Friday, November 2, 2012

Thoughts on Moral Relativism

Many people say that our concepts of right/wrong (morality) are merely societal, in other words, our ideas of right and wrong are taught to us by society. There are no objective rules, there is no objective standard, by which anything can be said to be inherently "right" or inherently "wrong" if this is true. Which creates all sorts of problems.

People (even many people who're Christians) in our post-modern society object frequently that morality is relative-you have your morality, I have mine, she has hers, and they have theirs. They will usually object to the idea of an Objective Moral Law bigger and higher than mankind that we can appeal to when deciding issues of morality. But then these people go back on that a hundred times a day without even realizing it.

Every time they say "What right does she have to speak to me like that?" or something similar. Every time they complain about their politicians being greedy and dishonest. Every time they object that some behavior by someone else "isn't fair." When they object to the War in Iraq as being "wrong" or "immoral." When they argue for or against abortion as being "a woman's 'right'" or "murder."  In each of these attempts they are appealing to an unstated higher standard. In all of these cases, they're appealing to what British Christian philosopher and apologist CS Lewis (1898-1963) called the "Moral Law." It might also be called the "law of right behavior" and its existence in each of the scenarios above is unquestioned, simply taken for granted. What is being examined is whether one action or another is a closer approximation to the demands of that law. People accused of falling short of the Moral Law, such as a husband who is rude to his wife's best friend, usually respond with an excuse as to why they should be let off the hook. They don't ever argue that being nice is a false concept that no one should be held responsible for doing, they simply argue as to why, in their case, an exception to the Rule should be made. To quote CS Lewis, very rarely do they ever respond with "to hell with your concept of right behavior." 

This concept appears to be universal to human beings everywhere. To the objection that it’s a societal construct, I would say just think about it. A kid who rudely pushes another kid in Bombay will get exactly the same response as a kid who rudely pushes another kid in Kiev, or Glasgow, or Des Moines, or Buenos Aries. This sense of right and wrong can be found around the world. But some people argue that differing cultures all have different norms of behavior, hence any conclusion about a shared Moral Law is unfounded. But Lewis, a keen observer and student of different cultures called this "a lie. A good resounding lie. If a man will go into a library and spend a few days with the Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics, he will soon discover the massive unanimity of the practical reason in man. From the Babylonian Hymn to Samos, from the Laws of Manu, the [Egyptian] Book of the Dead, the Analects, the Stoics, the Platonists, from Australian aborigines and Redskins, he will collect the same triumphantly monotonous denunciations of oppression, murder, treachery and falsehood; the same injunctions of kindness to the aged, the young, and thee weak, of almsgiving, impartiality and honesty." As Dr. Francis Collins, PhD, a former atheist, for many years a Christian, and former Director of the Human Genome Project observes "In some unusual cultures the law takes on surprising trappings-consider witch burning in seventeenth-century America. Yet when surveyed closely, these apparent aberrations can be seen to arise from strongly held but misguided notions about who or what is good or evil. If you firmly believed that a witch is the personification of evil on earth, an apostle of the devil himself, would it not then seem justified to take such drastic action?"

Atheistic sociobiologists sometimes like to argue that morality is a product of evolutionary processes. But this can't be right. Because one impulse of the Moral Law is for people to be altruistic, to "do the right thing," as in the case of jumping into a freezing river to save a drowning man, even at the risk of themselves being killed. The Moral Law may lead humans to make great personal sacrifices that lead to suffering, injury, and death, which goes against the idea of natural selection putting desires, drives and impulses in humans and animals that make them stronger, faster, smarter, willing to do whatever it takes to survive and be on top.

How do we explain the Law of Human Nature, Lewis' Moral Law? Because something unusual is going on here. It can only be explained as Lewis did:

"If there was a controlling power outside the universe, it could not show itself to us as one of the facts inside the universe-no more than the architect of a house could actually be a wall or staircase or fireplace in that house. The only way in which we could expect it to show itself would be inside ourselves as an influence or a command trying to get us to behave in a certain way. And that is just what we do find inside ourselves. Surely this ought to arouse our suspicions?"

