
Let us begin with toying with idea of if there is a God or
not. If one does not believe that there
is a God, the basis of moral grounding changes dramatically even if, on the
surface, they may seem the same as Christian.
If there is no God, then there is no Creator. If all that there is has no intelligent design
behind it, then it is a fluke. If it is
a fluke, then it has no real meaning. If
it has no meaning it really can’t progress toward anything – it is simply what
it is. If that is the case, then a human
being is no more wonderful than a stone.
(Many people like this idea.)
If all that is the case, then the case for goodness, for
morals, is entirely based on a social contract.
The social contract will be largely shaped by those with power. So “I won’t burn your house down if you don’t
burn my house down,” holds as long as the two home owners agree to the contract
and are able to enforce it. But if there
is no absolute good, breaking the contract may really make someone mad, but in
the end it doesn’t matter.

With a God however there is a Creator. With a Creator there is a giveness and a love
for that which is created. If something
is loved (with far more than a feeling) it has purpose and a goal. If it has a goal it has meaning. If it has meaning it has value and that value
is simply in the created’s being, not in their power or usefulness. Concepts of “the good” and right and wrong
have much more traction, are clearer, easier to defend, more universal, and are
easier to rectify when they have gone off track. The baby in the womb, the sick, the elderly,
the parent with dementia, the foreigner, they all have value because they are,
not because of how they benefit us. It
is a culture of life.

The good reverend on Sunday was not asking for “less morals,”
for he will be left with the exact same amount of morals the day after his wish
comes true as the day before. What he
wants is a different set of morals. God
help his grandchildren if he gets it.
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