He who does not love and respect the law, at least implicitly, will not obey it.I am all for these things. What concerns me is doing them in the proper way. To make abortion illegal by the Constitution is as wrong as going next door and throwing a brick through his window for not giving you your lawnmower back. Law must be respected before you can expect people to respect the law. You don't contact a Senator to fix a pothole in your street.
The law is meant to be obeyed, even though man's rebellious nature may not like it... it must be obeyed, for justice's sake.
An unjust law may be detested lawfully, because it violates the moral order.
We must affirm the right to life, and the intrinsic dignity of all individuals. This does not mean we must place that in the Constitution, however, just like having abortion does not mean we add to the Constitution, "unborn babies are not human persons."
What greater freedom is there than the freedom to do good?Well, this is where I disagree with a lot of Catholics here- I believe government exists to protect our rights, not to enforce morality.
Yes, a government should ideally allow individuals to act according to good conscience. This means, freedom of religion, speech, press, etc. This is a wonderful thing. However, this does not mean the government should allow people to act in bad conscience or direct malice, like in abortion, or any homicide involving adults.
Rights are based on morality. In some different moral systems than Christianity, man has no intrinsic rights. They are mere animal-machines whose 'rational' processes are governed by responses to stimuli, without free-will.
The idea that man has rights comes necessarily and almost exclusively from a monotheistic worldview. It is almost impossible to separate how one lives, speaks, and legislates, from a worldview implicit in their lives.
If we believe man is only matter, for example, we will treat man like only matter - we will feel free to use or destroy him as we see fit. We see this in Communism. We even see this in some radical animal rights groups. This is the logical outworking of a philosophical worldview.
If we believe man is made in the Image of God, then he is worthy of dignity, and has rights. Therefore, those who believe this (ideally) treat human beings with love, courtesy, and cultivate peace between neighbors. If you ask the typical person, "Why is killing wrong," they may say, "It hurts someone."
If one does not have a philosophy to justify the way they live, they begin to think the way they live.
Then you get into the philosophical presuppositions. How do you define hurt? Why is hurting someone, wrong? For all you know, you may be "helping" someone by annihilating them, one may argue.
This is the tragic fallacy of relativism, where you have "my morality" and "your morality," and we should not enforce any morality on anyone. This is the philosophy (and psychology) of sociopaths. To privatize morality will result in the destruction of civil law - because if our personal codes of morality: our own personal laws that govern our modes of behavior - are privatized to ourselves, it logically follows that we can claim that no man can enforce his moral code on us, if we do not believe it ourselves. Thus, for example, if murder is not an evil in my personal morality, than no one may judge me by enforcing their morality upon me, their personal right and wrong.
A society with this mentality will not fail to collapse.
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-- but I still think it is the right thing to do...