Lewis thus believed the Moral Law or Law of Human Nature, was put into us by God. I agree. That's why I don't think Moral Relativism is the answer. As I said above, Moral Relativism holds that everyone ought to act in accordance with the agent's own society's code (or perhaps, with the agent's own personal code). What's right for one society or individual isn't necessarily right for another society or individual. You can find this idea expressed in pop culture, everything from Star Trek: the Next Generation to MSNBC to Oprah Winfrey. "Do what you feel is right." For example, society A might hold that adultery is wrong, and society B that it is morally permissible. Put simply, moral relativism implies that moral propositions are not simply true or false. Rather, the truth values (true or false) of moral principles themselves are relative to the beliefs of a given culture. As an example, "murder is wrong” is not true plain and simply; it is "true" for one society but is "false" for another society. Its not just that there is a certain amount of relativity in the application of moral principles. For example two cultures might both believe that "one should maintain sexual fidelity in marriage," but apply this differently due to factual differences about what counts as marriage (one wife or several wives). Such factual diversity can lead to differences in the way a moral rule is applied. However moral relativism goes beyond this type of diversity and asserts that the truth values of moral principles themselves are relative to a given culture. There's a difference between individual moral relativism (subjectivism) and cultural moral relativism (conventionalism)

Because of the major criticisms against it most moral philosophers and theologians reject the idea of moral relativity. There are several reasons I don't think moral relativism is correct.  Here are five:

First, it is difficult to precisely define what a society is or to specify in a given case what the relevant society is. Imagine a woman from society A above (which says adultery is wrong) having an extramarital affair with a man from society B (which says adultery is morally permissible), in a hotel room in a third society, C, which holds a different view from either A or B. Which is the relevant society for determining whether the act was right or wrong?

Secondly, it can be objected that we are often simultaneously a member of several different societies which hold different moral values: our nuclear family; our neighborhood, school, church, or social clubs; our place of employment; our town, state, country, and the international community. Which society is the relevant one for determining moral standards? What if I'm simultaneously a member of two different societies and one allows but the other forbids a certain moral action? How do I decide which society's rule is right?

Third, moral relativism suffers from a problem known as the reformer's dilemma. Christian Philosopher Dr. JP Moreland explains:

"If normative relativism is true, then it is logically impossible for a society to have a virtuous, moral reformer like Jesus Christ, Gandhi, or Martin Luther King, Jr. Why? Moral reformers are members of a society who stand outside that society's code and pronounce a need for reform and change in that code. However, if an act is right if and only if it is in keeping with a given society's code, then the moral reformer himself is an immoral person, for his views are at odds with those of his society. Moral reformers must always be wrong because they go against the code of their society. But any view that moral reformers are impossible is defective because we all know that moral reformers have existed.

Put differently, moral relativism implies that neither cultures (if conventionalism is in view) nor individuals (if subjectivism is in view) can improve their moral code. The only thing they can do is change it. Why? Consider any change in a code from believing, say, racism is right to racism is wrong. How should we evaluate this change? All the moral relativist can say is that, from the perspective of the earlier code, the new principle is wrong, and from the perspective of the new code, the old principle is wrong. In short, there has merely been a change in perspective. No sense can be given to the idea that a new code reflects an improvement on an old code because this idea requires a vantage point outside of and above the society's (or individual's) code from which to make that judgment. And it is precisely such a vantage point that moral relativism disallows."

Fourth, some acts are wrong regardless of social conventions. Advocates of this criticism usually adopt the standpoint of particularism and claim that everyone knows that some things are wrong, such as torturing babies, stealing as such, greed as such, etc., without first needing criteria to know how they know this. Thus, torturing babies is wrong, and can be known to be wrong, even if society says it is right.

