![Christian ethics](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi83LzdjL0Jyb29rbHluX011c2V1bV8tX1RoZV9TZXJtb25fb2ZfdGhlX0JlYXRpdHVkZXNfJTI4TGFfc2VybW9uX2Rlc19iJUMzJUE5YXRpdHVkZXMlMjlfLV9KYW1lc19UaXNzb3QuanBnLzE2MDBweC1Ccm9va2x5bl9NdXNldW1fLV9UaGVfU2VybW9uX29mX3RoZV9CZWF0aXR1ZGVzXyUyOExhX3Nlcm1vbl9kZXNfYiVDMyVBOWF0aXR1ZGVzJTI5Xy1fSmFtZXNfVGlzc290LmpwZw==.jpg )
Christian ethics, also known as moral theology, is a multi-faceted ethical system. It is a virtue ethic, which focuses on building moral character, and a deontological ethic which emphasizes duty according to the Christian perspective. It also incorporates natural law ethics, which is built on the belief that it is the very nature of humans – created in the image of God and capable of morality, cooperation, rationality, discernment and so on – that informs how life should be lived, and that awareness of sin does not require special revelation.: 93 Other aspects of Christian ethics, represented by movements such as the social Gospel and liberation theology, may be combined into a fourth area sometimes called prophetic ethics.: 3–4
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Christian ethics derives its metaphysical core from the Bible, seeing God as the ultimate source of all power. Evidential, Reformed and volitional epistemology are the three most common forms of Christian epistemology. The variety of ethical perspectives in the Bible has led to repeated disagreement over defining the basic Christian ethical principles, with at least seven major principles undergoing perennial debate and reinterpretation. Christian ethicists use reason, philosophy, natural law, the social sciences, and the Bible to formulate modern interpretations of those principles; Christian ethics applies to all areas of personal and societal ethics.
Originating in early Christianity from c. 27 to 325 AD, Christian ethics continued to develop during the Middle Ages, when the rediscovery of Aristotle led to scholasticism and the writings of Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274). The Reformation of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the subsequent counter-Reformation, and Christian humanism heavily impacted Christian ethics, particularly its political and economic teachings. A branch of Christian theology for most of its history, Christian ethics separated from theology during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. For most scholars of the twenty-first century, Christian ethics fits in a niche between theology on one side and the social sciences on the other. Secularism has had significant influence on modern Christian ethics.
Definition and sources
Christian ethics, also referred to as moral theology, was a branch of theology for most of its history.: 15 Becoming a separate field of study, it was separated from theology during the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Enlightenment and, according to Christian ethicist Waldo Beach, for most 21st-century scholars it has become a "discipline of reflection and analysis that lies between theology on one side and the social sciences on the other".: 41
Christian ethics is a Virtue ethic which focuses on developing an ethical character, beginning with obedience to a set of rules and laws seen as divine commands. These behaviors are morally required, forbidden, or permitted. Although virtue ethics and deontological ethics are normally seen as contrasting with one another, they are combined in Christian ethics. Claire Brown Peterson calls the Christian ethic a natural law ethic, writing that the New Testament contains "the expectation that humans are capable of knowing much of how they should live apart from explicit divine instructions ... Thus Gentiles who lack the revelation of scripture are said to have the law 'written on their hearts' (Romans 2:15) so that they can [legitimately] be held accountable when they violate what they are capable of seeing is right.": 83, 96 Wilkins says that in this view, the primary moral laws are universally known, are discernible through reason, are innate in all people (and, therefore, binding on all), and their practice contributes to individual and community well-being.: 13, 16 Elements of each of these theories can be found in the Bible and the early church.: 4
By the twenty-first century, additional traditions had formed in Christian ethics based on different interpretations of divine attributes, how God communicates moral knowledge, differing anthropological conclusions, and different ideas about how the believer should relate to the Christian community and the outside world.: 3–4 One aspect of these differences, which focuses on the church and its mission, developed into what Wilkins calls prophetic ethics. Its starting point is social justice and Jesus' "kingdom ideals", rather than individual morality; it recognizes the group dimension of sin, and tends to be critical of (and challenge) the other Christian ethical theories.: 24–28 Anabaptism is an early incorporation of the prophetic model reaching back to the Radical Reformation. They differed from other Reformation groups in that they saw the church as a unique type of human organization and its problems, not as theological, but as ethical failures rooted in entanglement with politics. Anabaptism began among the dispossessed and persecuted with isolationist tendencies, whereas modern versions, such as the Social Gospel movement, have turned toward cultural engagement.: 26 Post-colonial thought, and black, feminist and liberation theologies are examples of this Christian ethic engaging the "sinfulness of the social order".: 27–29
According to Servais Pinckaers, moral theologian and Roman Catholic priest, the sources of Christian ethics are the "Scriptures, the Holy Spirit, the Gospel law, and natural law.": xxi, xiii The four sources of Wesleyan theology are the Bible, tradition, reason, and Christian experience (an experience of the decisive adoption of Christianity). Christian ethics takes from the Bible its normative rules focusing on conduct, its basic understanding of natural law, its patterns of moral reasoning which focus on character, and the ideals of a community built on social justice.: 9, 11 : 7–10 Philip Wogaman writes that Christian ethics has also had a "sometimes intimate, sometimes uneasy" relationship with Greek and Roman philosophy, taking some aspects of its principles from Plato, Aristotle and other Hellenic philosophers.: 16
Historical background
Early Christianity
Christian ethics began its development during the early Christian period, which is generally defined as having begun with the ministry of Jesus (c. 27 AD–30) and ended with the First Council of Nicaea in 325.: 51 It emerged from the heritage shared by both Judaism and Christianity, and depended upon the Hebrew canon as well as important legacies from Greek and Hellenistic philosophy.: 1, 16
The Council of Jerusalem, reported in chapter 15 of the Acts of the Apostles, may have been held in about AD 50. The council's decrees to abstain from blood, sexual immorality, meat sacrificed to idols, and the meat of strangled animals were considered generally binding for all Christians for several centuries, and are still observed by the Greek Orthodox Church.
Early Christian writings give evidence of the hostile social setting in the Roman Empire, which prompted Christians to think through aspects of Roman society in Christian terms.: 26 Christian ethics sought "moral instruction on specific problems and practices" which were not sophisticated ethical analyses, but simple applications of the teachings (and example) of Jesus about issues such as the role of women, sexuality and slavery.: 24 After Christianity became legal in the 4th-century Roman Empire, the range and sophistication of Christian ethics expanded. Through figures such as Augustine of Hippo, Christian ethical teachings defined Christian thought for several centuries;: 774 For example, Augustine's ethic concerning the Jews meant that "with the marked exception of Visigothic Spain in the seventh century, Jews in Latin Christendom lived relatively peacefully with their Christian neighbors through most of the Middle Ages" (until about the 13th century).: xii : 3
Middle Ages
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In the centuries following the Fall of the Western Roman Empire, monks on missionary journeys spread practices of penance and repentance using books known as penitentials.: 52–56, 57 Theologian Christoph Luthardt describes Christian ethics of the Middle Ages as listing "7 capital sins... 7 works of mercy, 7 sacraments, 7 principle virtues, 7 gifts of the Spirit, 8 beatitudes, 10 commandments, 12 articles of faith and 12 fruits of faith".: 287 Crusade historian Jonathan Riley-Smith says that the Crusades were products of the renewed spirituality of the High Middle Ages (1000–1250), when the ethic of living the Apostolic life and chivalry began to form.: 177 The Middle Ages and the Renaissance saw a number of models of sin, listing the seven deadly sins and the virtues opposed to each.
Inaccurate Latin translations of classical writings were replaced in the twelfth century with more accurate ones. This led to an intellectual revolution called scholasticism, which was an effort to harmonize Aristotle's thoughts and Christian thought.: 220, 221 In response to the dilemmas this effort created, Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274) wrote "one of the outstanding achievements of the High Middle Ages", the Summa Theologica. His positions were eventually developed into the school of thought known as Thomism, which contains many ethical teachings that continue to be used, especially within the Roman Catholic Church.: 222
Reformation, Counter-Reformation and Christian humanism
Martin Luther, in his classic treatise On the Freedom of a Christian (1520) argued that moral effort is a response to grace: ethically, humans are not made good by the things they do, but if they are made good by God's love, they will be impelled to do good things.: 111 John Calvin adopted and systematized Luther's main ideas, grounding everything in the sovereignty of God.: 120 In Calvin's view, all humans have a vocation, a calling, and the guiding measure of its value is simply whether it impedes or furthers God's will. This gives a "sacredness" to the most mundane and ordinary of actions leading to the development of the Protestant work ethic.: 116–122 Where some reformers such as Huldrych Zwingli regarded church and state as identical, Calvin separated church and state by stating that God worked through the church spiritually, and directly in the world through civil government, each with their own sphere of influence.: 122, 123 Using natural law, the Old Testament covenant model and his reformation theology and ethics, Calvin provided the grassroots "federal theology" used by "nations and churches struggling for justice and liberty". These reformers contributed ideas of popular sovereignty, asserting that human beings are not "subjects of the state but are members of the state".: 125 During the Reformation, Protestant Christians pioneered the ethics of religious toleration and religious freedom.: 3 Protestants also valued virtue ethics. After the Reformation, Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics continued to be the main authority for the discipline of ethics at Protestant universities until the late seventeenth century, with over fifty Protestant commentaries published on the Nicomachean Ethics before 1682.
Max Weber asserted that there is a correlation between the ethics of the Reformers and the predominantly Protestant countries where modern capitalism and modern democracy developed first.: 124 The secular ideologies of the Age of Enlightenment followed shortly on the heels of the Reformation, but the influence of Christian ethics was such that J. Philip Wogaman, pastor and professor of Christian ethics, asks "whether those (Enlightenment) ideas would have been as successful in the absence of the Reformation, or even whether they would have taken the same form".: 125
The Roman Catholic Church of the 16th century responded to Reformation Protestantism in three ways.: 335 First, through the Counter-Reformation which began with Pope Paul III (1534–1549). Secondly, through the new monastic orders which grew in response to the challenges which Protestantism presented. The most influential of these new orders was the Order of Jesuits.: 336 The Jesuits' commitment to education put them at the forefront of many colonial missions.: 336 The third response was by the Council of Trent in 1545 and 1563. The Council asserted that the Bible and church tradition were the foundations of church authority, not just the Bible (sola scriptura) as Protestants asserted; the Vulgate was the only official Bible and other versions were rejected; salvation was through faith and works, not faith alone; and the seven sacraments were reaffirmed. According to Matthews and Dewitt, "The moral, doctrinal and disciplinary results of the Council of Trent laid the foundations for Roman Catholic policies and thought right up to the present.": 337
Christian humanism taught the radical new idea that any Christian with a "pure and humble heart could pray directly to God" without the intervention of a priest.: 338 Matthews and Platt write that, "The outstanding figure among the northern humanists—and possibly the outstanding figure among all humanists—is the Dutch scholar Desiderius Erasmus".: 338 His ethical views included advocating a humble and virtuous life, "the study of Classics, and honoring the dignity of the individual". He promoted the Christian ethic as expressed in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5:1 – 7:27).: 339
Modern Christian ethics
After separating from theology, the primary concern of nineteenth century Christian ethicists was the study of human nature. "Beginning with the rise of Christian social theory" in the nineteenth century, theologian John Carman says Christian ethics became heavily oriented toward discussion of nature and society, wealth, work, and human equality.: 511–512 Carman adds that, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, "the appeal to inner experience, the renewed interest in human nature, and the influence of social conditions upon ethical reflection introduced new directions to Christian ethics".: 511–512
Carman adds that the question of how the Christian and the church relates to the surrounding world "has led to the development of three distinct types of modern Christian ethics: "the church, sect and mystical types".: 463 In the church type (i.e., Roman Catholicism and mainstream Protestantism), the Christian ethic is lived within the world, through marriage, family, and work, while living within and participating in their respective towns, cities and nations. This ethic is meant to permeate every area of life. The ethic of the sect (i.e., Amish, Mennonites, some monastic orders) works in the opposite direction. It is practiced by withdrawing from the non-Christian world, minimizing interaction with that world, while living outside or above the world in communities separated from other municipalities. The mystical type (i.e., some monastic orders, some parts of the charismatic movement and evangelicalism) advocates an ethic that is purely an inward experience of personal piety and spirituality and often includes asceticism.: 465
In the late twentieth century, these and other differences contributed to the creation of new varieties of Christian ethics.: 3–4 The Anabaptists, the Social Gospel movement, postcolonialism, black theology, feminist theology, and liberation theology focus first and foremost on social justice, the "kingdom ideals" of Jesus, recognize the community-based dimension of sin, and are critical of the traditional theories of Christian ethics.: 24–28
In the early twenty-first century, Professor of philosophy and religion at Maryville, William J. Meyer, asserts that Christian ethicists often find themselves on one side of a discussion of ethics, while those advocating a secular worldview that denies God and anything transcendent are their opponents on the other side. He says these discussions are divided by beliefs about how claims ought to be addressed, since both sides assume there is a polarity between human reason and the authority of scripture and tradition.: 2–5 Meyer asserts that the answer to this difficulty lies in modern Christian ethics embracing secular standards of rationality and coherence, while continuing to refuse the secular worldview and its premises and conclusions.: 2 Meyer describes this effort to affirm religion "within the context of modern secularity" as "the critical fault line in the contemporary world".: 5
Philosophical core
Gustafson sets out four basic points he asserts that any theologically grounded ethic must address:
- metaphysics: all other concepts and beliefs rest on metaphysics; it is about how being and existence are defined through God, His will and His relation to humans;
- epistemology: how humans know, and distinguish, justified belief from mere opinion, through human experience, community, nature and man's place in it;
- ethics: the system and principles used by persons as moral agents;
- applications: how persons make moral choices, judge their own acts, the acts of others, and the state of the world.: 14
Metaphysical foundations
The Christian metaphysic is rooted in the biblical metaphysic of God as "Maker of Heaven and earth".: 25 Philosopher Mark Smith explains that, in the Bible, a fundamental ontology is embodied in language about power, where the world and its beings derive their reality (their being, their power to exist, and to act) from the power of God (Being itself). Theology and philosophy professor says that metaphysics is found anywhere the Bible has something to say about "the nature of existence".: 207 According to Rolf Knierim, the Bible's metaphysic is "dynamistic ontology" which says reality is an ongoing dynamic process.: 208 In this view, God "gives the universe its basic order", and its "formal statistical patterns", generally referred to as natural laws, but also allows them to develop organically with minimum interference.
