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When is stealing not stealing?


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When is stealing not stealing?

Moralist will argue that we don’t always have a choice, they love to use the example of a man caught stealing bread. The moralist will say that if the man was stealing to feed his family than the act of stealing was justified. But the moralist would be wrong. Society does not allow for, nor could it survive with a sliding scale of morality. Stealing is steeling, wrong is wrong. The objections are noted and the circumstances duly noted, but stealing is stealing.

The Bible does not allow for a sliding scale, Jesus did not state that all must follow me, unless this or that happens. No Jesus said all must follow me, let the dead care for the dead. Jesus did not say follow only the commandments that meet your current social/political needs, he said I have not come to abolish the law, but to fulfill it. He told the rich young man to follow the commandments, and give up all he had to follow him. The young man was not willing to do so, and Jesus did not say, well that’s ok, follow me anyway, he, Jesus, told him to be gone.

Morality must be and should always be constant. It is only with consistence that humanity will stand a chance to survive. The greatness of a person lies in there moral fiber and the strength of that fiber lies in the constancy of its weaving.

The basic argument for a moralist is relativity, everything is relative to the person and circumstances. That each and every person and each and every moment has unlimited moral options, some grater that others, but all are still moral options.

Hog Wash!

Right is Right, Wrong is Wrong….

The Catholic Church teaches this, the actions of abortion are always wrong, regardless of reasons. Now the culpability of the individual may slide on a scale between total cooperation with the even act with full knowledge of its morality too involuntary cooperation in the evil act with no knowledge of its morality. One may be culpable or not, but the act it self is intrinsically evil.

Some will argue that abortion and steeling bread are not the same. But the logic is. The person my be less culpable if they were stealing under extreme mental stress than if they were stealing under normal circumstances. But the act of stealing has not changed.

We use this logic daily in our lives. We look at the situation and make judgment calls. Between choice  “A” and “B”, A is the less evil of the two. Example:

My family is with out food, I have no job nor money;

A: Steal bread to feed my family

B: Let my family go hungry

To the hungry man who wishes to care for his family the stealing of the bread is the lesser of the two evils. Yet this does not change the act of stealing in to a morally correct choice. It just served as the catalyst for the act of stealing.

In the modern world, one that is driven by a need to always be on the side of political correctness, we have taken the moral truths and designated them the moral guidelines or the moral sliding scale. Allowing the individual the responsibility of determining there own moral standards.

Yet we seem to be at a cross roads with this concept, with moral truths and the sliding scale of morality in a constant struggle for public acceptance. The moralist is pushing for a stringent adherence to personal morality, unless it interferes with the moral reality, than the moral truth, as they see it, should take precedence over the moral truth of the other.

We see this in our everyday life. The current controversy over the Ground Zero Mosque. The moralist think it should be built at Ground Zero, or at lest allowed to be built. But the same group that wishes to allow this under freedom of religion is the same group who wishes to prosecute the Christians who were passing out information at the Arab festival in Dearborn Michigan a few weeks back. You see the morality of the Mosque fit in to the truth of the moralist at the time were as the morality of the Christians did not.

Now some may say: well your the same, you think it is ok for the Christians to pass out information at a festival but not ok for a Mosque to be built, your in favor of only Christian moral truths. Not so… I Agree that they that the right to build the Mosque, I only question the location and the motive of the location. To me it is like adding salt in to the wounds of the nation. My moral truth remains the same, each group has the right to do what they are doing, and each group is protected by law to do so.

Morality is not an ever changing target, it is a constant. It is not a personal thing, it is a human thing. Stealing is Stealing, regardless of the reasons.

God Bless

Paul

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Posted by on September 8, 2010 in social justice

 

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Jesus as a tag line…


Faith1 Each day we all need to make personal choices regarding how we choose to live out our faith. We choose how we are going to react to our kids in the morning or how we are going to respond to the driver who just cut us off on our way to work. We are bombarded with options, most of them undesirable, and we must choose our personal response to each and every action the enters in to our life.

As Catholics we are given a plan to follow, we have a place to look for answers to the questions and situations that present themselves to us daily. We can choose to ignore them or to allow them to help form our reactions.

A few years back the big thing with teens and some adults was the WWJD (What would Jesus Do?) rubber bracelets. Everyone had them, even people who did not really care what Jesus would or would not do. The bracelets was an attempt to remind ourselves that we should always be thinking as Jesus thinks. But for most it was just a fashion statement.

We have opportunities to be Jesus to the world everyday. Most are small ways, but wwjdsome are big. We can choose to smile at a stranger or open a door for an elderly person. We can wave at the driver who just gave us the finger or we can pull over to help the stranded car along the road. Opportunities are always available, we just need to look for them and be willing to do them. Some are easy some are harder but all bring Jesus in to the world.

WWJD was and is a nice little saying, but we have tons of sayings:

  • Walk with Jesus daily (WWJD)
  • What would Jesus do (WWJD)
  • Look at it with Christ eyes

IM-LOVIN-IT-300x277so on and so on… But what good are the sayings if they mean nothing more that any  basic marketing tag line. And that’s what they are, tag lines, like McDonalds “I’m loven it” . There is nothing wrong with a little marketing, the Chuck could probably do more of it, but if it is nothing more than than that it’s a waste.  Maybe we should also introduce the club card like at CVS or at casinos, you know keep track of who attends and than offer discounts or gifts for use. The saying have to have meaning.

We must choose to live as Christ to the world, we have to make decisions moment by moment and each one will determine if I am bringing Christ in to the world or not. I offer no solutions in this blog on how you can do this, I am not you nor am I walking in your shoes. So my experiences are mine and your are yours, the challenges I face are unique to me and my life, how I choose to face them reflect upon me and how I choose to respond determines my character.

Of course my actions affect others and their actions affect others and so on and so on. But there is no one response fits all. But I can offer a resource to help you, in fact I can offer 2 or 3 resources to help:

All 3 books are guidelines to help you navigate this world using the eyes, heart and mind of Christ as your compass.

So starting today, look for ways to be Christ to others, look for opportunities to shine, not for your glory but for HIS glory.

God Bless

Paul

Catholic Study Bible – New American Bible – Including The Revised Psalms & The Revised New Testament
Catechism of the Catholic Church
James 1:12“Blessed is the man who perseveres under trial, because when he has stood the test, he will receive the crown of life that God has promised to those who love him.”

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