Fifth, if moral relativism is true, its difficult to see how one society could be justified in morally blaming another society in certain cases, such as Venezuelan Pres. Chavez criticizing Pres, Bush and US foreign policy. Or the US criticizing China over human rights violations-if moral relativism is right, human rights don't exist. Thus the US has no "right" to criticize China for human "rights" violations. And in the case of Bush and Chavez, Bush should act in keeping with his society's code and Chavez should act in keeping with his society's code. If morality is relative how can either Bush or Chavez criticize the other's actions as morally wrong? How could any other society criticize the War in Iraq as morally wrong?

To the objection that one society may have its own relative moral code but should criticize acts of, say, murder, wherever they occur, one could respond that this rule further points out the logical inconsistencies of moral relativism. Because if moral relativism is true then society A seem to be in the position of holding that members of society B should, in fact, commit murder, since B's moral code says its right to do so but that society A should criticize society B for murdering because A's code tells them to. Thus relativism tells A to criticize B's acts as immoral while at the same time telling them their acts of murder should be done. But why should society B care what society A thinks anyway? After all, if normative relativism is true, there's nothing intrinsically right about the moral views of society A, or any society. For these and lots of other reasons moral relativism is illogical and should be rejected.



The Campbellite Code


Note: What follows is a parody of Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code I posted on a Church of Christ website I used to help moderate a few years ago. We were having a discussion about whether Disciples of Christ/Christian Church/Church of Christ "co-founder" Alexander Campbell (1788-1866) was a true advocate of Christian unity or simply did nothing but sow discord among the Baptist Churches with his "Current Reformation" and quest for "the Ancient Order." One poster was convinced that I was obsessed with Campbell, who really wasn't the great unity advocate I said he was (and still do), nor a religious icon worthy of veneration (which I still believe), but a divisive religious fanatic and sower of discord (actually this guy was probably more ticked off at me and my view of Campbell than Campbell himself). As proof that Campbell was a respected religious icon of the mid-19th c. (whether one fully agreed with him or not). I posted a tribute to the Sage of Bethany written by none other than future Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee (1807-1870), to which this poster objected that who cared what Lee thought, Campbell was still a trouble-maker. So I started thinking, tongue firmly ensconced in cheek and a bit sarcastically, what if there was a great conspiracy, similar to what Dan Brown set out in his novel The Da Vinci Code, only centered around Campbell and the Church of Christ? So I tried to envision what said conspiracy theory from a CoC perspective might look like. I posted what follows; anyone up on Stone-Campbell/CoC history should get most of the references. If not, don't despair, I have a glossary at the end. 

I should take a moment and say that I'm not laughing at or poking fun at any of the persons referenced below, but rather laughing with them. Even while I might not agree theologically with some of them, like Wallace, McGary or Miller, I respect them and their views. My purpose isn't to offend or insult anyone. Okay, here goes:

"As per The Campbellite Code Robert E. Lee was one of several secretive Elders of Alexander Campbell's Priory of Bethany, which sinister cabal was/is bent on resurrecting long-dead Enlightenment philosopher John Locke from the dead to lead a maniacal millennial kingdom on earth. Lee was put in place by the Elders of the Priory to wage war on the enemies of the Priory via the Civil War, which also served as a diversion from the Priory's true intentions of world domination. Secret clues were coded into the text of Thomas Campbell's Declaration & Address back in 1809 setting forth the location of Atlantis and exposing via prophecy the secrets, both of Area 51, the Roswell, New Mexico UFO crash of 1947, and the identity of the counter-cult organization opposed to the Priory, the Societatis Reformatio; the true purpose of the Declaration and Address was secretly guarded by the secretive member(s) of Piney.com, a group bent on some mysterious purpose known only to him/them, though perhaps also working for the Priory of Bethany.

"Barton Stone, who conducted sinister charismatic spiritual exercises at the Cane Ridge meeting house, and allegedly hid a mysterious treasure in that structure that would supposedly topple the Campbells, hid clues to the treasures whereabouts in the structure. When the curator of the Disciples of Christ Archives in Nashville was discovered ritually murdered in front of a painting of Margaret Campbell (whom conspiracy theorists believe might actually have been Walter Scott in drag), with ritual symbols (which, when deciphered, read “Acts 2:38”) inscribed all over his body, it led to other hidden clues in America, Scotland, Ireland and other countries.

