Bob Lee said:
The problem from my perspective is that once we unmoor laws from an objective standard rooted in truth, then you can justify anything. The notion of justice itself relies on a well trained conscience and a proper understanding about what the right thing is to do in a particular instance. If we're going to punish people, send people to jail, sentence them to die, it had better be because what they did is actually wrong. If the truth is unknowable, how can we ever judge that anyone is doing anything wrong?
I don't need to rely on Christianity to say we have intrinsic knowledge about right and wrong. Aristotle knew this, and he lived before Christianity. The Decalogue pre dates Christianity. I'm not prescribing strict adherence to Christianity. It's just been the mechanism through which natural law is understood in the west for about a couple of thousand years.
A few concerns about objective moral truth: First, there are multiple versions of objective moral truth, none can be proven correct, and all must be taken on faith. Second, even if objective moral truth exists, we must rely on imperfect subjective human beings to interpret and execute objective moral laws.
Yes, laws rooted in something other than Christianity have the potential for making legal things not sanctioned by Christianity. In a democracy, eligible citizens get a say (indirectly usually) in deciding what laws to pass and how to enforce them. In a theocracy, a religious authority decides all laws and how to enforce them in the name of their version of God. Roughly, which system of government are you advocating for?
A democratic society which values individual property might be expected to write laws against theft. A democratic society which values life and safety might write laws against murder and assault. A society that values freedom of religion might write laws to permit the practice of different religions and beliefs. A society that does not value freedom of religion might write laws to violently force all citizens to obey one particular ideology. Again, what are you advocating for? If you value your right to practice Christianity, but you do not value my right to not practice Christianity, then you do not value freedom of religion. You value Christian theocratic authoritarianism.
Now, what members of society value can certainly be informed by religion and by Christianity. I think the vast majority of Christians that I know would say that freedom of religion is compatible with Christianity. I am not a Christian scholar, but I don't recall Jesus beating anyone over the head and forcing them to follow his teachings.
What I think you are not acknowledging is that your own rights to believe and practice as you see fit are equally at stake. If you are advocating for a system of governance rooted in religious truth, then you lose all reason to object the moment those with authority adopt a different religious truth.
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I tend to think that if something is intrinsically evil, it should not be legal. But if something is morally ambiguous or indifferent, it shouldn't be illegal.
And who gets to define evil? When those in power decide Christianity is evil, your objections lose ALL credibility. In a society rapidly becoming more secular, freedom of religion is Christianity's best defense. I worry that the more and more Christians continue to double down on the idea that their ideology should receive special treatment, the worse it will be for them in future decades. I don't want that.