I don’t really know the difference, in that case.
As for working on the Sabbath, I’m actually interested in how and why that law was instituted.
The Third Commandment dates back to about 4,000 B.C.E. or thereabouts, and the reason given is, “for in the days of Creation the Lord thy God rested on the seventh day; therefore the seventh day is holy to the Lord.” 😉
 
The average person in society doesn’t think very much about the Church. They certainly don’t go, which means they never hear sermons, and most of them don’t read newspapers, meaning they never hear what the Church has to say on particular issues.

I run into more than one person a day who thinks that Oprah Winfrey is “very spiritual.”
Yes, but are those people the ones we’re concerned with? The important thing is that the people in the church stand as models for others. If they don’t follow that example, that is their right.
Let us not confuse “moral” with “nice.”
Yes, but let’s also not confuse “different than me” with “without moral standards”.
There are plenty of nice people around - very few of them are actually moral. A great many of them would cheerfully kill your grandmother rather than pay taxes to get a doctor to cure her of whatever ails her - smiling pleasantly and making cheerful conversation the whole while.
Is this not the grandmother’s decision, whether she wants to be cured or not? People do not necessarily have to have the exact same morals as mainiline Christianity to have morals. If they want to take away a person’s right to life, then their morality comes to question. After all, the right to life is guaranteed in the constitution.
 
Being paid for sex is not illegal. Communicating for the purposes of prostitution is illegal, but almost impossible to prove, and almost never prosecuted.

Other illegal activities enjoy success because, number one, there is a market for their products (which means that there are a lot of immoral people buying these things) and number two, they enjoy a kind of status in society where either they are quietly approved of, or people are afraid of them, and in either case, nobody reports them.
As long as these people are not violating others’ right to be moral, what is the problem? At any rate, the people not reporting these things are equally at fault, or nearly so, by the law.
You can pick up Playboy or Hustler at any 7-11 or Mac’s Milk, and if you say you’re getting it for your Dad (assuming you’re a minor), they’ll sell it to you. Maybe those are considered “racy magazines” rather than pornography these days, but I don’t really know the difference, in that case.
Playboy and Hustler are not pornography because they do not contain explicit sexual content. I’m not sure where it is that one can pick them up if they’re “getting it for [their] dad” either; I have never encountered this.
The Third Commandment dates back to about 4,000 B.C.E. or thereabouts, and the reason given is, “for in the days of Creation the Lord thy God rested on the seventh day; therefore the seventh day is holy to the Lord.” 😉
So, our country is allowed to enforce religious laws on non-religious people? I’m not sure. The idea that that law is binding on non-Christians may be part of Christian belief, but, legaly it is not something that can be legislated. This seems contrary to religious freedom.
 
As long as these people are not violating others’ right to be moral, what is the problem?
Lovesa, it appears to me, after looking through this thread, that you might be something of a moral relativist – that is, that there is no objective morality, and that “do what you want as long as you don’t hurt anyone” is perhaps your guiding ethic.

It might be useful to remember that all law is an imposition of someone’s values (or, I should say, the values of a group) on the whole of society. Secular laws are not “neutral”, and are no less an imposition of values than are laws based on Judeo-Christian morality. The question ought to be: do these laws promote the good of society?
 
Lovesa, it appears to me, after looking through this thread, that you might be something of a moral relativist – that is, that there is no objective morality, and that “do what you want as long as you don’t hurt anyone” is perhaps your guiding ethic.

It might be useful to remember that all law is an imposition of someone’s values (or, I should say, the values of a group) on the whole of society. Secular laws are not “neutral”, and are no less an imposition of values than are laws based on Judeo-Christian morality. The question ought to be: do these laws promote the good of society?
I’m less of a moral relativist (all morals are right in societal context) than a believer in people’s right to disagree. I may think someone is wrong, but, unless they violate my rights, it is not in my rights to stop them from doing something lawful.