"The Priory of Bethany's evil machinations are opposed by Robert Richardson's secretive Societatis Reformatio, which masquerades as the American Christian Missionary Society (AMCS), currently led by Rubel Shelly, which at the reinstitution of the Nashville Jubilee plans to expose the current Grand Elder of the Priory, Foy Esco Wallace, Jr., who's been sleeping in cryogenic suspended animation in a secret underground vault in Texas since his alleged "death" in the late 1970s.

"Actually it was all part of a sinister plan to overthrow the gov't and set up a millennial theocracy with John Locke as head and Alexander Campbell as his general; to do so Campbell instigated a secret cult known as the Priory of Bethany, which conducted its sinister rituals in the Brush Run Church, which was secretly patterned after a Unitarian meeting house. Grand Elder Campbell actually left coded clues in the Christian Baptist and Millennial Harbinger, as well as on Barton Stone's and Thomas Campbell's tombs, which initiates in the know could easily decipher. These gave cult members instructions on how to start the Civil War, after first sowing discord and division throughout the denominations, especially the Baptists, who had previously expelled Campbell, hence his vow of revenge! Before he could instigate his millennial theocracy he would first have to bring the other sects (and the country) to their knees!

"The curator of the Disciples of Christ Museum in Nashville was found murdered in front of a painting of Margaret Campbell (as already stated, whom conspiracy theorists believe might actually have been Walter Scott in drag) with ritual symbols inscribed all over his body, leading investigators to the old Cane Ridge Meeting House in Bourbon County, Kentucky where they allegedly discovered secret hidden parchments behind the pulpit; these gave them the location of hidden clues, the "New Light Cipher" embedded as a series of odd numbers in Campbell's 1825 Living Oracles translation of the New Testament (I understand that Madonna has stopped studying the Kabbalah in favor of this), which led back to Glasgow, Scotland, where the young Campbell took classes in 1808, to the Haldanean Tabernacle church in Glasgow with clues that led them from there back to Ahorey, Ireland, where Thomas Campbell was once pastor before immigrating to America—all the while they were being followed by an operative of the secretive society code-named "Piney," whose member(s) as an extreme act of penance deny himself/themselves the use of instrumental music in worship and speak in code language about Pindar and Pliny. And then there’s the mystery of Barton Stone’s great wealth and his esoteric “secrets”; many believe that Barton W. Stone retired from Lexington, KY with an enormous amount of money and a “secret” that would destroy the Campbells. But I don't want to spoil the ending of The Campbellite Code.

"Tolbert Fanning was the Priory's second secret Grand Elder, Campbell himself being the first. However, Dr. Robert Richardson unbeknownst to Fanning, founded a counter-organization known as the Societatis Reformatio in order to fight the Priory of Bethany and thwart its evil schemes. Isaac Errett was the secret Grand Elder of the Societatis Reformatio when Austin McGary, current Grand Elder of the Priory of Bethany, in concert with the Pope in Rome, attempted to dissolve it in 1906. McGary thought Errett and the Societatis Reformatio were becoming too liberal and powerful (some say McGary actually coveted the Grand Eldership of the Societatis for himself, but had been rebuffed by Errett). At any rate, the Societatis knew the truth about the Priory of Bethany and had to be silenced. Errett passed the Grand Eldership of the Societatis on to David Lipscomb, unbeknownst to the Priory of Bethany, of which he was also head. Thus Lipscomb pretended to do the bidding of the Priory while all the while secretly working for the Societatis.

"In 1942 Foy Wallace, Jr. discovered these secrets, hence his scathing denunciation of Lipscomb as a false teacher and a heretic. Wallace thus expunged all references to the secretive Societatis Reformatio from official Church of Christ records. However RH Boll continued the Societatis as a clandestine cult group; in 2006 the current Grand Elder of the Societatis, Rubel Shelly (some say it's Max Lucado), intends to disclose the hidden secrets of the Priory of Bethany and the truth about its aims of a sinister millennial theocracy-if it survives the attack of the secret members of the Priory of Bethany. And it would've worked, too, if it weren't for those meddling kids! Zoinks, Scoob!