According to Roger E. Olson, the Christian view of the nature of reality can also be called "biblical theism" or "biblical personalism": the belief that "ultimate reality is a personal God who acts, shows and speaks...": 13, 17 Mark Smith explains that, in metaphysical language, the power of lesser beings participates in Power itself, which is identified as God.: 162 Humanity is the highest level of development in creation, but humans are still creatures.: 25 This view asserts that humans reflect the relational nature of God.: 13, 17 In the Christian metaphysic, humans have free will, but it is a relative and restricted freedom. Beach says that Christian voluntarism points to the will as the core of the self, and that within human nature, "the core of who we are is defined by what we love", and this determines the direction of moral action.: 25–26
Humans reflect the nature of ultimate reality, therefore they are seen as having a basic dignity and value and should be treated, as Immanuel Kant said, as "an end in themselves" and not as a means to an end.: 18 Humans have a capacity for reason and free will which enable making rational choices. They have the natural capacity to distinguish right and wrong which is often called a conscience or natural law. When guided by reason, conscience and grace, humans develop virtues and laws. In Christian metaphysics according to Beach, "Eternal Law is the transcendent blueprint of the whole order of the universe... Natural Law is the enactment of God's eternal law in the created world and discerned by human reason.": 11–12
Paul
Some older scholarship saw Paul's moral instruction as separate from his theology, saying his ethic was adopted from Hellenist philosophy.: 17 Modern scholarship has broken up these old paradigms.: 23 "Christianity began its existence as one among several competing Jewish sects or movements. Judaism was not one thing, either in Judea and Galilee or in the Diaspora, nor were the boundaries among the varieties of Judaism fixed or impermeable".: 26 Paul's writings reflect this mix.: 167
He called himself a "Hebrew of Hebrews" but he did so in fluent Greek. He avoided the high Atticistic Greek style of rhetoric but invented his own by making use of the strategies of the Greco-Roman orators.: 26–27 He employed Jewish strategies for interpretation and used the Jewish traditions for reading the apocalyptic scriptures including the sectarian and what would later be the rabbinic ones. But he was also aware of the Greco-Roman philosophical discussions of his day. He mixed things that modern scholars have seen as unmixable,: 27 changing and transforming key elements within the Jewish/Hellenist paradigm into something uniquely Christian.: 9, 242
Paul's theological and apocalyptic views form the foundation of his ethical views, and the foundation of Paul's theology is the cross of Christ.: 191 When the Corinthian church begins in-fighting, Paul responds by saying they have abandoned their core teachings: the cross and the centrality of God. These were the themes that formed the foundation of all of Paul's preaching.: 25 The cross informs Paul's ethic theologically, eschatological, and Christologically, reconciling people to God but also summoning them to service.: 118
"Paul has more to say about human nature [and ethical behavior] than any other early Christian author",: 165 and Paul holds up the cross as motivation for ethical conduct. Practicing the cross by living with the self, crucified, is associated in 1 Corinthians and Ephesians with Christian unity, self-sacrifice, and the Christian's future hope. "The cross is increasingly recognized as providing a general foundation for Christian ethics".: 131
Epistemology
Christian ethics asserts that it is possible for humans to know and recognize truth and moral good through the application of both reason and revelation.: 23 Observation, reasoned deduction and personal experiences, which includes grace, are the means of that knowledge. Rabbinic scholar Michael Fishbane goes on to add that human knowledge of God is understood through language, and "It is arguably one of Judaism's greatest contributions to the history of religions to assert that the divine Reality is communicated to mankind through words.": 129
Evidentialism in epistemology, which is advocated by Richard Swinburne (1934–), says a person must have some awareness of evidence for a belief for them to be justified in holding that belief. People hold many beliefs that are difficult to evidentially justify, so some philosophers have adopted a form of reliabilism instead. In reliablilism, a person can be seen as justified in a belief, so long as the belief is produced by a reliable means even when they do not know all the evidence.
Alvin Plantinga (1932–) and Nicholas Wolterstorff (1932–) advocate Reformed epistemology taken from Reformer John Calvin's (1509–1564) teaching that persons are created with a sense of God (sensus divinitatis). Even when this sense is not apparent to the person because of sin, it can still prompt them to believe and live a life of faith. This means belief in God may be seen as a properly basic belief similar to other basic human beliefs such as the belief that other persons exist, and the world exists, just as we believe we exist ourselves. Such a basic belief is what Plantinga calls a "warranted" belief even in the absence of evidence.
Paul Moser argues for . He systematically contends that, if the God of Christianity exists, this God would not be evident to persons who are simply curious, but would instead, only become evident in a process involving moral and spiritual transformation. "This process might involve persons accepting Jesus Christ as a redeemer who calls persons to a radical life of loving compassion, even the loving of our enemies. By willfully subjecting oneself to the commanding love of God, a person in this filial relationship with God, through Christ, may experience a change of character (from self-centeredness to serving others) in which the person's character (or very being) may come to serve as evidence of the truths of faith."
According to Gustafson, Christian epistemology is built on different assumptions than those of philosophical epistemology. He says the Christian ethic assumes either a condition of piety, or at least a longing for piety.: 152 He defines piety as an attitude of respect evoked by "human experiences of dependence upon powers we do not create and cannot fully master".: 87 Gustafson adds that such piety must be open to a wide variety of human experiences, including "data and theories about the powers that order life...": 87 He says this Christian knowing engages the affections, and takes the form of a sense of gratitude.: 88 Gustafson sees trust as an aspect of such knowing: underneath science is a trust that there is an identifiable order and discoverable principles beneath the disarray of complex data; this is comparable to the trust of the Christian faith that "there is unity, order, form and meaning in the cosmos ...of divine making".: 23–24 Gustafson adds that: "Knowledge conditions are relative to particular communities" and all human knowledge is based on the experiences we have in the cultures within which we live.: 124
Basic ethical principles
Christian ethics asserts the ontological nature of moral norms from God, but it is also accountable to standards of rationality and coherence; it must make its way through both what is ideal and what is possible.: 9 Thus, Beach asserts that some principles are seen as "more authoritative than others. The spirit, not the letter, of biblical laws becomes normative.": 15
The diversity of the Bible means that it does not have a single ethical perspective but instead has a variety of perspectives; this has given rise to disagreements over defining the foundational principles of Christian ethics.: 2, 3, 15 For example, reason has been a foundation for Christian ethics alongside revelation from its beginnings, but Wogaman points out that Christian ethicists have not always agreed upon "the meaning of revelation, the nature of reason, and the proper way to employ the two together".: 3, 5 He says there are at least seven ethical principles that Christian ethicists have perennially reinterpreted.: 2
Good and evil
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Since the Christian ethic begins with God as the source of all, and since God is defined as the ultimate good, the presence of evil and suffering in the world creates questions often referred to as the problem of evil. Philosopher David Hume summarizes: "Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then from whence comes evil?" Addressing this requires a theological and philosophical response which John Hick thinks is the Christian ethic's greatest challenge.
Todd Calder says there are at least two concepts of evil applicable to this question: a broad concept and a narrow one. A broad concept of evil defines it as any and all pain and suffering, but this quickly becomes problematic. Evil cannot be correctly understood on a simple scale of pleasure vs. pain, since the National Institute of medicine says pain is essential for survival. Marcus Singer says that a workable definition of evil requires that: "If something is really evil, it can't be necessary, and if it is really necessary, it can't be evil.": 186 The Christian story "is a story of the salvific value of suffering", therefore the Christian ethic, while assuming the reality of evil and recognizing the power of suffering, does not support the view that all suffering is evil. The narrow definition of evil is used instead. It is defined as the attempt or desire to inflict significant harm on a victim, without moral justification, perpetrated only by moral agents capable of independent choices.
The Christian ethic offers three main responses to the problem of evil and a good God. The freewill defense by Alvin Plantinga assumes that a world containing creatures who are significantly free is an innately more valuable world than one containing no free creatures at all, and that God could not have made such a world without including the possibility of evil and suffering.: 30 The soul-making theodicy advocated by John Hick (Irenaean theodicy) says God allows suffering because it has value for building moral character. Christian ethicists such as David Ray Griffin have also produced process theodicies which assert God's power and ability to influence events are, of necessity, limited by human creatures with wills of their own.: 143
says natural evil exists in the form of animal suffering, and she offers a theodicy in response that is based on the parable of the wheat and the tares (Matthew 13:24–29). She argues that nature can be understood as an intertwined mix of the perfect and the corrupted, that God could not have made one without allowing the existence of the other, and that this is because of the natural laws involved in creation.: 83 Christian ethicists such as Christopher Southgate have also produced evolutionary theodicies which use evolution to show that the suffering of biological creatures, and belief in a loving and almighty God, are logically compatible.: 711
Generally, Christians ethicists do not claim to know the answer to the "Why?" of evil. Plantinga stresses that this is why he does not proffer a theodicy but only a defense of the logic of theistic belief.: 33 The approach of Christian ethics to pain and evil is summarized by who asserts that: "Direct contact with God does not answer Job's questions, but it makes meaning, and the acceptance of suffering, possible.": 74
Inclusivity, exclusivity and pluralism
There is an inherent tension between inclusivity and exclusivity in all the Abrahamic traditions. According to the book of Genesis, Abraham is the recipient of the promise of God to become a great nation. The promise is given to him and his "seed", exclusively, yet the promise also includes that he will become a blessing to all nations, inclusively (Genesis 12:3). The God of the Bible is the inclusive God of all nations and all people (Galatians 3:28), and the Great Commission (Matthew 28:19) is a command to go to all nations, yet Wogaman points out that Christians are referred to in the New Testament as the "elect" (Romans 8:33 Matthew 24:22) implying God has chosen some and not others for salvation.: 628 Christians and non-Christians have, throughout much of history, faced significant moral and legal questions concerning this ethical tension.: 8 During the Reformation, Christians pioneered the concept of religious freedom which rests upon an acceptance of the necessity and value of pluralism, a modern-day concept often referred to as .: 3
Law, grace and human rights
Christian ethics emphasizes morality. The law and the commandments are set within the context of devotion to God but are deontological standards defining what this morality is. The prophets of the Old Testament show God as rejecting all unrighteousness and injustice and commending those who live moral lives.: 8 In tension with this, there is also "a deep expression of God's love for undeserving sinners".: 9 Wogaman says the apostle Paul refers to this as grace: "being treated as innocent when one is guilty".: 9 Wogaman argues that: "Part of the biblical legacy of Christian ethics is the necessity somehow to do justice to both" law and grace.: 9 Author Stanley Rudman asserts that human rights (as defined post–WWII) is the language through which the Christian ethic is able to relate these concepts to the world.: 309–311 In a convergence of opinion among Catholics, Lutherans, Reformed, and others, this has led to a support of human rights becoming common to all varieties of Christian ethics.: 304, 311
Authority, force and personal conscience
Wogaman asserts that "love is, and must remain", the foundation of the Christian ethical system.: 331 In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus summarizes his ethical teachings to those who would follow a new path that diverged from established law: "turn the other cheek" Matthew 5:38–39, "love your enemies" Matthew 5:43–45, "bless those who persecute you" Romans 12:14–21. Jesus' followers must not murder, as the law says, but they must also not hold the kind of hatred that leads to it, but must forgive instead.: 330 Wogaman adds that, "justice, as the institutional structure of love, is inevitably dependent upon other incentives, including, ultimately the use of force". Both the Old and the New Testaments give explicit commands to respect the state's authority to "carry the sword" (Romans 13:4).: 123, 331 Christian ethics is, and has been repeatedly, divided over this interaction between obedience to authority and authority's power to enforce that obedience in contrast with one's personal responsibility to love and forgive.
Self-affirmation and self-denial
According to the book of Genesis, God created and declared creation, including humans, good (Genesis 1:31). The Song of Songs depicts sensual love as good. Other parts of the Old Testament depict material prosperity as a reward. Yet, the New Testament references the life of the Spirit as the ultimate goal, and warns against worldliness.: 7 In the traditional view, this requires self-sacrifice, self-denial and self-discipline, and greatness lies in being a servant to all (Mark 10:42–45).: 7 : 14 Yet according to ethicist , "there is no ontological split between self/other; there is no monolithic polarity of self-interested action versus other-regardingness".: 62, 64 Christian ethics has not traditionally contained concepts of self-love as a good. However, Koji Yoshino asserts that, within the Christian ethic, "altruistic love and self-love are not contradictory to each other. Those who do not love themselves cannot love others, nevertheless, those who ignore others cannot love themselves."
Wealth and poverty
There are a variety of Christian views on poverty and wealth. At one end of the spectrum is a view which casts wealth and materialism as an evil to be avoided and even combatted. At the other end is a view which casts prosperity and well-being as a blessing from God. The Christian ethic is not an opponent of poverty since Jesus embraced it, but it is an opponent of the destitution that results from social injustice.: 25 Kevin Hargaden says "No Christian ethic can offer a consistent defense of massive wealth inequality.": 77 Some Christians argue that a proper understanding of Christian teachings on wealth and poverty requires a larger view where the accumulation of wealth is not the central focus of one's life but rather a resource to foster the "good life". Professor David W. Miller has constructed a three-part rubric which presents three prevalent attitudes among Protestants towards wealth: that wealth is (1) an offense to the Christian faith (2) an obstacle to faith and (3) the outcome of faith.
Gender and sexuality
Classicist Kyle Harper writes that sexuality was at the heart of Christianity's early clash with its surrounding culture. Rome's concept of sexual morality was centered on social status, whereas the Christian ethic was a "radical notion of individual freedom centered around a libertarian paradigm of complete sexual agency".: 10, 38 This meant the ethical obligation for sexual self-control was placed on the individual, male and female, slave and free, equally, in all communities, regardless of status. In Paul's letters, porneia was a single name for the array of sexual behaviors outside marital intercourse that became a central defining concept of sexual morality, and shunning it, a key sign of choosing to follow Jesus. For Paul, "the body was a consecrated space, a point of mediation between the individual and the divine".
Views on sexuality in the early church were diverse and fiercely debated within its various communities, and this continues. Throughout the majority of Christian history, most Christian theologians and denominations have considered homosexual behavior as immoral or sinful. In contemporary Christian ethics, there are a variety of views on the issues of sexual orientation and homosexuality. The many Christian denominations vary from condemning homosexual acts as sinful, to being divided on the issue, and to seeing it as morally acceptable. Even within a denomination, individuals and groups may hold different views. Further, not all members of a denomination necessarily support their church's views on homosexuality.
Applied ethics
Politics
Christian involvement in politics is both supported and opposed by the different types of Christian ethics. Political scientist Amy E. Black says Jesus' command to pay taxes (Matthew 22:21), was not simply an endorsement of government, but was also a refusal to participate in the fierce political debate of his day over the poll tax. Old Testament scholar Gordon Wenham says: Jesus' response "implied loyalty to a pagan government was not incompatible with loyalty to God".: 7
War and peace
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The Christian ethic addresses warfare from the differing viewpoints of pacifism, non-resistance, just war, and preventive war which is sometimes called crusade.: 13–37 Where pacifism and non-resistance can be seen as ideals in action, evangelical theologian Harold O. J. Brown describes just wars, preventive wars and crusades as "actions in support of an ideal".: 155, 161–165 In all four views, the Christian ethic presumes war is immoral and must not be waged or supported by Christians until certain conditions have been met that enable the setting aside of that presumption.: 336
Pacifism and non-resistance are opposed to all forms of physical violence based on belief that the example of Christ demonstrates it is better to suffer personally than to do harm to others. Non-resistance allows for non-combatant service where pacifism does not.: 63 They both presuppose the supersession of the New Testament over the Old, and believe in the separation of church and state to the degree the Christian does not owe obedience and loyalty to the state if that loyalty violates personal conscience.: 81–83, 97 Both pacifism and non-resistance are interpreted as applying to individual believers, not corporate bodies, or "unregenerate worldly governments".: 36 Mennonite minister Myron Augsburger says pacifism and non-resistance act as a conscience to society and as an active force for reconciliation and peace.: 63
Preventive war, also sometimes referred to as crusade, and just war recognize that harm can result from failing to resist a tyrannical enemy.: 154–155 Preventive war is waged in anticipation of an act of aggression that would violate ideals of human rights, decency, and a sense of right and wrong.: 155, 161–165 Counter-terrorism is a kind of preventive war. Preventive war/crusade can also be seen as an attempt to set right a past act of aggression that was not responded to at the time it occurred. It is not necessarily religious in nature or focus, but "attempts to undo what no one had the right to do in the first place": the First Crusade of the Middle Ages, the First Gulf War, and World War II.: 153, 158 Supporters of Just War theory say war can only be justified as self-defense or the defense of others. The biblical provisos for these types of war are not supersessionist, and therefore are more from the Old Testament than the New.: 115–135 : 270–274
The last 200 years have seen a shift toward just war in the moral focus concerning the state's use of force.: 59 Justification for war in the twenty-first century has become the ethic of intervention based on humanitarian goals of protecting the innocent.
Criminal justice
Early criminal justice began with the idea that God is the ultimate source of justice, and is the judge of all, including those administering justice on earth. Within Christian ethics, this view places the greatest responsibility for justice on judges with moral character, who are admonished not to lie or be deceptive, not to practice racial prejudice or discrimination, or to let egoism lead them to abuse their authority, as central to the administration of justice.: xx Biblical ethicist Christopher Marshall says there are features of covenant law from the Old Testament that have been adopted and adapted to contemporary human rights law, such as due process, fairness in criminal procedures, and equity in the application of law.: 46
How justice is defined has varied. Aristotle's classic definition of justice, giving each their due, entered into Christian ethics through scholasticism and Thomas Aquinas in the Middle Ages. For Aristotle and Aquinas that meant a hierarchical society with each receiving what was due according to their social status. This allows for the criminal justice system to be retributive, to discriminate based on social standing, and fails to recognize a concept of universal human rights and responsibilities. Philip Wogaman says that after Aquinas, the Radical Reformation, the social gospel and liberation theology redefined getting one's due into what became the Marxist formula: "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need". Along these lines, justice had an egalitarian form while retaining male domination, and defining justice for slaves as paternalistic care.: 325 Wogaman says that these issues will "continue to occupy Christian ethics for years to come".: 325
Capital punishment
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In Christian ethics of the twenty-first century, capital punishment has become controversial, and there are Christian ethicists on both sides. Biblical ethicist Christopher Marshall says there are about 20 offenses that carry the death penalty in the Old Testament.: 46 He adds that "contemporary standards tend to view these laws of capital punishment as cavalier toward human life", however, the ancient ethic of "covenantal community" suggests the value of life was as much communal as individual.: 46–47 In contemporary society, capital punishment can be seen as respect for the worth of the victim by calling for the equal cost to the offender; it can also be seen as respect for the offender, treating them as free agents responsible for their own choices who must bear the responsibility for their acts just as any citizen must.