As far as laws promoting the good of society, I’m all for laws that promote it. However, is society better benefited by laws that violate personal conscience or by laws that promote freedom of conscience? There is a difference between banning things that affect people’s own morality and banning things that allow people to live by their consciences.

In regards to “all law is an imposition of someone’s values”, surely. However, the law is less in place (at least in the US) to better society by outlawing things thought to harm it than to protect the freedoms of the people. That is my view, at any rate. To quote the Constitution,

“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. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the consent of the governed,”

When a government goes beyond this, I believe it has exceeded its rights, because moral society is the product of freedom, not of regulation. I don’t mean everyone must agree, but laws intended to “benefit society” tread dangerous ground in that they can end up taking away those freedoms we are given and need as free men and women.

I’d like to here note, however, that I lay no claim to the idea these things must hold ground outside the U.S. They need not, certainly.
 
Lovesa,

What you say sounds quite reasonable, but, in the real world, it doesn’t work very well. As Chesterton once so aptly put it, “When you break the big laws, you do not get freedom; you do not even get anarchy. You get the small laws.”

Ignore a “big law” – say, traditional sexual morality – and society will be harmed, as traditional sexual morality promotes stronger families, and as the family goes, so goes society. Surely that is obvious?

You appear to put a great store in personal conscience, but personal conscience is not an infallible guide if uninformed or poorly developed. Individuals, you must have observed by now, can rationalize all kinds of truly reprehensible behavior. Lots of folks think it’s perfectly OK to abort unborn humans or euthanize old people who are a drain on the system. Abortion is quite legal; euthanasia is legal in other countries. Judeo-Christian morality does NOT allow for us to sit quietly by and watch evil happen to others, even if our personal consciences are clear regarding our own actions.

Overall you and I agree about the virtues of limited government: all I am saying is that if the government allows or promotes immorality, it will then set the stage for increased government intrusion, as the government then takes over the role the family used to, and tries to contain the resulting social pathologies. So, ironically enough, the pursuit of a skewed view of freedom (license)leads to the loss of real freedom.

Error has no rights.
 
I am fine with Catholic Laws as long as the cops give me a choice between confession and prison. 🙂

In all honesty, as long as the law allows me to practice my faith, I am happy. Does legalized abortion need to be overturned? Yes. But I still have the power to teach my children to respect life and practice theology of the body. It would be much worse if the state were forcing abortions on women in order to regulate population quotas.
 
Lovesa,

What you say sounds quite reasonable, but, in the real world, it doesn’t work very well. As Chesterton once so aptly put it, “When you break the big laws, you do not get freedom; you do not even get anarchy. You get the small laws.”

Ignore a “big law” – say, traditional sexual morality – and society will be harmed, as traditional sexual morality promotes stronger families, and as the family goes, so goes society. Surely that is obvious?

You appear to put a great store in personal conscience, but personal conscience is not an infallible guide if uninformed or poorly developed. Individuals, you must have observed by now, can rationalize all kinds of truly reprehensible behavior. Lots of folks think it’s perfectly OK to abort unborn humans or euthanize old people who are a drain on the system. Abortion is quite legal; euthanasia is legal in other countries. Judeo-Christian morality does NOT allow for us to sit quietly by and watch evil happen to others, even if our personal consciences are clear regarding our own actions.

Overall you and I agree about the virtues of limited government: all I am saying is that if the government allows or promotes immorality, it will then set the stage for increased government intrusion, as the government then takes over the role the family used to, and tries to contain the resulting social pathologies. So, ironically enough, the pursuit of a skewed view of freedom (license)leads to the loss of real freedom.

Error has no rights.
I’m with you one the big laws, certainly. That’s the exception to the rule that is covered in most legal systems. However, how far must one go in taking care of sexual immorality? I think that’s where the disagreement between various people’s position lies, and it can be difficult to tell where the good of society ends and personal freedom begins.