"Read all about it in the best-selling The Campbellite Code.

"Oh, and all descriptions of art, architecture and secret rituals are of course factual.

"Soon to be a major motion picture by Jule Miller! Coming soon to a filmstrip projector near you!"




Since much of the above may make no sense to many of you, I offer the following Glossary:

Alexander Campbell (1788-1866): Hugely influential former Presbyterian minister and editor, advocate of Christian reform and unity, who took over leadership of his father Thomas' movement. Campbell was postmillennial and pacifist in his views. He believed that the unity of the church would hasten the spead of the gospel which itself would hasten Christ's millennial kingdom. In order to achieve that unity he originally urged a return to what he described as the "ancient order" of the work and worship of the church as set forth in the New Testament, yet later abandoned the ancient order as a catalyst for unity (though he never abandoned belief in the ancient order itself) in favor of a more "catholic" (universal) unity upon the "seven ones" (one faith; one hope; one baptism; one God; one Spirit; etc) of Ephesians 4.

Area 51: Top secret US Air Force base near Las Vegas, Nevada, the subject of numerous UFO conspiracy theories, as, among other things, Area 51 supposedly has the wreckage of the UFO that crashed at Roswell, New Mexico, in 1947, along with the bodies of the aliens.

Austin McGary (1846-1928): Influential conservative Church of Christ minister and editor from Texas, who disagreed with David Lipscomb on topics such as whether one being baptized must understand that baptism is for the remission of sins for it to be a valid baptism (McGary said "yes," Lipscomb said "no").

Barton Warren Stone (1772-1844): Former Presbyterian pastor, editor of The Christian Messenger, and founder of the "Christian Church," which united with the Campbells' Disciples in 1832. Stone was premillennial (classical, not Dispensational) and pacifist in his views.

Bethany: Virginia (now West Virginia) Home of Alexander Campbell and name of the university he founded in the 1840s. 

Cane Ridge: Barton W. Stone was pastor of the Cane Ridge Presbyterian Church near Lexington, KY in 1801 when the famous Cane Ridge Revival occurred. The revival was the catalyst for Stone's eventual separation from the Presbyterian Church and his founing the Christian Church dedicated to Christian reform and unity. 

Christian Baptist: Name of Alexander Campbell's first religious journal. The second was called the Millennial Harbinger.

David Lipscomb (1831-1917): Hugely influential Christian Church/Church of Christ minister, editor of The Gospel Advocate, and namesake of David Lipscomb University in Nashville. Lipscomb was premillennial, pacifist, and against Christian participation in government and the military.


"Declaration & Address," document advocating Christian unity and reform penned by Thomas Campbell in 1809.

Disciples of Christ: Preferred name of Alexander's group of believers which merged with Barton Stone's Christians in 1832 to become the Christian Church. In 1906 the Christian Church, the communion of churches dedicated to Christian reform and unity, officially split into the mostly Northern Disciples of Christ and the mostly Southern Churches of Christ. The Disciples split again in the 1950s, into Disciples of Christ and Independent Christian Churches.

Foy Esco Wallace (1896-1979): Hugely influential conservative Church of Christ minister and exposer of what he deemed "false teaching," both among the denominations, and among his own brethren. Wallace strongly disagreed with and condemned David Lipsomb's premillennial, pacifist, anti-Christian involvement in government views.

Haldanean Tabernacle Church: One of several congregations of Scottish Christian restorationists Robert (1764-1842) and James Haldane. Alexander Campbell's views were partially informed by those of the Haldane brothers.

Isaac Errett (1820-1888): Hugely influential Northern Christian Church minister and editor of the Christian Standard, also a disciple of Alexander Campbell. Errett attempted to be a peacemaker and uniter during the disputes of the 1870s and 1880s that eventually resulted in the 1906 split.