According to Jeffrey Reiman, the argument against capital punishment is not based on the offender's guilt or innocence, but on the belief that killing is wrong, and is therefore never a permissible act, even for the state.: 10 G. C. Hanks argues against the death penalty by saying it "is not effective in fighting crime, costs more than life sentences, reinforces poverty and racism, and causes innocent persons to be executed". He argues that it interferes with creating a just and humane society, negatively impacts the families of victims, and race issues, and can be seen as "cruel and unusual punishment". These arguments leave retribution as the primary supporting argument in favor of capital punishment, and Professor Michael L. Radelet says retribution's moral base is a problem for a Christian ethic.
The Catholic Church has historically taught that capital punishment is permissible, but during the twentieth century, popes began to argue that it could not be justified under present-day circumstances as there were other ways to protect society from offenders. Capital punishment has been abolished in many countries, and Radelet predicts that increasing opposition from religious leaders will lead to its abolition in America as well.
Relationships
In most ancient religions the primary focus is on humankind's relationship to nature, whereas in the Christian ethic, the primary focus is on relationship with God as the "absolute moral personality".: 23 This is demonstrated as a focus on relationship itself as a primary concern in all Christian ethics.
Neighbors
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Traditional Christian ethics recognizes the command to "love thy neighbor" as one of the two primary commands called the "greatest commands" by Jesus.: 24 This reflects an attitude that aims at promoting another person's good in what Stanley J. Grenz calls an "enlightened unselfishness".: 175 When the Pharisee asked Jesus: "Who is my neighbor?" (Luke 10:29), Grenz says the questioner intended to limit the circle of those to whom this obligation was due, but Jesus responded by reversing the direction of the question into "To whom can I be a neighbor?".: 107 In the parable of the "Good Samaritan", the use of a racially despised and religiously rejected individual as an example of the good, defines a neighbor as anyone who responds to those in need.
Women
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There are four primary views in Christian ethics on the roles of women. Christian feminism defines itself as a school of Christian theology which seeks to advance and understand the equality of men and women.Christian egalitarianism argues that the Bible supports "mutual submission". These views reflect the belief that Jesus held women personally responsible for their own behavior: the woman at the well (John 4:16–18), the woman taken in adultery (John 8:10–11), and the sinful woman who anointed his feet (Luke 7:44–50), are all dealt with as having the personal freedom, and enough self-determination, to choose their own repentance and forgiveness.: 127 The New Testament names many women among the followers of Jesus as well as naming women in positions of leadership in the early church.: 54, 112 Biblical patriarchy upholds the view that 1 Corinthians 14:34–35, 1 Timothy 2:11–15, and 1 Corinthians 11:2–16 represent a hierarchy of male over female authority.: 97 Complementarianism contains aspects of both views seeing women as "ontologically equal; functionally different".
Before the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, ordination was dedication to a particular role or ministry, and in this capacity, women in the church were ordained up until the 1200s.: 30 When theologians of this medieval period circumscribed the seven sacraments, they changed the vocabulary and gave the sacraments exclusively to male priests.: 30 In the nineteenth century, rights for women brought a wide variety of responses from Christian ethics with the Bible featuring prominently on both sides ranging from traditional to feminist.: 203 In the late twentieth century, the ordination of women became a controversial issue. Linda Woodhead states that, "Of the many threats that Christianity has to face in modern times, gender equality is one of the most serious."
Marriage and divorce
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According to professor of Religion Barbara J. MacHaffie, the early church fathers treated married life with some sensitivity, as a relationship of love and trust and mutual service, contrasting it with non-Christian marriage as one where passions rule a "domineering husband and a lusty wife".: 24 In the synoptic Gospels, Jesus is seen as emphasizing the permanence of marriage, as well as its integrity: "Because of your hardness of heart, Moses allowed you to divorce your wives, but from the beginning it was not so." Restriction on divorce was based on the necessity of protecting the woman and her position in society, not necessarily in a religious context, but in an economic context.Paul concurred but added an exception for abandonment by an unbelieving spouse.: 351–354
Augustine wrote his treatise on divorce and marriage, De adulterinis coniuigiis, in which he asserts couples may only divorce on the ground of fornication (adultery) in 419/21, even though marriage did not become one of the seven sacraments of the church until the thirteenth century.: xxv Though Augustine confesses in later works (Retractationes) that these issues were complicated and that he felt he had failed to address them completely, adultery was the standard necessary for legal divorce until the modern day.: 110 The twenty-first century Catholic Church still prohibits divorce, but permits annulment (a finding that the marriage was never valid) under a narrow set of circumstances. The Eastern Orthodox Church permits divorce and remarriage in church in certain circumstances. Most Protestant churches discourage divorce except as a last resort but do not actually prohibit it through church doctrine, often providing divorce recovery programs as well.
Sexuality and celibacy
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Lisa Sowle Cahill refers to sex and gender as the most difficult topics in new studies of Christian ethics. As "the rigidity and stringency of ...traditional moral representation has collided head-on with historicized or 'postmodern' interpretations of moral systems", Cowell says tradition has acquired new forms of patriarchy, sexism, homophobia and hypocrisy.: xi Feminist critics have suggested that part of what drives traditional sexual morality is the social control of women, yet within postmodern western societies the "attempt to reclaim moral autonomy through sexual freedom" has produced a loss of all sense of sexual boundaries.: 75, xi Cahill concludes that, in contemporary Western culture, "Personal autonomy and mutual consent are almost the only criteria now commonly accepted in governing our sexual behavior.": 1
The gospel requires that all relationships be reconfigured by new life within the community, yet the New Testament has no systematic investigation into all facets of any moral topic, no definitive guidance for the many variations of moral problems that exist in the twenty-first century.: 121 According to Lisa Sowle Cahill, "Traditional societies place sex and gender in the context of community, family and parenthood; modern societies respect reciprocity, intimacy and gender equality.": 257 Cowell says, New Testament authors challenge that which perpetuates sin, and encourage the transformation that "embodies the reign of God".: 122
While Jesus made reference to some that have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven, there is no commandment in the New Testament that priests must be unmarried and celibate. During the first three or four centuries, no law was promulgated prohibiting clerical marriage. Celibacy was a matter of choice for bishops, priests, and deacons. In the twenty-first century, the Roman Catholic Church teachings on celibacy uphold it for monastics and some priests. Protestantism has rejected the requirement of celibacy for pastors, and they see it primarily as a temporary abstinence until the joys of a future marriage. Some modern day evangelicals desire a more positive understanding of celibacy that is more like Paul's: focused on devotion to God rather than a future marriage or a lifelong vow to the Church.
Slavery and race
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In the twenty-first century, Christian organizations reject slavery, but historically Christian views have varied, embracing both support and opposition. Slavery was harsh and inflexible in the first century when Christian ethics began, and slaves were vulnerable to abuse, yet neither Jesus nor Paul ordered the abolition of slavery. At this time, the Christian view was that morals were a matter of obedience to the ordained hierarchy of God and men.: 296 Paul was opposed to the political and social order of the age in which he lived, but his letters offer no plan for reform beyond working toward the apocalyptic return of Christ. He did indirectly articulate a social ideal through the Pauline virtues, the "faith, hope and love" of his First Epistle to the Corinthians, by designating love as the highest of all virtues; and he indirectly undermined the mistreatment of women, children and slaves through his teachings on marriage and through his own personal lifestyle. Stanley K. Stowers, professor of religious studies, asserts the view that Paul's refusal to marry and set up a household that would require slaves, and his insistence on being self-supporting, was a model followed by many after him that "structurally attacked slavery by attacking its social basis, the household, and its continuity through inheritance from master to master".: 308–309
In the early 4th century, Roman law, such as the Novella 142 of Justinian, gave Christian bishops (and priests) the power to free slaves by a ritual in a church performed by the bishop or priest involved. It is not known if baptism was required before this ritual. Several early figures, such as Saint Patrick (415–493), himself having been enslaved as an adolescent, and Acacius of Amida (400–425), made personal sacrifices to free slaves. Bishop Ambrose (337–397 AD), while not openly advocating abolition, ordered that church property be sold to get the money to buy and free slaves.Gregory of Nyssa (c. 335–394) went further and stated opposition to all slavery as a practice. Later Saint Eligius (588-650) used his vast wealth to purchase British and Saxon slaves in groups of 50 and 100 in order to set them free.
By the time of Charlemagne (742–814), while Muslims were coming onto the scene "as major players in a large-scale slave trade" of Africans, , lecturer in medieval European history, says that slavery had become almost non-existent in the West.: 38, 167 Rio says criticism of the trade in Christian slaves was not new, but at this time, opposition began to get wider support, seeing all those involved in the trade as what Rio calls "symbols of barbarity".: 39 Slavery in Africa existed for six centuries before the arrival of the Portuguese (1500s) and the opening of the Atlantic slave trade in the West.: 8 Economics drove its development, but historian Herbert S. Klein adds that the trade was abolished in the U.S., Britain and Europe while it was still profitable and important to those respective economies.: 188 Early abolitionist literature viewed the abolition of slavery as a moral crusade.: 188 Churches became vital parts of that effort with abolitionists, reformers, and supporters of slavery all using Christian ethics to justify their relative positions.: 84–85, 277–279, 281–286
Racial violence over the last decades of the twentieth century and the early decades of the twenty first demonstrate how troubled issues involving race remain.: 186 Paul Harvey says that, in the 1960s, "The religious power of the civil rights movement transformed the American conception of race.": 189 The social power of the religious Right responded in the 70s by recapturing and recasting many evangelical concepts into political terms including support of racial separation.: 189 Since then, Harvey says the prosperity gospel, which has become a dominant force in American religious life, has translated evangelical themes into "a modern idiom" of "self-empowerment, racial reconciliation, and a 'positive confession'", (which Harvey defines as an amalgam of positive thinking, evangelical tradition and New Thought).: 196–197 The prosperity gospel's multi-cultural demographic may suggest much about the future of Christian ethics and race.: 196–197
Bioethics
Bioethics is the study of the life and health issues raised by modern technology that attempts to discover what medical ethicist Scott B. Rae and Christian ethicist call "normative guidelines built on sound moral foundations".: vii This is necessary because the moral questions surrounding new medical technologies have become complex, important and difficult.: 9, 11 David VanDrunen, professor of systematic theology and Christian ethics, opines that with the tremendous benefits of medical advances, have come the "eerie forebodings of a future that is less humane, not more".: 12 In what Rae and Cox describe as "a best selling exposé", Jeff Lyon in Playing God in the Nursery charged physicians with "prematurely withdrawing life-sustaining technology from seriously ill newborns".: 94 Remedies for infertility enable researchers to create embryos as a disposable resource for stem cells. Scripture offers no direct instruction for when a right to life becomes a right to death.: 14
The Catholic bio–ethic can be seen as one that rests on natural law. Moral decision making affirms the basic "goods" or values of life, which is built on the concept of a hierarchy of values, with some values more basic than others.: 17, 20 For example, Catholic ethics supports self-determination but with limits from other values, say, if a patient chose a course of action that would no longer be in their best interests, then outside intervention would be morally acceptable.: 18 If there is conflict over how to apply conflicting values, Rae and Cox say that then a proportionate reasoned decision would be made. This is defined as including values such as preservation of life, human freedom, and lessening pain and suffering while also recognizing that not all values can be realized in these situations.: 19–20
The Protestant Christian ethic is rooted in the belief that agape love is its central value, and that this love is expressed in the pursuit of good for other persons.: 20–22 This ethic as a social policy may use natural law and other sources of knowledge, but in the Protestant Christian ethic, apape love must remain the controlling virtue that guides principles and practices.: 23 This approach determines the moral choice by what is the most love-embodying action within a situation. Rae and Cox conclude that, in this view, actions that can be seen as wrong, when they are acts of maximal love toward another, become right.: 24
Genetic engineering
New technologies of prenatal testing, DNA therapy and other genetic engineering help many, yet Wogaman asserts they also offer ways in which "science and technology can become instruments of human oppression".: 303 Manipulating the genetic code can prevent inheritable diseases and also produce, for those rich enough, designer babies "destined to be taller, faster and smarter than their classmates".: 12 Genetic technologies can correct genetic defects, but how one defines defect is often subjective. Parents might have certain expectations about gender, for example, and consider anything else as defective.: 118–120 In some Third World countries where "women have far fewer rights and female children are viewed as liabilities with bleak futures", genetic testing is widely used for sex selection, and some couples have terminated otherwise healthy pregnancies because the child was not the desired gender.: 121 Research into the gene for homosexuality could lead to prenatal tests that predict it, which could be particularly problematic in countries where homosexuals are considered defective and have no legal protection. Such intervention is problematic morally, and has been characterized as "playing God".: 93, 94
The general view of genetic engineering by Christian ethicists is stated by theologian . He reasons that since diseases are the result of sin coming into the world, and because Christian ethics asserts that Jesus himself began the process of conquering sin and evil through his healings and resurrection, "if there is a condition in a human being (whether physical or psychological) [understood as disease], and if there is something that genetic technology could do to address that problem, then use of this technology would be acceptable. In effect, we would be using this technology to fight sin and its consequences".: 120
Abortion
Stanley Rudman boils down the abortion debate by saying that "if one says that the central issue between conservatives and liberals in the abortion question is whether the fetus is a person, it is clear that the dispute may be either about what properties a thing must have in order to be a person, in order to have the right to life – a moral question – or about whether a fetus at a given stage of development... possesses the properties in question" – a biological question.: 50 Most philosophers have picked out the capacity for rationality, autonomy and self-awareness to describe personhood, but there are at least four possible definitions: in order to be a true person, a subject must have interests; possess rationality; be capable of action; and/or have the capacity for self-consciousness.: 53 A fetus fails to possess at least one and possibly all of these, and so it can be argued that the fetus is not a true person.
Rudman points out how this approach becomes a slippery slope, as the argument can then be used to justify infanticide, which is not only not generally supported, but is defined by society as a crime. "Without assuming the Christian moral framework" concerning the sanctity of life, "the grounds for not killing persons do not apply to newborn infants. Neither classical utilitarianism nor preferential utilitarianism ... offer good reasons why infanticide should necessarily be wrong".: 44–46 Moral philosopher Peter Singer in Practical Ethics describes the Christian argument as "It is wrong to kill an innocent human being; a fetus is an innocent human being" therefore it is wrong to kill a fetus.: 46 Rudman asserts the Christian ethic is more than a simple syllogism, it is "a narrative that includes the child in God's family, takes into account the entire context surrounding its birth, including the other lives involved, and seeks harmony with God's redeeming activity through Christ. It includes confidence in God's ability to sustain and direct those who put their trust in him.": 339
Alcohol and addiction
![image](https://www.english.nina.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.jpg)
The Christian ethic concerning alcohol has fluctuated from one generation to the next. In the nineteenth century, the largest proportion of Christians in all denominations resolved to remain alcohol free. While it is true that some contemporary Christians, including Pentecostals, Baptists and Methodists, continue to believe one ought to abstain from alcohol, the majority of contemporary Christians have determined that moderation is the better approach.: 4–7
Ethicist asserts that the primary question for Christian ethics revolves around the fact that alcohol misuse is a "contemporary social problem of enormous economic significance, which exacts a high toll in human suffering".: 1 All persons must, directly and indirectly, determine their ethical response to alcohol's enormous popularity and widespread acceptance in the face of its social and medical harm.: 4 The Christian ethic takes seriously the power of addiction to "hold people captive, and the need for an experience of a gracious 'Higher Power' as the basis for finding freedom".: 199
Physician-assisted suicide
Physician Daniel P. Sulmasy lists arguments against physician-assisted suicide (PAS): those advocating it might do so for selfish/monetary reasons rather than out of concern for the patient; that suicide devalues life; that limits on the practice erode over time and it can become over-used; that palliative care and modern therapeutics have become better at managing pain, so other options are often available; and that PAS can damage a physician's integrity and undermine the trust patients place in them to heal and not harm.
