rusmeister
A Russified American Orthodox Chestertonian
- Dec 9, 2005
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No. I see it terms of legality. To say that someone has the legal right to do something is to recognize that some governing body that confers legal status upon the thing that the person wants to do has decided "okay, people can now do this thing without any legal repercussions in terms of going to jail, etc." (or "with some legal benefits via XYZ"). It's not that morals don't have anything to do with this; it's that what is morally right and what is a legal right are often not the same thing, not because we don't want them to be, but because they just aren't. Because we don't live in a world where everyone is Orthodox, or even Christian, or even heterosexual. What's to be done about that...make everyone be Orthodox Christians insofar as it is possible without compromising what that means? Yes! And that's precisely why we don't look to Evangelicals adoringly as though they know anything about what that means just because they too don't view homosexual marriage as legitimate. That's why I've posted in this thread at all (since I'm not EO, the OP doesn't even pertain to me). Because what we need to do to get to where we want to get to isn't going to be accomplished by settling this one issue. Gay marriage could be re-illegalized tomorrow and it would not transform society in such a way as to bring it in line with traditional Christian anthropology and morals (as it was already way out of whack with that last year, when this stuff was still illegal at a federal level, or twenty years ago, when it was still illegal everywhere in the USA). Sure, gay marriage being legal (and all this other sexuality and gender based stuff that is everywhere) certainly isn't helping, but...well...what can anyone say? The world is not getting any easier out there, so we have to work harder and smarter than we have been, and not rely on the lazy, entitled Evangelical mainstream to do our work for us when we'd be better off doing it ourselves than making quasi-saints of their flash-in-the-pan culture warriors. So I personally see the Kim Davis approach as one fitting Evangelicals, who have a very politicized and surface level understanding of Christian morality in the first place, but not for Orthodox Christians, who are supposed to have a holistic, deep lived knowledge of personhood, rights, and all of these other things that cannot be limited to "Don't be gay cuz Jesus says so", which is the (only) message that people outside of Christian circles seem to be getting from this whole mess.
I agree with you on nearly everything here, dzheremi, which is why I've been saying what I'm saying. The chief misunderstanding here seems to be that I suggest adoring Davis, when I see her as a victim, put in a difficult situation that none of us want to be in, and making a hard choice, one that requires courage, even if she is "a bear of very little brain". I think that, from such "bears", even if they have none of the brains or wisdom of Chrysostom, even if they can only say, "Don't be gay cuz Jesus said so" - and the enemies of faith will not WANT to get any other message - they would dismiss a Chrysostom as "blathering nonsense", they are still showing courage, and not cowardice, and are trying to do the right thing, not the wrong thing. You disagree, you think resigning best. I get that, and I don't agree. And I don't think resistance to illegitimate government commands to be an especially evangelical Protestant act.
You say, as I understand it, that we ought to obey and/or honor commands of the government regardless of their morality because they are legal. I disagree. That's what all of the talk of "rights" boils down to. You think we must submit because a government agency has said "they have a right". I don't think we should. It all comes down to that.
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