Take the case of spousal abuse, for example. When does the right to free speech (including the occasional argument) end and turn into punishable verbal abuse? I’m generally in agreement with your statement. I just think we should be very careful when getting into these laws, and try not to let the “good of society” get the better of us.
 
Who’s forcing people to have abortions?
The government is. This is the debate regarding whether doctors and nurses who oppose abortion may refuse to perform or assist in them, or whether the refusal will cost them their profession.
What about in cases where the act forbidden is not forcing something on someone?
Generally, these laws are less offensive. But not always. An example are the vagrancy laws. They are written such that they appear to proscribe begging. The Christian sees through this. The Christian knows that to forbid asking for charity is to compel the continuation of the need, and to compel the continuation of the sin of failing to render charity to the poor.
There is no reason to assume I support no-fault divorce. A contract is different than a law all are forced to obey. One has a choice to enter into a contract; entering into that contract is their right. However, the contract binds on them because they chose that binding.
I made no such assumption. Indeed, because you are a Lutheran, I assumed you would be against divorce.

A contract is not different from law because contracts rely on law for enforcement. This was proved in the public accomodation segregation cases: the law upheld the contracts which enabled segregation to continue, therefore, the law upheld segregation even in the absence of a formal apartheid.

If marriage is a contract (for Christians, it an exchange of vows, which is somewhat different), the law still forbids a perpetual binding marriage. If I promise to wed you, and you accept, the law will forbid you from binding me when I decide to desert you.
Without a draft, the soldiers chose their conscription, and therefore agree, by free will, to be bound by the rules.
Well, a choice is only free to the extent it is knowing. The military does not disclose all of the facts, and the parties are not bargaining on a level playing field. Also, the breach by one party discharges the obligation of the other side to continue adhering to the contract. Plus, no one can enforece an immoral contract. All these matters weigh against the military.

But even if we assume there is some weird justice the government could enforce against its soldiers, then we arrive back at the basic question: by what kind of “justice” (other than force) does the government give itself the right to enforce an irrevocable contract on soldiers while denying it to Christians in the marital context?
Taxes do not infringe upon rights, nor does licensing, to my view. If one has a “right” to their money, very well. However, children do not pay taxes.
Taking the points in reverse order: children do pay taxes. They pay sales tax and inheritance tax, for example. If taxes do not infringe rights, then we are left with a very strange kind of morality: one where the government defines what is moral, excludes any meaningful appeal from the decision, all while claiming it is based on a consensus, but at the same time denying the basic right to property.
I am…an adherent of social contract theory. Rules in the cave you mention are quite cooperative.
First, there is no record of any cave agreement. But even if there were, what has that to do with me?
Surely they are moral; they simply see morality differently than you.
This is like saying they see an apple differently than me, because they call an apple what is in fact an orange. This is not mere disagreement.

That is not what is happening. The government is labeling its conduct “morality” in order to deceive people. They know it is not moral, and I do, too. But they do not want to admit this. So they call a system based on force and exploitation “public morality” to avoid the indictment that will fall on them if they admit to being immoral.
No one is defending the morality of the action. It is simply prudent to point out that their logic for supporting abortion is based on a morality that, to them, respects life more than the opposition to abortion.
Yes, but they are objectively wrong. And if they are wrong, then they have no right to persist in calling their position “moral.”
Abortion supporters are not lying when they say they believe they are moral. They believe it is immoral to force a woman to have a baby …she does not want
They are lying in the same way the criminal lies when he says he shot the policeman in self defense.
It says that the social contract is not a guidebook of specific laws, but an explanation of the origin of the spirit of the law. Murder is wrong, says the social contract. This is concrete and inherent. What differs is what a society feels “murder” constitutes. Morality is not necessarily the same everywhere with social contract; it is merely constant in its spirit
If murder were “concrete and inherent” then we would all agree what constitutes murder.
 