In Christian ethics, responses to assisted suicide are rooted in belief in personal autonomy and love.: 19–20, 24 This remains problematic as the arguments commonly used to defend PAS are concepts of justice and mercy that can be described as a minimalist understanding of the terms. A minimal concept of justice respects autonomy, protects individual rights, and attempts to guarantee that each individual has the right to act according to their own preferences, but humans are not fully independent or autonomous; humans live in community with others. This minimalist view does not recognize the significance of covenant relationships in the process of decision making.: 348, 350 Empathy toward another's suffering tells us to do something but not what to do. Killing as an act of mercy is a minimalist understanding of mercy that is not sufficient to prevent unethical acts.: 349–350 Battin, Rhodes and Silvers conclude that the Christian ethic asserts "life and its flourishing are gifts of God, but they are not the ultimate good, and neither are suffering and death the ultimate evils. One need not use all of one's resources against them. One need only act with integrity in the face of them.": 352
Persistent vegetative state
VanDrunen explains that modern technology has treatments that enable a persistent vegetative state (PVS) which has led to questions of euthanasia and the controversial distinction between killing and letting die.: 197 PVS patients are in a permanent state of unconsciousness due to the loss of higher brain function; the brain stem remains alive, so they breathe, but swallowing is a voluntary reflex, so they must receive artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH) to survive. These patients can be without other health problems and live for extended periods. Most ethicists conclude it is morally sound to decline ANH for such a patient, but some argue otherwise based on defining when death occurs.: 232
Environmental ethics
The twenty-first century has seen an increased concern over human impacts on the environment, including global warming, pollution, soil erosion, deforestation, species extinction, overpopulation, and overconsumption.: xi There appears to be a strong scientific consensus that industrialized civilization has emitted enough carbon dioxide into the atmosphere to create a greenhouse effect causing global warming, yet debate rages primarily over the economic effects of limiting development.: 312–313 Michael Northcott, professor of ethics, says both issues will have to be dealt with: the reorientation of modern society toward recognizing the biological limits of the planet will not occur without a related quest for justice and the common good.: xiii Wogaman argues that the "doctrine of creation creates a presumption in favor of environmental conservation".: 327 Francis Schaeffer, evangelical theologian, said: "We are called to treat nature personally.": 127 Northcott says the incarnation shows God loves material reality, not just spirit.: 129 Recent studies indicate American Christians have become polarized over these issues. "For liberal Christians, the call to be a better steward is urgent, unequivocal, of the highest priority, and not to be subject to negotiation or compromise. For conservative Christians, however, the commitment to stewardship has become increasingly hemmed in with certain reservations and qualifications... Today, the official position of Southern Baptists, and of other conservative Christians, is indistinguishable from that of secular conservatives in the climate denial movement".
Animal rights
The debate over the inhumane treatment of animals revolves around the issue of personhood and animal rights.: 1, 2 In the Christian ethic, personhood is related to the nature of God, who is understood in terms of community and inter-relationship.: 1 Within this view, the nature of moral community is not limited to a community of equals: humans are not equal to God yet have community with him.: 319 On this basis, Rudman argues that animals should be included in the moral community without being required to be regarded as persons.: 339 He says that, based on convictions which include the future transformation and liberation of all creation, a Christian view is obligated to take animal welfare seriously.: 319 Therefore, he concludes that the Christian ethic sees an emphasis on animal welfare as a better approach than the use of concepts of personhood and divine rights for addressing inhumane treatment of animals.: 319 Northcott adds that the Christian ethic, with its concepts of redemption of all physical reality and its manifestation of responsible stewardship in community and relation to others, is "a vital corrective to modern individualism which devalues both human and non-human distinctiveness".: 209
Criticism
Some philosophers have described Christian ethics as: intolerant, immoral, repressive, and infantilizing. According to Ronald Preston, the first of those four objections carries, historically seen, the most weight. According to Wayne A. Leys, modern ethics (e.g. by Immanuel Kant) was born because modern philosophers rejected traditional morality. Kant wanted solid, rational foundations for morality, not the weak foundation of a religion going into a decline. And he did not like that Christianity kept adults under "self-imposed nonage". Kant did not completely say farewell to Christian ethics, that is why Friedrich Nietzsche called him "a theologian in disguise". E.g. Kant did not reject God, the human soul, or the duty to God. By declaring that God and the soul are incognoscible he really meant insulating them from rational criticism.
See also
- Aristotelian ethics
- Beatitudes
- Brotherly love (philosophy)
- Catholic peace traditions
- Choose the right
- Christian Morals
- Christian pacifism
- Christian philosophy
- Christian values
- Christian vegetarianism
- Christian views on the Old Covenant
- Council of Jerusalem
- Ethics in religion
- Buddhist ethics
- Islamic ethics
- Jewish ethics
- Ethics in the Bible
- Good works
- Great Commandment
- Jesus in Christianity
- Plowshares movement
- Problem of Hell
- Religious views on love
- Swords to ploughshares
- Theonomy
- Turning the other cheek
- Works of mercy
References
Notes
- Karl Josef von Hefele's commentary on canon II of Gangra Archived 20 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine notes: "We further see that, at the time of the Synod of Gangra [in the fourth century], the rule of the Apostolic Synod with regard to blood and things strangled was still in force. With the Greeks, indeed, it continued always in force as their Euchologies still show... St. Augustine ...states that the Apostles had given this command in order to unite the heathens and Jews in the one ark of Noah; but that then, when the barrier between Jewish and heathen converts had fallen, this command concerning things strangled and blood had lost its meaning, and was only observed by few... its decree has been obsolete for centuries in the West..."
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'Preamble: To join with other Christian denominations in a united voice against the evil of human trafficking, we present this statement of our opposition to all forms of human slavery.'
- "Pope Francis". Archived from the original on 16 February 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
Inspired by our confessions of faith, today we are gathered for an historic initiative and concrete action: to declare that we will work together to eradicate the terrible scourge of modern slavery in all its forms.
- "Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury". Archived from the original on 16 February 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
'At a time when faiths are seen wrongly as a cause of conflict is a sign of real hope that today global faith leaders have together committed themselves publicly to the battle to end modern slavery.'
- "Southern Baptist Convention". Archived from the original on 21 February 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
'...Be it further resolved, that we lament and repudiate historic acts of evil such as slavery from which we continue to reap a bitter harvest...'
- Glancy, Jennifer A. (2002). Slavery in Early Christianity. Fortress Press. pp. 119, 125. ISBN 978-1-4514-1094-5.
- Stowers, Stanley K. (1998). "Paul and slavery: A response". Semeia (83/84).
- Rotman, Youval (2009). Byzantine Slavery and the Mediterranean World. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-03611-6 – via Google Books.
- Nagasawa, Mako A. "Slavery and Christianity: First to Fifteenth Centuries" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 November 2017.
- Ramelli, Ilaria (25 June 2012). "Gregory of Nyssa's Position in Late Antique Debates on Slavery and Poverty, and the Role of Asceticism". Journal of Late Antiquity. 5 (1): 87–118. doi:10.1353/jla.2012.0004. S2CID 159740033.
- Hans Boersma (2013). Embodiment and Virtue in Gregory of Nyssa: An Anagogical Approach. OUP Oxford. pp. 146–163. ISBN 978-0-19-964112-3.
- Rowling, Marjorie (1987). Life in Medieval Times. Batsford. ISBN 978-0-88029-128-6.
- Rio, Alice (2017). Slavery After Rome, 500–1100. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-870405-8.
- Nelson, Janet L.; Rio, Alice (2013). Bennett, Judith; Karras, Ruth (eds.). "Women and Laws in Early Medieval Europe". The Oxford Handbook of Women and Gender in Medieval Europe. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199582174.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-958217-4. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
- Klein, Herbert S. (2010). The Atlantic Slave Trade. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-48911-9.
- Harvey, Paul (2016). Christianity and Race in the American South A History. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-41549-9.
- Rae, Scott B.; Cox, Paul M. (1999). Bioethics: A Christian Approach in a Pluralistic Age. Eerdmans. ISBN 978-0-8028-4595-5.
- VanDrunen, David (2009). Bioethics and the Christian Life A Guide to Making Difficult Decisions. Crossway. ISBN 978-1-4335-2183-6.
- Schüklenk, Udo; Stein, Edward; Kerin, Jacinta; Byne, William (1997). "The Ethics of Genetic Research on Sexual Orientation". Hastings Center Report. 27 (4): 6–13. doi:10.2307/3528773. JSTOR 3528773. PMID 9271716.
- Singer, Peter (2011). Practical Ethics. Cambridge University Press. p. 134. ISBN 978-1-139-49689-6.
- "Global Survey of Evangelical Protestant Leaders". Pew Forum. 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2013.
[E]vangelical leaders are divided over the consumption of alcohol. About four-in-ten (42%) say it is compatible with being a good evangelical, while 52% say it is incompatible. Leaders from sub-Saharan Africa are especially likely to oppose alcohol use; 78% of them say it is incompatible with being a good evangelical, as do 78% of evangelical leaders who live in Muslim-majority countries.
- Cook, Christopher C. H. (2006). Alcohol, Addiction and Christian Ethics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-45497-1.
- Sulmasy, Daniel P.; Travaline, JM; Mitchell, LA; Ely, EW (2016). "Non-Faith-Based Arguments against Physician-Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia". The Linacre Quarterly. 83 (3): 246–257. doi:10.1080/00243639.2016.1201375. PMC 5102187. PMID 27833206.
- Battin, Margaret P.; Rhodes, Rosamond; Silvers, Anita (2015). Physician Assisted Suicide Expanding the Debate. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-79532-2.
- Northcott, Michael S. (1996). Clark, Stephen R. L. (ed.). The Environment and Christian Ethics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-57631-4.
- Szasz, Andrew; Zaleha, Bernard Daley (2015). "Why conservative Christians don't believe in climate change". Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. 71 (5): 19–30. Bibcode:2015BuAtS..71e..19Z. doi:10.1177/0096340215599789. S2CID 145477853.
- Preston, Ronald (2013) [1991]. "Christian ethics". In Singer, Peter (ed.). A Companion to Ethics. Blackwell Companions to Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 103–104. ISBN 978-1-118-72496-5. Retrieved 9 August 2024.
- Leys, Wayne A. (2011) [1941]. "7. Rationality and duty". Ethics And Social Policy. Read Books Limited [Prentice-Hall, Inc.] p. 132. ISBN 978-1-4474-9493-5. Retrieved 9 August 2024.
Rebellion against the demands of traditional morality had been, in fact, the frame of mind that initiated the quest for general ethical principles.
- Welshon, Rex (2004) [1914]. The Philosophy of Nietzsche. Continental European philosophy. Acumen [Haskell House Publishers, Ltd.] p. 97. ISBN 978-1-902683-89-8. Retrieved 1 December 2023.
- Smith, Craig R. (2023). Romanticism, Rhetoric and the Search for the Sublime, 2nd Edition: A Neo-Romantic Theory. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 92. ISBN 978-1-5275-9292-6. Retrieved 9 August 2024.
Sources
- Anderson, Elizabeth (2007). "If God Is Dead, Is Everything Permitted?". In Hitchens, Christopher (ed.). The Portable Atheist: Essential Readings for the Nonbeliever. Philadelphia: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-81608-6.
- Blackburn, Simon (2001). Ethics: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280442-6.
- Brunner, Emil (2002). The Divine Imperative: A Study in Christian Ethics. James Clarke & Co. ISBN 978-0-7188-9045-2.
- Childress, James F.; Macquarrie, John, eds. (1986). The Westminster Dictionary of Christian Ethics. Philadelphia: The Westminster Press. ISBN 978-0-664-20940-7.
- Harper, Kyle (2013). From Shame to Sin. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-07456-9.
- Hill, Jonathan (2005). What Has Christianity Ever Done for Us?: Its Role in Shaping the World Today. Lion. ISBN 978-0-7459-5168-3.
- Hill, Jonathan (2013). The History of Christian Thought. Lion. ISBN 978-0-7459-5763-0.
- Long, D. Stephen (2010). Christian Ethics: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-956886-4.
Further reading
- De La Torre, Miguel A., Doing Christian Ethics from the Margins, Orbis Books, 2004.
- Doomen, Jasper. "Religion's Appeal", Philosophy and Theology 23, 1: 133–148 (2011)
- al-Faruqi, Isma'il Raji. Christian Ethics: A Historical and Systematic Analysis of Its Dominant Ideas. McGill University Press, 1967. N.B.: Written from an Islamic perspective.
- Hein, David. "Christianity and Honor." The Living Church, 18 August 2013, pp. 8–10.
External links
- Christian Ethics Reading Room, Online Literature, Tyndale Seminary
- Kirby Laing Institute for Christian Ethics – Institute based in Cambridge, England. KLICE triannually publishes Ethics in Brief, issues of which can be read here.
