F
FraterInChristo
Guest
To start off, there have been a number of threads discussing the moral matter of whether or not speeding is a sin; I do not intend to create another one discussing the same thing, though that may come up.
The point of this post is to see where this community thinks the “submitting to authority” moral obligation applies: at the written level or the enforcement level of the law.
The higher moral teaching that governs this is that we should submit to the authority over us while things are just and morally acceptable; if the authority imposes things that are unjust or immoral then we have the right to stand up for what is good (Godly).
Situation:
I have a non-Catholic Christian friend that is telling me that he can exceed the speed limit up to the speed that is “enforced” because that is what the authority of the “enforcers” is telling them the limit is for enforcement. I am telling him that the authority created the law that says you shall not exceed the speed limit posted for that section of road.
He believes that it is OK to “break” the law while remaining under the “enforced limit” because that is the true law because that is how the authority communicates the limit; and that fulfills “submitting to authority.”
What do you think? Or, better, yet, what do you know the Church to teach and why?
The point of this post is to see where this community thinks the “submitting to authority” moral obligation applies: at the written level or the enforcement level of the law.
The higher moral teaching that governs this is that we should submit to the authority over us while things are just and morally acceptable; if the authority imposes things that are unjust or immoral then we have the right to stand up for what is good (Godly).
Situation:
I have a non-Catholic Christian friend that is telling me that he can exceed the speed limit up to the speed that is “enforced” because that is what the authority of the “enforcers” is telling them the limit is for enforcement. I am telling him that the authority created the law that says you shall not exceed the speed limit posted for that section of road.
He believes that it is OK to “break” the law while remaining under the “enforced limit” because that is the true law because that is how the authority communicates the limit; and that fulfills “submitting to authority.”
What do you think? Or, better, yet, what do you know the Church to teach and why?