The government is. This is the debate regarding whether doctors and nurses who oppose abortion may refuse to perform or assist in them, or whether the refusal will cost them their profession.
And I am not in support of laws forcing people to perform abortions.
Generally, these laws are less offensive. But not always. An example are the vagrancy laws. They are written such that they appear to proscribe begging. The Christian sees through this. The Christian knows that to forbid asking for charity is to compel the continuation of the need, and to compel the continuation of the sin of failing to render charity to the poor.
Are you sure a Christian must be against vagrancy laws? There are other ways of asking for charity than asking people on the street.

(Not that I necessarily have either position on said laws.)
I made no such assumption. Indeed, because you are a Lutheran, I assumed you would be against divorce.

A contract is not different from law because contracts rely on law for enforcement. This was proved in the public accomodation segregation cases: the law upheld the contracts which enabled segregation to continue, therefore, the law upheld segregation even in the absence of a formal apartheid.

If marriage is a contract (for Christians, it an exchange of vows, which is somewhat different), the law still forbids a perpetual binding marriage. If I promise to wed you, and you accept, the law will forbid you from binding me when I decide to desert you.
The law, then, would seem to need amendment. The law is in a position to protect contracts.
Well, a choice is only free to the extent it is knowing. The military does not disclose all of the facts, and the parties are not bargaining on a level playing field. Also, the breach by one party discharges the obligation of the other side to continue adhering to the contract. Plus, no one can enforece an immoral contract. All these matters weigh against the military.

But even if we assume there is some weird justice the government could enforce against its soldiers, then we arrive back at the basic question: by what kind of “justice” (other than force) does the government give itself the right to enforce an irrevocable contract on soldiers while denying it to Christians in the marital context?
I agree with you on this; the government has no right to deny contract enforcement to Christians in a marital context.
Taking the points in reverse order: children do pay taxes. They pay sales tax and inheritance tax, for example. If taxes do not infringe rights, then we are left with a very strange kind of morality: one where the government defines what is moral, excludes any meaningful appeal from the decision, all while claiming it is based on a consensus, but at the same time denying the basic right to property.
I am very unsure of tax laws myself, in that context. However, without the governments we would not have our other rights. It is one of the things that all generally agree on for the benefit of saving all the other rights.
First, there is no record of any cave agreement. But even if there were, what has that to do with me?
🤷 I was just rolling with the analogy given.
This is like saying they see an apple differently than me, because they call an apple what is in fact an orange. This is not mere disagreement.
Actually, I think the argument is more “Is the orange worth eating?” or “What should we use oranges for?” than attempting to name the fruit.
That is not what is happening. The government is labeling its conduct “morality” in order to deceive people. They know it is not moral, and I do, too. But they do not want to admit this. So they call a system based on force and exploitation “public morality” to avoid the indictment that will fall on them if they admit to being immoral.
So the government is lying to us? I haven’t seen them call morality into an argument, either. Individual politicians may claim it, but the government has no real claim to morality.
Yes, but they are objectively wrong. And if they are wrong, then they have no right to persist in calling their position “moral.”
I’d disagree on this point. Everyone has the right to be wrong, providing they offer some kind of proof.
They are lying in the same way the criminal lies when he says he shot the policeman in self defense.
Criminals could, in rare circumstances, be telling the truth as well. If we were not there, are we in a position to come to a conclusion without further investigation?
If murder were “concrete and inherent” then we would all agree what constitutes murder.
I’m not sure about that either. Many political parties agree that taxes are “concrete and inherent”, but do not agree on what constitutes justifiable taxation.
 
Criminals could, in rare circumstances, be telling the truth as well. If we were not there, are we in a position to come to a conclusion without further investigation?
This is a very interesting observation. In absolute terms, I would agree we are not in a position to conclude. In practical terms, however, we often must.
Many political parties agree that taxes are “concrete and inherent”, but do not agree on what constitutes justifiable taxation.
I understand. I think we disagree more in the terms we use than in the application. You seem comfortable with putting more things under a given term than I am. The good thing about your method is that it is more apt, perhaps, to generate consensus since you can concede quickly that you on the same page, so to speak, as your opponent. My way is apt to create an argument where there isn’t really one.