- Catholic Encyclopedia: Ethics
- Catholic Encyclopedia: Moral Theology
- "Thomas Aquinas: Moral Philosophy". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Three Good Deeds Archived 25 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Collection of resources focused on the Judeo-Christian values of caring for the environment, yourself and others
Christian ethics also known as moral theology is a multi faceted ethical system It is a virtue ethic which focuses on building moral character and a deontological ethic which emphasizes duty according to the Christian perspective It also incorporates natural law ethics which is built on the belief that it is the very nature of humans created in the image of God and capable of morality cooperation rationality discernment and so on that informs how life should be lived and that awareness of sin does not require special revelation 93 Other aspects of Christian ethics represented by movements such as the social Gospel and liberation theology may be combined into a fourth area sometimes called prophetic ethics 3 4 Sermon of the Beatitudes depicts Jesus Sermon on the Mount in which he summarized his ethical teachings James Tissot c 1890 Christian ethics derives its metaphysical core from the Bible seeing God as the ultimate source of all power Evidential Reformed and volitional epistemology are the three most common forms of Christian epistemology The variety of ethical perspectives in the Bible has led to repeated disagreement over defining the basic Christian ethical principles with at least seven major principles undergoing perennial debate and reinterpretation Christian ethicists use reason philosophy natural law the social sciences and the Bible to formulate modern interpretations of those principles Christian ethics applies to all areas of personal and societal ethics Originating in early Christianity from c 27 to 325 AD Christian ethics continued to develop during the Middle Ages when the rediscovery of Aristotle led to scholasticism and the writings of Thomas Aquinas 1225 1274 The Reformation of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries the subsequent counter Reformation and Christian humanism heavily impacted Christian ethics particularly its political and economic teachings A branch of Christian theology for most of its history Christian ethics separated from theology during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries For most scholars of the twenty first century Christian ethics fits in a niche between theology on one side and the social sciences on the other Secularism has had significant influence on modern Christian ethics Definition and sourcesChristian ethics also referred to as moral theology was a branch of theology for most of its history 15 Becoming a separate field of study it was separated from theology during the eighteenth and nineteenth century Enlightenment and according to Christian ethicist Waldo Beach for most 21st century scholars it has become a discipline of reflection and analysis that lies between theology on one side and the social sciences on the other 41 Christian ethics is a Virtue ethic which focuses on developing an ethical character beginning with obedience to a set of rules and laws seen as divine commands These behaviors are morally required forbidden or permitted Although virtue ethics and deontological ethics are normally seen as contrasting with one another they are combined in Christian ethics Claire Brown Peterson calls the Christian ethic a natural law ethic writing that the New Testament contains the expectation that humans are capable of knowing much of how they should live apart from explicit divine instructions Thus Gentiles who lack the revelation of scripture are said to have the law written on their hearts Romans 2 15 so that they can legitimately be held accountable when they violate what they are capable of seeing is right 83 96 Wilkins says that in this view the primary moral laws are universally known are discernible through reason are innate in all people and therefore binding on all and their practice contributes to individual and community well being 13 16 Elements of each of these theories can be found in the Bible and the early church 4 By the twenty first century additional traditions had formed in Christian ethics based on different interpretations of divine attributes how God communicates moral knowledge differing anthropological conclusions and different ideas about how the believer should relate to the Christian community and the outside world 3 4 One aspect of these differences which focuses on the church and its mission developed into what Wilkins calls prophetic ethics Its starting point is social justice and Jesus kingdom ideals rather than individual morality it recognizes the group dimension of sin and tends to be critical of and challenge the other Christian ethical theories 24 28 Anabaptism is an early incorporation of the prophetic model reaching back to the Radical Reformation They differed from other Reformation groups in that they saw the church as a unique type of human organization and its problems not as theological but as ethical failures rooted in entanglement with politics Anabaptism began among the dispossessed and persecuted with isolationist tendencies whereas modern versions such as the Social Gospel movement have turned toward cultural engagement 26 Post colonial thought and black feminist and liberation theologies are examples of this Christian ethic engaging the sinfulness of the social order 27 29 According to Servais Pinckaers moral theologian and Roman Catholic priest the sources of Christian ethics are the Scriptures the Holy Spirit the Gospel law and natural law xxi xiii The four sources of Wesleyan theology are the Bible tradition reason and Christian experience an experience of the decisive adoption of Christianity Christian ethics takes from the Bible its normative rules focusing on conduct its basic understanding of natural law its patterns of moral reasoning which focus on character and the ideals of a community built on social justice 9 11 7 10 Philip Wogaman writes that Christian ethics has also had a sometimes intimate sometimes uneasy relationship with Greek and Roman philosophy taking some aspects of its principles from Plato Aristotle and other Hellenic philosophers 16 Historical backgroundEarly Christianity Christian ethics began its development during the early Christian period which is generally defined as having begun with the ministry of Jesus c 27 AD 30 and ended with the First Council of Nicaea in 325 51 It emerged from the heritage shared by both Judaism and Christianity and depended upon the Hebrew canon as well as important legacies from Greek and Hellenistic philosophy 1 16 The Council of Jerusalem reported in chapter 15 of the Acts of the Apostles may have been held in about AD 50 The council s decrees to abstain from blood sexual immorality meat sacrificed to idols and the meat of strangled animals were considered generally binding for all Christians for several centuries and are still observed by the Greek Orthodox Church Early Christian writings give evidence of the hostile social setting in the Roman Empire which prompted Christians to think through aspects of Roman society in Christian terms 26 Christian ethics sought moral instruction on specific problems and practices which were not sophisticated ethical analyses but simple applications of the teachings and example of Jesus about issues such as the role of women sexuality and slavery 24 After Christianity became legal in the 4th century Roman Empire the range and sophistication of Christian ethics expanded Through figures such as Augustine of Hippo Christian ethical teachings defined Christian thought for several centuries 774 For example Augustine s ethic concerning the Jews meant that with the marked exception of Visigothic Spain in the seventh century Jews in Latin Christendom lived relatively peacefully with their Christian neighbors through most of the Middle Ages until about the 13th century xii 3 Middle Ages Marco da Montegallo Libro dei comandamenti di Dio Book of the Commandments of God 1494 In the centuries following the Fall of the Western Roman Empire monks on missionary journeys spread practices of penance and repentance using books known as penitentials 52 56 57 Theologian Christoph Luthardt describes Christian ethics of the Middle Ages as listing 7 capital sins 7 works of mercy 7 sacraments 7 principle virtues 7 gifts of the Spirit 8 beatitudes 10 commandments 12 articles of faith and 12 fruits of faith 287 Crusade historian Jonathan Riley Smith says that the Crusades were products of the renewed spirituality of the High Middle Ages 1000 1250 when the ethic of living the Apostolic life and chivalry began to form 177 The Middle Ages and the Renaissance saw a number of models of sin listing the seven deadly sins and the virtues opposed to each Inaccurate Latin translations of classical writings were replaced in the twelfth century with more accurate ones This led to an intellectual revolution called scholasticism which was an effort to harmonize Aristotle s thoughts and Christian thought 220 221 In response to the dilemmas this effort created Thomas Aquinas 1225 1274 wrote one of the outstanding achievements of the High Middle Ages the Summa Theologica His positions were eventually developed into the school of thought known as Thomism which contains many ethical teachings that continue to be used especially within the Roman Catholic Church 222 Reformation Counter Reformation and Christian humanism Martin Luther in his classic treatise On the Freedom of a Christian 1520 argued that moral effort is a response to grace ethically humans are not made good by the things they do but if they are made good by God s love they will be impelled to do good things 111 John Calvin adopted and systematized Luther s main ideas grounding everything in the sovereignty of God 120 In Calvin s view all humans have a vocation a calling and the guiding measure of its value is simply whether it impedes or furthers God s will This gives a sacredness to the most mundane and ordinary of actions leading to the development of the Protestant work ethic 116 122 Where some reformers such as Huldrych Zwingli regarded church and state as identical Calvin separated church and state by stating that God worked through the church spiritually and directly in the world through civil government each with their own sphere of influence 122 123 Using natural law the Old Testament covenant model and his reformation theology and ethics Calvin provided the grassroots federal theology used by nations and churches struggling for justice and liberty These reformers contributed ideas of popular sovereignty asserting that human beings are not subjects of the state but are members of the state 125 During the Reformation Protestant Christians pioneered the ethics of religious toleration and religious freedom 3 Protestants also valued virtue ethics After the Reformation Aristotle s Nicomachean Ethics continued to be the main authority for the discipline of ethics at Protestant universities until the late seventeenth century with over fifty Protestant commentaries published on the Nicomachean Ethics before 1682 Max Weber asserted that there is a correlation between the ethics of the Reformers and the predominantly Protestant countries where modern capitalism and modern democracy developed first 124 The secular ideologies of the Age of Enlightenment followed shortly on the heels of the Reformation but the influence of Christian ethics was such that J Philip Wogaman pastor and professor of Christian ethics asks whether those Enlightenment ideas would have been as successful in the absence of the Reformation or even whether they would have taken the same form 125 The Roman Catholic Church of the 16th century responded to Reformation Protestantism in three ways 335 First through the Counter Reformation which began with Pope Paul III 1534 1549 Secondly through the new monastic orders which grew in response to the challenges which Protestantism presented The most influential of these new orders was the Order of Jesuits 336 The Jesuits commitment to education put them at the forefront of many colonial missions 336 The third response was by the Council of Trent in 1545 and 1563 The Council asserted that the Bible and church tradition were the foundations of church authority not just the Bible sola scriptura as Protestants asserted the Vulgate was the only official Bible and other versions were rejected salvation was through faith and works not faith alone and the seven sacraments were reaffirmed According to Matthews and Dewitt The moral doctrinal and disciplinary results of the Council of Trent laid the foundations for Roman Catholic policies and thought right up to the present 337 Christian humanism taught the radical new idea that any Christian with a pure and humble heart could pray directly to God without the intervention of a priest 338 Matthews and Platt write that The outstanding figure among the northern humanists and possibly the outstanding figure among all humanists is the Dutch scholar Desiderius Erasmus 338 His ethical views included advocating a humble and virtuous life the study of Classics and honoring the dignity of the individual He promoted the Christian ethic as expressed in the Sermon on the Mount Matthew 5 1 7 27 339 Modern Christian ethics After separating from theology the primary concern of nineteenth century Christian ethicists was the study of human nature Beginning with the rise of Christian social theory in the nineteenth century theologian John Carman says Christian ethics became heavily oriented toward discussion of nature and society wealth work and human equality 511 512 Carman adds that in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries the appeal to inner experience the renewed interest in human nature and the influence of social conditions upon ethical reflection introduced new directions to Christian ethics 511 512 Carman adds that the question of how the Christian and the church relates to the surrounding world has led to the development of three distinct types of modern Christian ethics the church sect and mystical types 463 In the church type i e Roman Catholicism and mainstream Protestantism the Christian ethic is lived within the world through marriage family and work while living within and participating in their respective towns cities and nations This ethic is meant to permeate every area of life The ethic of the sect i e Amish Mennonites some monastic orders works in the opposite direction It is practiced by withdrawing from the non Christian world minimizing interaction with that world while living outside or above the world in communities separated from other municipalities The mystical type i e some monastic orders some parts of the charismatic movement and evangelicalism advocates an ethic that is purely an inward experience of personal piety and spirituality and often includes asceticism 465 In the late twentieth century these and other differences contributed to the creation of new varieties of Christian ethics 3 4 The Anabaptists the Social Gospel movement postcolonialism black theology feminist theology and liberation theology focus first and foremost on social justice the kingdom ideals of Jesus recognize the community based dimension of sin and are critical of the traditional theories of Christian ethics 24 28 In the early twenty first century Professor of philosophy and religion at Maryville William J Meyer asserts that Christian ethicists often find themselves on one side of a discussion of ethics while those advocating a secular worldview that denies God and anything transcendent are their opponents on the other side He says these discussions are divided by beliefs about how claims ought to be addressed since both sides assume there is a polarity between human reason and the authority of scripture and tradition 2 5 Meyer asserts that the answer to this difficulty lies in modern Christian ethics embracing secular standards of rationality and coherence while continuing to refuse the secular worldview and its premises and conclusions 2 Meyer describes this effort to affirm religion within the context of modern secularity as the critical fault line in the contemporary world 5 Philosophical coreGustafson sets out four basic points he asserts that any theologically grounded ethic must address metaphysics all other concepts and beliefs rest on metaphysics it is about how being and existence are defined through God His will and His relation to humans epistemology how humans know and distinguish justified belief from mere opinion through human experience community nature and man s place in it ethics the system and principles used by persons as moral agents applications how persons make moral choices judge their own acts the acts of others and the state of the world 14 Metaphysical foundations The Christian metaphysic is rooted in the biblical metaphysic of God as Maker of Heaven and earth 25 Philosopher Mark Smith explains that in the Bible a fundamental ontology is embodied in language about power where the world and its beings derive their reality their being their power to exist and to act from the power of God Being itself Theology and philosophy professor says that metaphysics is found anywhere the Bible has something to say about the nature of existence 207 According to Rolf Knierim the Bible s metaphysic is dynamistic ontology which says reality is an ongoing dynamic process 208 In this view God gives the universe its basic order and its formal statistical patterns generally referred to as natural laws but also allows them to develop organically with minimum interference According to Roger E Olson the Christian view of the nature of reality can also be called biblical theism or biblical personalism the belief that ultimate reality is a personal God who acts shows and speaks 13 17 Mark Smith explains that in metaphysical language the power of lesser beings participates in Power itself which is identified as God 162 Humanity is the highest level of development in creation but humans are still creatures 25 This view asserts that humans reflect the relational nature of God 13 17 In the Christian metaphysic humans have free will but it is a relative and restricted freedom Beach says that Christian voluntarism points to the will as the core of the self and that within human nature the core of who we are is defined by what we love and this determines the direction of moral action 25 26 Humans reflect the nature of ultimate reality therefore they are seen as having a basic dignity and value and should be treated as Immanuel Kant said as an end in themselves and not as a means to an end 18 Humans have a capacity for reason and free will which enable making rational choices They have the natural capacity to distinguish right and wrong which is often called a conscience or natural law When guided by reason conscience and grace humans develop virtues and laws In Christian metaphysics according to Beach Eternal Law is the transcendent blueprint of the whole order of the universe Natural Law is the enactment of God s eternal law in the created world and discerned by human reason 11 12 Paul Some older scholarship saw Paul s moral instruction as separate from his theology saying his ethic was adopted from Hellenist philosophy 17 Modern scholarship has broken up these old paradigms 23 Christianity began its existence as one among several competing Jewish sects or movements Judaism was not one thing either in Judea and Galilee or in the Diaspora nor were the boundaries among the varieties of Judaism fixed or impermeable 26 Paul s writings reflect this mix 167 He called himself a Hebrew of Hebrews but he did so in fluent Greek He avoided the high Atticistic Greek style of rhetoric but invented his own by making use of the strategies of the Greco Roman orators 26 27 He employed Jewish strategies for interpretation and used the Jewish traditions for reading the apocalyptic scriptures including the sectarian and what would later be the rabbinic ones But he was also aware of the Greco Roman philosophical discussions of his day He mixed things that modern scholars have seen as unmixable 27 changing and transforming key elements within the Jewish Hellenist paradigm into something uniquely Christian 9 242 Paul s theological and apocalyptic views form the foundation of his ethical views and the foundation of Paul s theology is the cross of Christ 191 When the Corinthian church begins in fighting Paul responds by saying they have abandoned their core teachings the cross and the centrality of God These were the themes that formed the foundation of all of Paul s preaching 25 The cross informs Paul s ethic theologically eschatological and Christologically reconciling people to God but also summoning them to service 118 Paul has more to say about human nature and ethical behavior than any other early Christian author 165 and Paul holds up the cross as motivation for ethical conduct Practicing the cross by living with the self crucified is associated in 1 Corinthians and Ephesians with Christian unity self sacrifice and the Christian s future hope The cross is increasingly recognized as providing a general foundation for Christian ethics 131 Epistemology Christian ethics asserts that it is