Moral absolutes: Judeo-Christian values: Part XI
Dennis Prager (archive)
May 3, 2005
Nothing more separates Judeo-Christian values from secular values than
the question of whether morality -- what is good or evil -- is absolute
or relative. In other words, is there an objective right or wrong, or
is right or wrong a matter of personal opinion?
In the Judeo-Christian value system, God is the source of moral
values and therefore what is moral and immoral transcends personal or
societal opinion. Without God, each society or individual makes up its
or his/her moral standards. But once individuals or societies become
the source of right and wrong, right and wrong, good and evil, are
merely adjectives describing one's preferences. This is known as moral
relativism, and it is the dominant attitude toward morality in modern
secular society.
Moral relativism means that murder, for example, is not
objectively wrong; you may feel it's wrong, but it is no more
objectively wrong than your feeling that some music is awful renders
that music objectively awful. It's all a matter of personal feeling.
That is why in secular society people are far more prone to regard
moral judgments as merely feelings. Children are increasingly raised to
ask the question, "How do you feel about it?" rather than, "Is it right
or wrong?"
Only if God, the transcendent source of morality, says murder is
wrong, is it wrong, and not merely one man's or one society's opinion.
Most secular individuals do not confront these consequences of
moral relativism. It is too painful for most decent secular people to
realize that their moral relativism, their godless morality, means that
murder is not really wrong, that "I think murder is wrong," is as
meaningless as "I think purple is ugly."
That is why our culture has so venerated the Ten Commandments --
it is a fixed set of God-given moral laws and principles. But that is
also why opponents of America remaining a Judeo-Christian country,
people who advocate moral relativism, want the Ten Commandments removed
from all public buildings. The Ten Commandments represents objective,
i.e., God-based morality.
All this should be quite clear, but there is one aspect of moral
relativism that confuses many believers in Judeo-Christian moral
absolutes. They assume that situational ethics is the same thing as
moral relativism and therefore regard situational ethics as
incompatible with Judeo-Christian morality. They mistakenly argue that
just as allowing individuals to determine what is right and wrong
negates moral absolutes, allowing situations to determine what is right
and wrong also negates moral absolutes.
This is a misunderstanding of the meaning of moral absolutes. It
means that if an act is good or bad, it is good or bad for everyone in
the identical situation ("universal morality").
But "everyone" is hardly the same as "every situation." An act
that is wrong is wrong for everyone in the same situation, but almost
no act is wrong in every situation. Sexual intercourse in marriage is
sacred; when violently coerced, it is rape. Truth telling is usually
right, but if, during World War II, Nazis asked you where a Jewish
family was hiding, telling them the truth would have been evil.
So, too, it is the situation that determines when killing is
wrong. That is why the Ten Commandments says "Do not murder," not "Do
not kill." Murder is immoral killing, and it is the situation that
determines when killing is immoral and therefore murder. Pacifism, the
belief that it is wrong to take a life in every situation, is based on
the mistaken belief that absolute morality means "in every situation"
rather than "for everyone in the same situation." For this reason, it
has no basis in Judeo-Christian values, which holds that there is moral
killing (self-defense, defending other innocents, taking the life of a
murderer) and immoral killing (intentional murder of an innocent
individual, wars of aggression, terrorism, etc.).
But situational ethics aside, the key element to Judeo-Christian
morality remains simply this: There is good and there is evil
independent of personal or societal opinion; and in order to determine
what it is, one must ask, "How would God and my God-based text judge
this action?" rather than, "How do I -- or my society -- feel about it?"
That different religious people will at times come up with
different responses in no way negates the fact that at least they may
be pursuing moral truth. In secular society, where there is no
God-based morality, there is no moral truth to pursue. The consequences
may be easily seen by observing that the most morally confused
institution in America, the university -- where good and evil are often
either denied or inverted -- is also its most secular.
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