James A. Harding (1848-1922): Influential Christian Church/Church of Christ minister, editor and co-founder with David Lipsomb of the Nashville Bible School (now David Lipscomb University) in Nashville. Harding had a very robust theology of the personal indwelling of the Holy Spirit at a time when many in the Church of Christ were embracing a legalistic, "word-only" theory of the operation of the Holy Spirit in the believer's life.


John Locke (1632-1704): English philosopher whose ideas greatly influenced a young Alexander Campbell. Among other things, Locke taught that human beings possess no innate knowledge; we begin our lives as "blank slates" and ideas are the materials of knowledge and all ideas come from experience. Locke also argued that the Christian faith can be paired down to a set of essential propositions that all reasonable people could assent to.

Jule Miller (1925-2000): Church of Christ minister who developed a popular, widely-used evangelization filmstrip in the 1970s (before VCRs or DVD players). If you grew up in the CoC before the 1980s you know what I'm talking about.

Kabbalah: Medieval Jewish mystical and esoteric method of interpreting Jewish scripture and rabbinical teaching. A modern, reworked New Age version is all the rage among many people like rock star Madonna.

Margaret Campbell (d. 1827): Alexander Campbell's first wife, who died of an illness.

Max Lucado: Popular Church of Christ minister and best-selling author, considered a bit too progressive by many in the conservative and mainline CoCs.

New Lights: Nickname for the sect of Presbyterians Barton Stone came out of.

Piney.com: Website hosted by a very conservative, outspoken, Church of Christ minister. Piney espouses some strange views, it seems to me.

RH (Robert Henry) Boll (1875-1956): Influential premillennial minister in Midwestern Churches of Christ, and a student of James A. Harding's and David Lipscomb's Nashville Bible School.

Robert Richardson (1806-1876): Influential Christian Church minister, scientist, physician, editor and author of Alexander Campbell's memoirs, who in the 1840s and 1850s in the Millennial Harbinger (which he edited) opposed the growing legalistic, sectarian, too-rational approach to the faith, which limited the role of grace and the Holy Spirit, which was being advocated by leaders like Tolbert Fanning.

Roswell, New Mexico: Famous site of an alleged UFO crash in 1947, which many people believe was covered up by the US Air Force.

Rubel Shelley: Hugely influential modern minister and author of Churches of Christ, currently President of Rochester College in Michigan, who abandoned what he viewed as his earlier legalism of works-righteousness for a message of salvation by grace through faith in Christ; Shelley is thus considered too progressive by many of his more conservative brethren. His former congregation of Woodmont Hills in Nashville used to host an annual conference known as Jubilee. It was considered too "liberal" by many in the more conservative congregations of the Church of Christ.

Thomas Campbell (1763-1854): Former Irish Presbyterian pastor, father of Alexander and founder of the Disciples. The Campbells immigrated to America from Ireland, Thomas in 1807, the rest of the family in 1809. Thomas, an advocate of Presbyterian unity in Ireland, felt compelled to sever ties with the Presbyterian Church in America in the wake of his being censured for serving communion to members of another sect of Presbyterians. He and a like-minded group of people then founded a non-denominational "para-church"
organization called the Washington, Pennsylvania Christian Association, dedicated to Christian union and later an Independent congregation. In 1809 Thomas published the "Declaration & Address," calling for Christian reform and unity.

Tolbert Fanning (1810-1874): Influential Christian Church minister, co-founder of the Gospel Advocate, and associate of David Lipscomb. Founded Franklin Academy near Nashville.
 
Walter Scott (1796-1861): Influential Christian Church minister, editor and colleague of Alexander Campbell. It was Scott who formulated what he called the "Golden Oracle," the essential gospel teaching that Jesus is the Christ, as well as the principal elements of the gospel message on his "five-finger exercise," which were: faith; repentance; baptism; remission of sins; gift of the Holy Spirit. Somehow the Church of Christ later changed these into the "five-step plan of salvation": hear; believe; repent; confess; be baptized.