possible for humans to know and recognize truth and moral good through the application of both reason and revelation 23 Observation reasoned deduction and personal experiences which includes grace are the means of that knowledge Rabbinic scholar Michael Fishbane goes on to add that human knowledge of God is understood through language and It is arguably one of Judaism s greatest contributions to the history of religions to assert that the divine Reality is communicated to mankind through words 129 Evidentialism in epistemology which is advocated by Richard Swinburne 1934 says a person must have some awareness of evidence for a belief for them to be justified in holding that belief People hold many beliefs that are difficult to evidentially justify so some philosophers have adopted a form of reliabilism instead In reliablilism a person can be seen as justified in a belief so long as the belief is produced by a reliable means even when they do not know all the evidence Alvin Plantinga 1932 and Nicholas Wolterstorff 1932 advocate Reformed epistemology taken from Reformer John Calvin s 1509 1564 teaching that persons are created with a sense of God sensus divinitatis Even when this sense is not apparent to the person because of sin it can still prompt them to believe and live a life of faith This means belief in God may be seen as a properly basic belief similar to other basic human beliefs such as the belief that other persons exist and the world exists just as we believe we exist ourselves Such a basic belief is what Plantinga calls a warranted belief even in the absence of evidence Paul Moser argues for He systematically contends that if the God of Christianity exists this God would not be evident to persons who are simply curious but would instead only become evident in a process involving moral and spiritual transformation This process might involve persons accepting Jesus Christ as a redeemer who calls persons to a radical life of loving compassion even the loving of our enemies By willfully subjecting oneself to the commanding love of God a person in this filial relationship with God through Christ may experience a change of character from self centeredness to serving others in which the person s character or very being may come to serve as evidence of the truths of faith According to Gustafson Christian epistemology is built on different assumptions than those of philosophical epistemology He says the Christian ethic assumes either a condition of piety or at least a longing for piety 152 He defines piety as an attitude of respect evoked by human experiences of dependence upon powers we do not create and cannot fully master 87 Gustafson adds that such piety must be open to a wide variety of human experiences including data and theories about the powers that order life 87 He says this Christian knowing engages the affections and takes the form of a sense of gratitude 88 Gustafson sees trust as an aspect of such knowing underneath science is a trust that there is an identifiable order and discoverable principles beneath the disarray of complex data this is comparable to the trust of the Christian faith that there is unity order form and meaning in the cosmos of divine making 23 24 Gustafson adds that Knowledge conditions are relative to particular communities and all human knowledge is based on the experiences we have in the cultures within which we live 124 Basic ethical principles Christian ethics asserts the ontological nature of moral norms from God but it is also accountable to standards of rationality and coherence it must make its way through both what is ideal and what is possible 9 Thus Beach asserts that some principles are seen as more authoritative than others The spirit not the letter of biblical laws becomes normative 15 The diversity of the Bible means that it does not have a single ethical perspective but instead has a variety of perspectives this has given rise to disagreements over defining the foundational principles of Christian ethics 2 3 15 For example reason has been a foundation for Christian ethics alongside revelation from its beginnings but Wogaman points out that Christian ethicists have not always agreed upon the meaning of revelation the nature of reason and the proper way to employ the two together 3 5 He says there are at least seven ethical principles that Christian ethicists have perennially reinterpreted 2 Good and evil The devil in opposition to the will of God represents evil and tempts Christ the personification of the character and will of God Ary Scheffer 1854 Since the Christian ethic begins with God as the source of all and since God is defined as the ultimate good the presence of evil and suffering in the world creates questions often referred to as the problem of evil Philosopher David Hume summarizes Is God willing to prevent evil but not able Then he is not omnipotent Is he able but not willing Then he is malevolent Is he both able and willing Then from whence comes evil Addressing this requires a theological and philosophical response which John Hick thinks is the Christian ethic s greatest challenge Todd Calder says there are at least two concepts of evil applicable to this question a broad concept and a narrow one A broad concept of evil defines it as any and all pain and suffering but this quickly becomes problematic Evil cannot be correctly understood on a simple scale of pleasure vs pain since the National Institute of medicine says pain is essential for survival Marcus Singer says that a workable definition of evil requires that If something is really evil it can t be necessary and if it is really necessary it can t be evil 186 The Christian story is a story of the salvific value of suffering therefore the Christian ethic while assuming the reality of evil and recognizing the power of suffering does not support the view that all suffering is evil The narrow definition of evil is used instead It is defined as the attempt or desire to inflict significant harm on a victim without moral justification perpetrated only by moral agents capable of independent choices The Christian ethic offers three main responses to the problem of evil and a good God The freewill defense by Alvin Plantinga assumes that a world containing creatures who are significantly free is an innately more valuable world than one containing no free creatures at all and that God could not have made such a world without including the possibility of evil and suffering 30 The soul making theodicy advocated by John Hick Irenaean theodicy says God allows suffering because it has value for building moral character Christian ethicists such as David Ray Griffin have also produced process theodicies which assert God s power and ability to influence events are of necessity limited by human creatures with wills of their own 143 says natural evil exists in the form of animal suffering and she offers a theodicy in response that is based on the parable of the wheat and the tares Matthew 13 24 29 She argues that nature can be understood as an intertwined mix of the perfect and the corrupted that God could not have made one without allowing the existence of the other and that this is because of the natural laws involved in creation 83 Christian ethicists such as Christopher Southgate have also produced evolutionary theodicies which use evolution to show that the suffering of biological creatures and belief in a loving and almighty God are logically compatible 711 Generally Christians ethicists do not claim to know the answer to the Why of evil Plantinga stresses that this is why he does not proffer a theodicy but only a defense of the logic of theistic belief 33 The approach of Christian ethics to pain and evil is summarized by who asserts that Direct contact with God does not answer Job s questions but it makes meaning and the acceptance of suffering possible 74 Inclusivity exclusivity and pluralism There is an inherent tension between inclusivity and exclusivity in all the Abrahamic traditions According to the book of Genesis Abraham is the recipient of the promise of God to become a great nation The promise is given to him and his seed exclusively yet the promise also includes that he will become a blessing to all nations inclusively Genesis 12 3 The God of the Bible is the inclusive God of all nations and all people Galatians 3 28 and the Great Commission Matthew 28 19 is a command to go to all nations yet Wogaman points out that Christians are referred to in the New Testament as the elect Romans 8 33 Matthew 24 22 implying God has chosen some and not others for salvation 628 Christians and non Christians have throughout much of history faced significant moral and legal questions concerning this ethical tension 8 During the Reformation Christians pioneered the concept of religious freedom which rests upon an acceptance of the necessity and value of pluralism a modern day concept often referred to as 3 Law grace and human rights Christian ethics emphasizes morality The law and the commandments are set within the context of devotion to God but are deontological standards defining what this morality is The prophets of the Old Testament show God as rejecting all unrighteousness and injustice and commending those who live moral lives 8 In tension with this there is also a deep expression of God s love for undeserving sinners 9 Wogaman says the apostle Paul refers to this as grace being treated as innocent when one is guilty 9 Wogaman argues that Part of the biblical legacy of Christian ethics is the necessity somehow to do justice to both law and grace 9 Author Stanley Rudman asserts that human rights as defined post WWII is the language through which the Christian ethic is able to relate these concepts to the world 309 311 In a convergence of opinion among Catholics Lutherans Reformed and others this has led to a support of human rights becoming common to all varieties of Christian ethics 304 311 Authority force and personal conscience Wogaman asserts that love is and must remain the foundation of the Christian ethical system 331 In the Sermon on the Mount Jesus summarizes his ethical teachings to those who would follow a new path that diverged from established law turn the other cheek Matthew 5 38 39 love your enemies Matthew 5 43 45 bless those who persecute you Romans 12 14 21 Jesus followers must not murder as the law says but they must also not hold the kind of hatred that leads to it but must forgive instead 330 Wogaman adds that justice as the institutional structure of love is inevitably dependent upon other incentives including ultimately the use of force Both the Old and the New Testaments give explicit commands to respect the state s authority to carry the sword Romans 13 4 123 331 Christian ethics is and has been repeatedly divided over this interaction between obedience to authority and authority s power to enforce that obedience in contrast with one s personal responsibility to love and forgive Self affirmation and self denial According to the book of Genesis God created and declared creation including humans good Genesis 1 31 The Song of Songs depicts sensual love as good Other parts of the Old Testament depict material prosperity as a reward Yet the New Testament references the life of the Spirit as the ultimate goal and warns against worldliness 7 In the traditional view this requires self sacrifice self denial and self discipline and greatness lies in being a servant to all Mark 10 42 45 7 14 Yet according to ethicist there is no ontological split between self other there is no monolithic polarity of self interested action versus other regardingness 62 64 Christian ethics has not traditionally contained concepts of self love as a good However Koji Yoshino asserts that within the Christian ethic altruistic love and self love are not contradictory to each other Those who do not love themselves cannot love others nevertheless those who ignore others cannot love themselves Wealth and poverty There are a variety of Christian views on poverty and wealth At one end of the spectrum is a view which casts wealth and materialism as an evil to be avoided and even combatted At the other end is a view which casts prosperity and well being as a blessing from God The Christian ethic is not an opponent of poverty since Jesus embraced it but it is an opponent of the destitution that results from social injustice 25 Kevin Hargaden says No Christian ethic can offer a consistent defense of massive wealth inequality 77 Some Christians argue that a proper understanding of Christian teachings on wealth and poverty requires a larger view where the accumulation of wealth is not the central focus of one s life but rather a resource to foster the good life Professor David W Miller has constructed a three part rubric which presents three prevalent attitudes among Protestants towards wealth that wealth is 1 an offense to the Christian faith 2 an obstacle to faith and 3 the outcome of faith Gender and sexuality Classicist Kyle Harper writes that sexuality was at the heart of Christianity s early clash with its surrounding culture Rome s concept of sexual morality was centered on social status whereas the Christian ethic was a radical notion of individual freedom centered around a libertarian paradigm of complete sexual agency 10 38 This meant the ethical obligation for sexual self control was placed on the individual male and female slave and free equally in all communities regardless of status In Paul s letters porneia was a single name for the array of sexual behaviors outside marital intercourse that became a central defining concept of sexual morality and shunning it a key sign of choosing to follow Jesus For Paul the body was a consecrated space a point of mediation between the individual and the divine Views on sexuality in the early church were diverse and fiercely debated within its various communities and this continues Throughout the majority of Christian history most Christian theologians and denominations have considered homosexual behavior as immoral or sinful In contemporary Christian ethics there are a variety of views on the issues of sexual orientation and homosexuality The many Christian denominations vary from condemning homosexual acts as sinful to being divided on the issue and to seeing it as morally acceptable Even within a denomination individuals and groups may hold different views Further not all members of a denomination necessarily support their church s views on homosexuality Applied ethicsPolitics Christian involvement in politics is both supported and opposed by the different types of Christian ethics Political scientist Amy E Black says Jesus command to pay taxes Matthew 22 21 was not simply an endorsement of government but was also a refusal to participate in the fierce political debate of his day over the poll tax Old Testament scholar Gordon Wenham says Jesus response implied loyalty to a pagan government was not incompatible with loyalty to God 7 War and peace Blessed are the Peacemakers 1917 by George Bellows The Christian ethic addresses warfare from the differing viewpoints of pacifism non resistance just war and preventive war which is sometimes called crusade 13 37 Where pacifism and non resistance can be seen as ideals in action evangelical theologian Harold O J Brown describes just wars preventive wars and crusades as actions in support of an ideal 155 161 165 In all four views the Christian ethic presumes war is immoral and must not be waged or supported by Christians until certain conditions have been met that enable the setting aside of that presumption 336 Pacifism and non resistance are opposed to all forms of physical violence based on belief that the example of Christ demonstrates it is better to suffer personally than to do harm to others Non resistance allows for non combatant service where pacifism does not 63 They both presuppose the supersession of the New Testament over the Old and believe in the separation of church and state to the degree the Christian does not owe obedience and loyalty to the state if that loyalty violates personal conscience 81 83 97 Both pacifism and non resistance are interpreted as applying to individual believers not corporate bodies or unregenerate worldly governments 36 Mennonite minister Myron Augsburger says pacifism and non resistance act as a conscience to society and as an active force for reconciliation and peace 63 Preventive war also sometimes referred to as crusade and just war recognize that harm can result from failing to resist a tyrannical enemy 154 155 Preventive war is waged in anticipation of an act of aggression that would violate ideals of human rights decency and a sense of right and wrong 155 161 165 Counter terrorism is a kind of preventive war Preventive war crusade can also be seen as an attempt to set right a past act of aggression that was not responded to at the time it occurred It is not necessarily religious in nature or focus but attempts to undo what no one had the right to do in the first place the First Crusade of the Middle Ages the First Gulf War and World War II 153 158 Supporters of Just War theory say war can only be justified as self defense or the defense of others The biblical provisos for these types of war are not supersessionist and therefore are more from the Old Testament than the New 115 135 270 274 The last 200 years have seen a shift toward just war in the moral focus concerning the state s use of force 59 Justification for war in the twenty first century has become the ethic of intervention based on humanitarian goals of protecting the innocent Criminal justice Early criminal justice began with the idea that God is the ultimate source of justice and is the judge of all including those administering justice on earth Within Christian ethics this view places the greatest responsibility for justice on judges with moral character who are admonished not to lie or be deceptive not to practice racial prejudice or discrimination or to let egoism lead them to abuse their authority as central to the administration of justice xx Biblical ethicist Christopher Marshall says there are features of covenant law from the Old Testament that have been adopted and adapted to contemporary human rights law such as due process fairness in criminal procedures and equity in the application of law 46 How justice is defined has varied Aristotle s classic definition of justice giving each their due entered into Christian ethics through scholasticism and Thomas Aquinas in the Middle Ages For Aristotle and Aquinas that meant a hierarchical society with each receiving what was due according to their social status This allows for the criminal justice system to be retributive to discriminate based on social standing and fails to recognize a concept of universal human rights and responsibilities Philip Wogaman says that after Aquinas the Radical Reformation the social gospel and liberation theology redefined getting one s due into what became the Marxist formula from each according to his ability to each according to his need Along these lines justice had an egalitarian form while retaining male domination and defining justice for slaves as paternalistic care 325 Wogaman says that these issues will continue to occupy Christian ethics for years to come 325 Capital punishment Capital punishment in the world click to enlarge and see In Christian ethics of the twenty first century capital punishment has become controversial and there are Christian ethicists on both sides Biblical ethicist Christopher Marshall says there are about 20 offenses that carry the death penalty in the Old Testament 46 He adds that contemporary standards tend to view these laws of capital punishment as cavalier toward human life however the ancient ethic of covenantal community suggests the value of life was as much communal as individual 46 47 In contemporary society capital punishment can be seen as respect for the worth of the victim by calling for the equal cost to the offender it can also be seen as respect for the offender treating them as free agents responsible for their own choices who must bear the responsibility for their acts just as any citizen must According to Jeffrey Reiman the argument against capital punishment is not based on the offender s guilt or innocence but on the belief that killing is wrong and is therefore never a permissible act even for the state 10 G C Hanks argues against the death penalty by saying it is not effective in fighting crime costs more than life sentences reinforces poverty and racism and causes innocent persons to be executed He argues that it interferes with creating a just and humane society negatively impacts the families of victims and race issues and can be seen as cruel and unusual punishment These arguments leave retribution as the primary supporting argument in favor of capital punishment and Professor Michael L Radelet says retribution s moral base is a problem for a Christian ethic The Catholic Church has historically taught that capital punishment is permissible but during the twentieth century popes began to argue that it could not be justified under present day circumstances as there were other ways to protect society from offenders Capital punishment has been abolished in many countries and Radelet predicts that increasing opposition from religious leaders will lead to its abolition in America as well Relationships