Cheers!
 
Hi Lovesa,

Thanks for your response. You wrote:
However, how far must one go in taking care of sexual immorality? I think that’s where the disagreement between various people’s position lies, and it can be difficult to tell where the good of society ends and personal freedom begins.
I think, if we’re honest as a society, that we know very well where to draw the line between societal good and personal freedom. We know that because we’re reaping the terrible harvest of having gone too far towards an unchecked individualiam that has ripped apart families for at least a whole generation. I don’t think you can deny that the government has stepped in, quite willingly, to take the power over individuals that once resided in healthy families. Face it – fathers aren’t necessary anymore. The government will be Big Daddy for all – and then it has the power to tell you how to live your life, since they’re footing the bill.

You presume a conflict between personal freedom and the good of society, but that premise is seriously flawed as it is based on a flawed understanding of what “freedom” is to begin with, and what truth is. Properly understood, there is no conflict between man as an individual – his holy needs and desires – and that of society. The Catholic Christian view of man is quite elevated, both on the personal and societal level.

You ought to be able to see for yourself that the secularization of our society (which, by the way, is NOT what the Founders intended) has been harmful to the individual as well as to society. A sick individualism (which I think is what we have today) inevitably leads to the destruction of the family, and then the government steps in to deal with the resulting pathologies (without EVER dealing with the real problem, as to do so would reduce their power).

How can you deny the reality of what is going on around us? And do you understand that Truth is not relative – it doesn’t apply only to Catholics, but to all of mankind? Try all of these great American experiments in individual “freedom” (sexual immorality, etc)and you’ll find the same results everywhere.
 
Hi Lovesa,

Thanks for your response. You wrote:

I think, if we’re honest as a society, that we know very well where to draw the line between societal good and personal freedom. We know that because we’re reaping the terrible harvest of having gone too far towards an unchecked individualiam that has ripped apart families for at least a whole generation. I don’t think you can deny that the government has stepped in, quite willingly, to take the power over individuals that once resided in healthy families. Face it – fathers aren’t necessary anymore. The government will be Big Daddy for all – and then it has the power to tell you how to live your life, since they’re footing the bill.

You presume a conflict between personal freedom and the good of society, but that premise is seriously flawed as it is based on a flawed understanding of what “freedom” is to begin with, and what truth is. Properly understood, there is no conflict between man as an individual – his holy needs and desires – and that of society. The Catholic Christian view of man is quite elevated, both on the personal and societal level.

You ought to be able to see for yourself that the secularization of our society (which, by the way, is NOT what the Founders intended) has been harmful to the individual as well as to society. A sick individualism (which I think is what we have today) inevitably leads to the destruction of the family, and then the government steps in to deal with the resulting pathologies (without EVER dealing with the real problem, as to do so would reduce their power).

How can you deny the reality of what is going on around us? And do you understand that Truth is not relative – it doesn’t apply only to Catholics, but to all of mankind? Try all of these great American experiments in individual “freedom” (sexual immorality, etc)and you’ll find the same results everywhere.
I’d agree that families are in quite a spot today, but I’m not sure it’s as easy to decide between personal freedom and societal good as you say. After all, not everyone is Catholic, and they deserve to follow their own religious ways. For instance, fathers do not get enough promotion these days. Fair enough. While I’ve seen campaigns lately against that, they don’t seem to be doing enough. However, it is good to not absolutely ban the idea of families that don’t fit the ideal mold out of necessity. Take for example the woman with the violently abusive husband who just up and left one day, or even the gay couple that abides by all laws, doesn’t adopt children, and doesn’t attempt to push their life on the religious. Surely these people are not part of any movement to hurt the family unit or society. After all, there are exceptions to every rule, and they deserve to be noted.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top