In most ancient religions the primary focus is on humankind s relationship to nature whereas in the Christian ethic the primary focus is on relationship with God as the absolute moral personality 23 This is demonstrated as a focus on relationship itself as a primary concern in all Christian ethics Neighbors The good Samaritan Harold Copping Traditional Christian ethics recognizes the command to love thy neighbor as one of the two primary commands called the greatest commands by Jesus 24 This reflects an attitude that aims at promoting another person s good in what Stanley J Grenz calls an enlightened unselfishness 175 When the Pharisee asked Jesus Who is my neighbor Luke 10 29 Grenz says the questioner intended to limit the circle of those to whom this obligation was due but Jesus responded by reversing the direction of the question into To whom can I be a neighbor 107 In the parable of the Good Samaritan the use of a racially despised and religiously rejected individual as an example of the good defines a neighbor as anyone who responds to those in need Women The Samaritan woman meeting Jesus by the well Orthodox icon There are four primary views in Christian ethics on the roles of women Christian feminism defines itself as a school of Christian theology which seeks to advance and understand the equality of men and women Christian egalitarianism argues that the Bible supports mutual submission These views reflect the belief that Jesus held women personally responsible for their own behavior the woman at the well John 4 16 18 the woman taken in adultery John 8 10 11 and the sinful woman who anointed his feet Luke 7 44 50 are all dealt with as having the personal freedom and enough self determination to choose their own repentance and forgiveness 127 The New Testament names many women among the followers of Jesus as well as naming women in positions of leadership in the early church 54 112 Biblical patriarchy upholds the view that 1 Corinthians 14 34 35 1 Timothy 2 11 15 and 1 Corinthians 11 2 16 represent a hierarchy of male over female authority 97 Complementarianism contains aspects of both views seeing women as ontologically equal functionally different Before the twelfth and thirteenth centuries ordination was dedication to a particular role or ministry and in this capacity women in the church were ordained up until the 1200s 30 When theologians of this medieval period circumscribed the seven sacraments they changed the vocabulary and gave the sacraments exclusively to male priests 30 In the nineteenth century rights for women brought a wide variety of responses from Christian ethics with the Bible featuring prominently on both sides ranging from traditional to feminist 203 In the late twentieth century the ordination of women became a controversial issue Linda Woodhead states that Of the many threats that Christianity has to face in modern times gender equality is one of the most serious Marriage and divorce Christ with the Woman Taken in Adultery by Guercino 1621 Depicts Jesus and the woman taken in adultery According to professor of Religion Barbara J MacHaffie the early church fathers treated married life with some sensitivity as a relationship of love and trust and mutual service contrasting it with non Christian marriage as one where passions rule a domineering husband and a lusty wife 24 In the synoptic Gospels Jesus is seen as emphasizing the permanence of marriage as well as its integrity Because of your hardness of heart Moses allowed you to divorce your wives but from the beginning it was not so Restriction on divorce was based on the necessity of protecting the woman and her position in society not necessarily in a religious context but in an economic context Paul concurred but added an exception for abandonment by an unbelieving spouse 351 354 Augustine wrote his treatise on divorce and marriage De adulterinis coniuigiis in which he asserts couples may only divorce on the ground of fornication adultery in 419 21 even though marriage did not become one of the seven sacraments of the church until the thirteenth century xxv Though Augustine confesses in later works Retractationes that these issues were complicated and that he felt he had failed to address them completely adultery was the standard necessary for legal divorce until the modern day 110 The twenty first century Catholic Church still prohibits divorce but permits annulment a finding that the marriage was never valid under a narrow set of circumstances The Eastern Orthodox Church permits divorce and remarriage in church in certain circumstances Most Protestant churches discourage divorce except as a last resort but do not actually prohibit it through church doctrine often providing divorce recovery programs as well Sexuality and celibacy Married Eastern Orthodox priest from Jerusalem with his family three generations c 1893 Lisa Sowle Cahill refers to sex and gender as the most difficult topics in new studies of Christian ethics As the rigidity and stringency of traditional moral representation has collided head on with historicized or postmodern interpretations of moral systems Cowell says tradition has acquired new forms of patriarchy sexism homophobia and hypocrisy xi Feminist critics have suggested that part of what drives traditional sexual morality is the social control of women yet within postmodern western societies the attempt to reclaim moral autonomy through sexual freedom has produced a loss of all sense of sexual boundaries 75 xi Cahill concludes that in contemporary Western culture Personal autonomy and mutual consent are almost the only criteria now commonly accepted in governing our sexual behavior 1 The gospel requires that all relationships be reconfigured by new life within the community yet the New Testament has no systematic investigation into all facets of any moral topic no definitive guidance for the many variations of moral problems that exist in the twenty first century 121 According to Lisa Sowle Cahill Traditional societies place sex and gender in the context of community family and parenthood modern societies respect reciprocity intimacy and gender equality 257 Cowell says New Testament authors challenge that which perpetuates sin and encourage the transformation that embodies the reign of God 122 While Jesus made reference to some that have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven there is no commandment in the New Testament that priests must be unmarried and celibate During the first three or four centuries no law was promulgated prohibiting clerical marriage Celibacy was a matter of choice for bishops priests and deacons In the twenty first century the Roman Catholic Church teachings on celibacy uphold it for monastics and some priests Protestantism has rejected the requirement of celibacy for pastors and they see it primarily as a temporary abstinence until the joys of a future marriage Some modern day evangelicals desire a more positive understanding of celibacy that is more like Paul s focused on devotion to God rather than a future marriage or a lifelong vow to the Church Slavery and race The Hope of the World Harold Copping 1915 In the twenty first century Christian organizations reject slavery but historically Christian views have varied embracing both support and opposition Slavery was harsh and inflexible in the first century when Christian ethics began and slaves were vulnerable to abuse yet neither Jesus nor Paul ordered the abolition of slavery At this time the Christian view was that morals were a matter of obedience to the ordained hierarchy of God and men 296 Paul was opposed to the political and social order of the age in which he lived but his letters offer no plan for reform beyond working toward the apocalyptic return of Christ He did indirectly articulate a social ideal through the Pauline virtues the faith hope and love of his First Epistle to the Corinthians by designating love as the highest of all virtues and he indirectly undermined the mistreatment of women children and slaves through his teachings on marriage and through his own personal lifestyle Stanley K Stowers professor of religious studies asserts the view that Paul s refusal to marry and set up a household that would require slaves and his insistence on being self supporting was a model followed by many after him that structurally attacked slavery by attacking its social basis the household and its continuity through inheritance from master to master 308 309 In the early 4th century Roman law such as the Novella 142 of Justinian gave Christian bishops and priests the power to free slaves by a ritual in a church performed by the bishop or priest involved It is not known if baptism was required before this ritual Several early figures such as Saint Patrick 415 493 himself having been enslaved as an adolescent and Acacius of Amida 400 425 made personal sacrifices to free slaves Bishop Ambrose 337 397 AD while not openly advocating abolition ordered that church property be sold to get the money to buy and free slaves Gregory of Nyssa c 335 394 went further and stated opposition to all slavery as a practice Later Saint Eligius 588 650 used his vast wealth to purchase British and Saxon slaves in groups of 50 and 100 in order to set them free By the time of Charlemagne 742 814 while Muslims were coming onto the scene as major players in a large scale slave trade of Africans lecturer in medieval European history says that slavery had become almost non existent in the West 38 167 Rio says criticism of the trade in Christian slaves was not new but at this time opposition began to get wider support seeing all those involved in the trade as what Rio calls symbols of barbarity 39 Slavery in Africa existed for six centuries before the arrival of the Portuguese 1500s and the opening of the Atlantic slave trade in the West 8 Economics drove its development but historian Herbert S Klein adds that the trade was abolished in the U S Britain and Europe while it was still profitable and important to those respective economies 188 Early abolitionist literature viewed the abolition of slavery as a moral crusade 188 Churches became vital parts of that effort with abolitionists reformers and supporters of slavery all using Christian ethics to justify their relative positions 84 85 277 279 281 286 Racial violence over the last decades of the twentieth century and the early decades of the twenty first demonstrate how troubled issues involving race remain 186 Paul Harvey says that in the 1960s The religious power of the civil rights movement transformed the American conception of race 189 The social power of the religious Right responded in the 70s by recapturing and recasting many evangelical concepts into political terms including support of racial separation 189 Since then Harvey says the prosperity gospel which has become a dominant force in American religious life has translated evangelical themes into a modern idiom of self empowerment racial reconciliation and a positive confession which Harvey defines as an amalgam of positive thinking evangelical tradition and New Thought 196 197 The prosperity gospel s multi cultural demographic may suggest much about the future of Christian ethics and race 196 197 Bioethics Bioethics is the study of the life and health issues raised by modern technology that attempts to discover what medical ethicist Scott B Rae and Christian ethicist call normative guidelines built on sound moral foundations vii This is necessary because the moral questions surrounding new medical technologies have become complex important and difficult 9 11 David VanDrunen professor of systematic theology and Christian ethics opines that with the tremendous benefits of medical advances have come the eerie forebodings of a future that is less humane not more 12 In what Rae and Cox describe as a best selling expose Jeff Lyon in Playing God in the Nursery charged physicians with prematurely withdrawing life sustaining technology from seriously ill newborns 94 Remedies for infertility enable researchers to create embryos as a disposable resource for stem cells Scripture offers no direct instruction for when a right to life becomes a right to death 14 The Catholic bio ethic can be seen as one that rests on natural law Moral decision making affirms the basic goods or values of life which is built on the concept of a hierarchy of values with some values more basic than others 17 20 For example Catholic ethics supports self determination but with limits from other values say if a patient chose a course of action that would no longer be in their best interests then outside intervention would be morally acceptable 18 If there is conflict over how to apply conflicting values Rae and Cox say that then a proportionate reasoned decision would be made This is defined as including values such as preservation of life human freedom and lessening pain and suffering while also recognizing that not all values can be realized in these situations 19 20 The Protestant Christian ethic is rooted in the belief that agape love is its central value and that this love is expressed in the pursuit of good for other persons 20 22 This ethic as a social policy may use natural law and other sources of knowledge but in the Protestant Christian ethic apape love must remain the controlling virtue that guides principles and practices 23 This approach determines the moral choice by what is the most love embodying action within a situation Rae and Cox conclude that in this view actions that can be seen as wrong when they are acts of maximal love toward another become right 24 Genetic engineering New technologies of prenatal testing DNA therapy and other genetic engineering help many yet Wogaman asserts they also offer ways in which science and technology can become instruments of human oppression 303 Manipulating the genetic code can prevent inheritable diseases and also produce for those rich enough designer babies destined to be taller faster and smarter than their classmates 12 Genetic technologies can correct genetic defects but how one defines defect is often subjective Parents might have certain expectations about gender for example and consider anything else as defective 118 120 In some Third World countries where women have far fewer rights and female children are viewed as liabilities with bleak futures genetic testing is widely used for sex selection and some couples have terminated otherwise healthy pregnancies because the child was not the desired gender 121 Research into the gene for homosexuality could lead to prenatal tests that predict it which could be particularly problematic in countries where homosexuals are considered defective and have no legal protection Such intervention is problematic morally and has been characterized as playing God 93 94 The general view of genetic engineering by Christian ethicists is stated by theologian He reasons that since diseases are the result of sin coming into the world and because Christian ethics asserts that Jesus himself began the process of conquering sin and evil through his healings and resurrection if there is a condition in a human being whether physical or psychological understood as disease and if there is something that genetic technology could do to address that problem then use of this technology would be acceptable In effect we would be using this technology to fight sin and its consequences 120 Abortion Stanley Rudman boils down the abortion debate by saying that if one says that the central issue between conservatives and liberals in the abortion question is whether the fetus is a person it is clear that the dispute may be either about what properties a thing must have in order to be a person in order to have the right to life a moral question or about whether a fetus at a given stage of development possesses the properties in question a biological question 50 Most philosophers have picked out the capacity for rationality autonomy and self awareness to describe personhood but there are at least four possible definitions in order to be a true person a subject must have interests possess rationality be capable of action and or have the capacity for self consciousness 53 A fetus fails to possess at least one and possibly all of these and so it can be argued that the fetus is not a true person Rudman points out how this approach becomes a slippery slope as the argument can then be used to justify infanticide which is not only not generally supported but is defined by society as a crime Without assuming the Christian moral framework concerning the sanctity of life the grounds for not killing persons do not apply to newborn infants Neither classical utilitarianism nor preferential utilitarianism offer good reasons why infanticide should necessarily be wrong 44 46 Moral philosopher Peter Singer in Practical Ethics describes the Christian argument as It is wrong to kill an innocent human being a fetus is an innocent human being therefore it is wrong to kill a fetus 46 Rudman asserts the Christian ethic is more than a simple syllogism it is a narrative that includes the child in God s family takes into account the entire context surrounding its birth including the other lives involved and seeks harmony with God s redeeming activity through Christ It includes confidence in God s ability to sustain and direct those who put their trust in him 339 Alcohol and addiction The Marriage at Cana Les noces de Cana by James Tissot 19th century The Christian ethic concerning alcohol has fluctuated from one generation to the next In the nineteenth century the largest proportion of Christians in all denominations resolved to remain alcohol free While it is true that some contemporary Christians including Pentecostals Baptists and Methodists continue to believe one ought to abstain from alcohol the majority of contemporary Christians have determined that moderation is the better approach 4 7 Ethicist asserts that the primary question for Christian ethics revolves around the fact that alcohol misuse is a contemporary social problem of enormous economic significance which exacts a high toll in human suffering 1 All persons must directly and indirectly determine their ethical response to alcohol s enormous popularity and widespread acceptance in the face of its social and medical harm 4 The Christian ethic takes seriously the power of addiction to hold people captive and the need for an experience of a gracious Higher Power as the basis for finding freedom 199 Physician assisted suicide Physician Daniel P Sulmasy lists arguments against physician assisted suicide PAS those advocating it might do so for selfish monetary reasons rather than out of concern for the patient that suicide devalues life that limits on the practice erode over time and it can become over used that palliative care and modern therapeutics have become better at managing pain so other options are often available and that PAS can damage a physician s integrity and undermine the trust patients place in them to heal and not harm In Christian ethics responses to assisted suicide are rooted in belief in personal autonomy and love 19 20 24 This remains problematic as the arguments commonly used to defend PAS are concepts of justice and mercy that can be described as a minimalist understanding of the terms A minimal concept of justice respects autonomy protects individual rights and attempts to guarantee that each individual has the right to act according to their own preferences but humans are not fully independent or autonomous humans live in community with others This minimalist view does not recognize the significance of covenant relationships in the process of decision making 348 350 Empathy toward another s suffering tells us to do something but not what to do Killing as an act of mercy is a minimalist understanding of mercy that is not sufficient to prevent unethical acts 349 350 Battin Rhodes and Silvers conclude that the Christian ethic asserts life and its flourishing are gifts of God but they are not the ultimate good and neither are suffering and death the ultimate evils One need not use all of one s resources against them One need only act with integrity in the face of them 352 Persistent vegetative state VanDrunen explains that modern technology has treatments that enable a persistent vegetative state PVS which has led to questions of euthanasia and the controversial distinction between killing and letting die 197 PVS patients are in a permanent state of unconsciousness due to the loss of higher brain function the brain stem remains alive so they breathe but swallowing is a voluntary reflex so they must receive artificial nutrition and hydration ANH to survive These patients can be without other health problems and live for extended periods Most ethicists conclude it is morally sound to decline ANH for such a patient but some argue otherwise based on defining when death occurs 232 Environmental ethics The twenty first century has seen an increased concern over human impacts on the environment including global warming pollution soil erosion deforestation species extinction overpopulation and overconsumption xi There appears to be a strong scientific consensus that industrialized civilization has emitted enough carbon dioxide into the atmosphere to create a greenhouse effect causing global warming yet debate rages primarily over the economic effects of limiting development 312 313 Michael Northcott professor of ethics says both issues will have to be dealt with the reorientation of modern society toward recognizing the biological limits of the planet will not occur without a related quest for justice and the common good xiii Wogaman argues that the doctrine of creation creates a presumption in favor of environmental conservation 327 Francis Schaeffer evangelical theologian said We are called to treat nature personally 127 Northcott says the incarnation shows God loves material reality not just spirit 129 Recent studies indicate American Christians have become polarized over these issues For liberal Christians the call to be a better steward is urgent unequivocal of the highest priority and not to be subject to negotiation or compromise For conservative Christians however the commitment to stewardship has become increasingly hemmed in with certain reservations and qualifications Today the official position of Southern Baptists and of other conservative Christians is indistinguishable from that of secular conservatives in the climate denial movement Animal rights The debate over the inhumane treatment of animals revolves around the issue of personhood and animal rights 1 2 In the Christian ethic personhood is related to the nature of God who is understood in terms of community and inter relationship 1 Within this view the nature of moral community is not limited to a community of equals humans are not equal to God yet have community with him 319 On this basis Rudman argues that animals should be included in the moral community without being required to be regarded as persons 339 He says that based on convictions which include the future transformation and liberation of all creation a Christian view is obligated to take animal welfare seriously 319 Therefore he concludes that the Christian ethic sees an emphasis on animal welfare as a better approach than the use of concepts of personhood and divine rights for addressing inhumane treatment of animals 319 Northcott adds that the Christian ethic with its concepts of redemption of all physical reality and its manifestation of responsible stewardship in community and relation to others is a vital corrective to modern individualism which devalues both human and non human distinctiveness 209 CriticismSome philosophers have described Christian ethics as intolerant immoral repressive and infantilizing According to Ronald Preston the first of those four objections carries historically seen the most weight According to Wayne A Leys modern ethics e g by Immanuel Kant was born because modern philosophers rejected traditional morality Kant wanted solid rational foundations for morality not the weak foundation of a religion going into a decline And he did not like that Christianity kept adults under self imposed nonage Kant did not completely say farewell to Christian ethics that is why Friedrich Nietzsche called him a theologian in disguise E g Kant did not reject God the human soul or the duty to God By declaring that God and the soul are incognoscible he really meant insulating them from rational criticism See alsoAristotelian ethics Beatitudes Brotherly love philosophy Catholic peace traditions Choose the right Christian Morals Christian pacifism Christian philosophy Christian values Christian vegetarianism Christian views on the Old Covenant Council of Jerusalem Ethics in religion Buddhist ethics Islamic ethics Jewish ethics Ethics in the Bible Good works Great Commandment Jesus in Christianity Plowshares movement Problem of Hell Religious views on love Swords to ploughshares Theonomy Turning the other cheek Works of mercyReferencesNotes Karl Josef von Hefele s commentary on canon II of Gangra Archived 20 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine notes We further see that at the time of the Synod of Gangra in the fourth century the rule of the Apostolic Synod with regard to blood and things strangled was still in force With the Greeks indeed it continued always in force as their Euchologies still show St Augustine states that the Apostles had given this command in order to unite the heathens and Jews in the one ark of Noah but that then when the barrier between Jewish and heathen converts had fallen this command concerning things strangled and blood had lost its meaning and was only observed by few its decree has been obsolete for centuries in the West Citations Peterson Claire Brown 2017 Natural Law Christian Ethics Four Views IVP Academic ISBN 978 0 8308 4023 6 Wilkins Steve ed 2017 Christian Ethics Four Views IVP Academic ISBN 978 0 8308 4023 6 Foster Robert Verrell 1898 Systematic Theology Columbia University Meyer William J Schubert M Schubert M 2010 Metaphysics and the Future of Theology The Voice of Theology in Public Life Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 63087 805 4 Beach Waldo 1988 Christian Ethics in the Protestant Tradition John Knox Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 8042 0793 5 Alexander Larry Moore Michael Deontological Ethics Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 4 January 2020 Ridlehoover Charles Nathan June 2020 The Sermon on the Mount and Moral Theology A Deontological Virtue Ethic of Response Approach Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 63 2 267 280 Ranganathan Bharat 2 October 2019 Paul Ramsey s Christian Deontology In Ranganathan Bharat Woodard Lehman D eds Scripture Tradition and Reason in Christian Ethics Palgrave Macmillan pp 163 185 ISBN 978 3 030 25192 5 Pinckaers Servais 1995 Noble Mary Thomas ed The Sources of Christian Ethics paperback Catholic University of America 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Christians and Jews Medieval Roots Modern Perspectives UK Palgrave ISBN 978 1 349 42499 3 Bachrach Bernard S 1977 Early medieval Jewish policy in Western Europe Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 0814 0 Luthardt Christoph Ernst 1889 History of Christian Ethics I History of Christian Ethics Before the Reformation Columbia University Riley Smith Jonathan 1980 Crusading As An Act Of Love History 65 214 177 192 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1980 tb01939 x JSTOR 24419031 Hill 2013 pp 130 132 Matthews Roy T Platt F DeWitt 1992 The Western Humanities Mayfield Publishing Co ISBN 978 0 87484 785 7 Dreyer W A In die Skriflig 44 Supplement 3 2010 167 179167 Calvin on church and government PDF core ac uk University of Pretoria p 172 Retrieved 25 February 2021 Scribner Robert W Grell Ole Peter Scribner Bob eds 2002 Tolerance and Intolerance in the European Reformation United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89412 8 Sytsma David 2021 Aristotle s Nicomachean Ethics 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and the Experience of the Divine in Ancient Israel Minneapolis Minnesota Fortress Press ISBN 978 0 8006 3485 8 Brunner 2002 p 494 Hays Richard 1996 The Moral Vision of the New Testament Community Cross New Creation A Contemporary Introduction to New Testament Ethic Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 06 063796 5 Engberg Pedersen Troels 2001 Paul Beyond the Judaism Hellenism Divide illustrated ed Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22406 6 Schreiner Thomas R 2006 Paul Apostle of God s Glory in Christ A Pauline Theology reprint ed InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 2825 8 Williams III H H Drake 2003 Living as Christ Crucified The Cross as a Foundation for Christian Ethics in 1 Corinthians Evangelical Quarterly An International Review of Bible and Theology 75 2 117 131 doi 10 1163 27725472 07502002 Brosnan Christine A Hickey Joanne V 2012 Evaluation of Health Care Quality in Advanced Practice Nursing Springer Publishing Company p 31 ISBN 978 0 8261 0767 1 Fishbane Michael 1992 The Garments of Torah Essays in Biblical Hermeneutics Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 11408 2 Taliaferro Charles Philosophy of Religion Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Sanford University p 3 1 Retrieved 7 December 2020 Gustafson James M 2007 Gustafson James M Boer Theodoor Adriaan Capetz Paul E eds Moral Discernment in the Christian Life Essays in Theological Ethics Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 23070 8 Hickson Michael W 2014 A Brief History of Problems of Evil In McBrayer Justin P Howard Snyder Daniel eds The Blackwell Companion to The Problem of Evil Hoboken New Jersey Wiley Blackwell pp 6 7 ISBN 978 1 118 60797 8 Nah David S 2012 Christian Theology and Religious Pluralism Wipf and Stock p 36 ISBN 978 1 4982 5762 6 Calder Todd The Concept of Evil Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford university Retrieved 7 December 2020 Kemp John 25 February 2009 Pain and Evil Philosophy 29 108 13 doi 10 1017 S0031819100022105 S2CID 144540963 Retrieved 8 January 2021 Committee on Advancing Pain Research Care and Education Institute of Medicine US Relieving Pain in America A Blueprint for Transforming Prevention Care Education and Research NCBI Bookshelf National Academies Press US Retrieved 21 February 2021 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Reviews The Humane Review 2 5 8 E Bell 374 1901 Singer Marcus G April 2004 The Concept of Evil Philosophy 79 308 Cambridge University Press 185 214 doi 10 1017 S0031819104000233 JSTOR 3751971 S2CID 146121829 Gregg Brian Han 2016 What Does the Bible Say About Suffering Downer s Grove Illinois IVP Academic p 160 ISBN 978 0 8308 5145 4 Plantinga Alvin 1977 God freedom and evil Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8028 1731 0 Kane G Stanley 1975 The Failure of Soul Making Theodicy International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 6 1 1 22 doi 10 1007 BF00136996 JSTOR 40021034 S2CID 170214854 Scott Mark S M 2015 Pathways in Theodicy An Introduction to the Problem of Evil illustrated reprint ed Augsburg Fortress Publishers ISBN 978 1 4514 6470 2 Griffin David Ray 1991 Evil Revisited Responses and Reconsiderations SUNY Press pp 25 27 ISBN 978 0 7914 0612 0 Creegan Nicola Hoggard 2013 Animal Suffering and the Problem of Evil Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 993185 9 Russell Robert John 2018 Southgate s Compound Only way Evolutionary Theodicy Deep Appreciation and Further Directions Zygon Journal of Religion and Science 53 3 711 726 doi 10 1111 zygo 12438 S2CID 150123771 Plantinga Alvin 2012 Tomberlin H Tomberlin James E van Inwagen P eds Alvin Plantinga Self Profile Springer Netherlands pp 33 38 ISBN 978 94 009 5223 2 Pinnock Sarah K 2012 Beyond Theodicy Jewish and Christian Continental Thinkers Respond to the Holocaust State University of New York Press pp 251 253 ISBN 978 0 7914 8780 8 Pyper Hugh S 2000 Abraham In Mason Alistair Hastings Ed Hastings Adrian Pyper Hugh S eds The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought Oxford University Press pp 4 5 ISBN 978 0 19 860024 4 Wogaman J Philip 2010 Christian Ethics A Historical Introduction Second ed Presbyterian Publishing Corporation ISBN 978 1 61164 291 9 Hertzke Allen D 1998 The Theory of Moral Ecology The Review of Politics 60 4 628 659 doi 10 1017 S003467050005083X JSTOR 1408255 S2CID 145792842 Retrieved 3 January 2021 Rudman Stanley 2008 Concepts of Person and Christian Ethics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 09024 7 Brunner 2002 p 469 Weaver Darlene Fozard 2002 Self Love and Christian Ethics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 81781 3 Yoshino Koji 2020 Inseparability of Self Love and Altruistic Love P A Sorokin and E Fromm Human Arenas 3 38 51 doi 10 1007 s42087 019 00093 7 S2CID 213388896 Hargaden Kevin 2018 Theological Ethics in a Neoliberal Age Confronting the Christian Problem with Wealth Wipf and Stock ISBN 978 1 5326 5500 5 Liacopulos George P 2007 Church and Society Orthodox Christian Perspectives Past Experiences and Modern Challenges Somerset Hall Press p 88 ISBN 978 0 9774610 5 9 Miller David W 23 24 April 2007 Wealth Creation as Integrated with Faith A Protestant Reflection Muslim Christian and Jewish Views on the Creation of Wealth Harper 2013 pp 1 14 84 86 88 Langlands Rebecca 2006 Sexual Morality in Ancient Rome Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 85943 1 Harper 2013 pp 88 92 Gnuse Robert K May 2015 Seven Gay Texts Biblical Passages Used to Condemn Homosexuality Biblical Theology Bulletin 45 2 SAGE Publications on behalf of Biblical Theology Bulletin Inc 68 87 doi 10 1177 0146107915577097 ISSN 1945 7596 S2CID 170127256 Koenig Harold G Dykman Jackson 2012 Religion and Spirituality in Psychiatry Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 521 88952 0 the overwhelming majority of Christian churches have maintained their positions that homosexual behavior is sinful Childress amp Macquarrie 1986 p 580 Keller Tim 29 September 2018 How Do Christians Fit Into the Two Party System They Don t PDF New York Times Retrieved 2 January 2021 Black Amy E 2015 Christian Traditions and Political Engagement In Black Amy E Gundry Stanley N eds Five Views on the Church and Politics Grand Rapids Michigan Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 51793 1 Clouse Robert G ed 1986 War Four Christian Views Winona Lake Indiana BMH Books ISBN 978 0 88469 097 9 Niditch Susan 1993 War in the Hebrew Bible A study in the Ethics of Violence New York Oxford University Press p 5 ISBN 978 0 19 507638 7 Brown Harold O J 1986 The Just War In Clouse Robert G ed War Four Christian Views Winona Lake Indiana BMH Books ISBN 978 0 88469 097 9 Augsburger Myron S 1986 Christian pacifism In Clouse Robert G ed War Four Christian views Winona Lake Indiana BMH Books ISBN 978 0 88469 097 9 Dombrowski Peter Payne Rodger A 2006 The emerging consensus for preventive war Survival Global Politics and Strategy 48 2 115 136 doi 10 1080 00396330600765419 S2CID 154607460 Holmes Arthur F 1986 The Just War In Clouse Robert G ed War Four Christian Views Winona Lake Indiana BMH Books ISBN 978 0 88469 097 9 Levin Yigal Shapira Amnon 2012 Epilogue War and peace in Jewish tradition seven anomalies In Levin Yigal Shapira Amnon eds War and Peace in Jewish Tradition From the Biblical World to the Present New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 58715 0 Schweiker William 1999 Responsibility and Christian Ethics illustrated reprint revised ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 65709 9 Finnemore Martha 2004 The Purpose of Intervention Changing Beliefs about the Use of Force illustrated reprint ed Cornell University Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 8014 8959 4 Swartley Willard 2014 God s moral character as the basis of human ethics Foundational convictions In Brenneman Laura Schantz Brad D eds Struggles for Shalom Peace and Violence across the Testaments Eugene Oregon Wipf and Stock ISBN 978 1 62032 622 0 Souryal Sam S 2015 Ethics in Criminal Justice In Search of the Truth 6th ed New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 323 28091 4 Marshall Christopher 1999 A Little lower than the Angels Human rights in the biblical tradition In Atkin Bill Evans Katrine eds Human Rights and the Common Good Christian Perspectives Wellington New Zealand Victoria University Press ISBN 978 0 86473 362 7 Reiman Jeffrey H Pojman Louis P 1998 The Death Penalty For and Against Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc p 61 ISBN 978 0 8476 8633 9 Hanks Gardner C 1997 Against the Death Penalty Christian and Secular Arguments Against Capital Punishment Herald Pr ISBN 978 0 8361 9075 5 Radelet Michael L 2000 2001 The Role of Organized Religions in Changing Death Penalty Debates Wm amp Mary Bill RTS 9 201 Brugger Eugene Christian 2014 Capital Punishment and Roman Catholic Moral Tradition University of Notre Dame Press pp 10 11 ISBN 978 0 268 02241 9 Raja Rubina Rupke Jorg eds 2015 A Companion to the Archaeology of Religion in the Ancient World Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World Wiley Blackwell p 223 ISBN 978 1 4443 5000 5 Hiebert Theodore 1996 The Yahwist s Landscape Nature and Religion in Early Israel Oxford University Press p 6 ISBN 978 0 19 535785 1 Cronin Kieran 1992 Rights and Christian ethics Cambridge University Press p 223 ISBN 978 0 521 41889 8 Grudem Wayne 2018 Christian Ethics An Introduction to Biblical Moral Reasoning Crossway ISBN 978 1 4335 4965 6 Grenz Stanley J 2016 The Moral Quest Foundations of Christian Ethics InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 9105 4 Hultgren Arland J 2017 Enlarging the Neighborhood The Parable of the Good Samaritan Luke 10 25 37 PDF Word amp World 37 1 74 75 Hassey Janette 1989 A Brief History of Christian Feminism Transformation 6 2 1 5 doi 10 1177 026537888900600201 JSTOR 43052265 S2CID 150983833 Padgett Alan G What Is Biblical Equality Priscilla Papers Summer 2002 16 3 Padgett is professor of Systematic Theology at Luther Seminary St Paul MN Witherington III Ben 1984 Women in the Ministry of Jesus A Study of Jesus attitudes to women and their roles as reflected in his earthly life Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 34781 5 Richards Sue Poorman Richards Lawrence O 2003 Women of the Bible The Life and Times of Every woman in the Bible Nashville Tenn Thomas Nelson Publishers ISBN 978 0 7852 5148 4 Keng Mun Chung Mary 2005 Chinese Women in Christian Ministry An Intercultural Study New York Peter Lang p 14 ISBN 978 0 8204 5198 5 Linda Belleville 2009 Chapter 1 Women in Ministry an egalitaritan perspective In Beck James R et al eds Two views on women in ministry Grand Rapids Michigan Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 25437 9 OCLC 779330381 Blomberg Craig L 2009 Women in Ministry a complementarian perspective In Beck James R ed Two views on women in ministry Grand Rapids Michigan Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 25437 9 Piper John 1991 Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood Wheaton Illinois Crossway pp 31 59 ISBN 978 1 85684 045 3 Macy Gary 2012 The Hidden History of Women s Ordination Female Clergy in the Medieval West Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 994706 5 MacHaffie Barbara J 1992 Her Story Women in Christian Tradition Fortress Press ISBN 978 1 4514 0402 9 Woodhead Linda 2014 Christianity A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press p n p ISBN 978 0 19 968774 9 e g Matthew 5 31 32 Matthew 19 3 9 Mark 10 2 12 Luke 16 18 see also Expounding of the Law Divorce Henry Chadwick The Early Church ISBN 978 0 14 023199 1 Hill 2005 Reynolds Philip L 2016 How Marriage Became One of the Sacraments The Sacramental Theology of Marriage from its Medieval Origins to the Council of Trent Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 316 79090 8 See Timothy now Archbishop Kalistos Ware The Orthodox Church Archived 17 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine Vawter Bruce April 1954 The Divorce Clauses in MT 5 32 and 19 9 The Catholic Biblical Quarterly 16 2 158 JSTOR 43720613 Rubio Julie Hanlon A Christian Theology of Marriage and Family Paulist Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 8091 4118 0 Cahill Lisa Sowle 1996 Clark Stephen R L ed Sex Gender and Christian Ethics reprint ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57848 6 Matthew 19 12 Celibacy Archived 14 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2009 31 October 2009 Colon Christine and Bonnie Field Singled Out Why Celibacy Must Be Reinvented in Today s Church Grand Rapids MI Brazos 2009 Mennonite Church USA Retrieved 11 February 2016 Preamble To join with other Christian denominations in a united voice against the evil of human trafficking we present this statement of our opposition to all forms of human slavery Pope Francis Archived from the original on 16 February 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2016 Inspired by our confessions of faith today we are gathered for an historic initiative and concrete action to declare that we will work together to eradicate the terrible scourge of modern slavery in all its forms Justin Welby Archbishop of Canterbury Archived from the original on 16 February 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2016 At a time when faiths are seen wrongly as a cause of conflict is a sign of real hope that today global faith leaders have together committed themselves publicly to the battle to end modern slavery Southern Baptist Convention Archived from the original on 21 February 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2016 Be it further resolved that we lament and repudiate historic acts of evil such as slavery from which we continue to reap a bitter harvest Glancy Jennifer A 2002 Slavery in Early Christianity Fortress Press pp 119 125 ISBN 978 1 4514 1094 5 Stowers Stanley K 1998 Paul and slavery A response Semeia 83 84 Rotman Youval 2009 Byzantine Slavery and the Mediterranean World Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 03611 6 via Google Books Nagasawa Mako A Slavery and Christianity First to Fifteenth Centuries PDF Archived from the original PDF on 18 November 2017 Ramelli Ilaria 25 June 2012 Gregory of Nyssa s Position in Late Antique Debates on Slavery and Poverty and the Role of Asceticism Journal of Late Antiquity 5 1 87 118 doi 10 1353 jla 2012 0004 S2CID 159740033 Hans Boersma 2013 Embodiment and Virtue in Gregory of Nyssa An Anagogical Approach OUP Oxford pp 146 163 ISBN 978 0 19 964112 3 Rowling Marjorie 1987 Life in Medieval Times Batsford ISBN 978 0 88029 128 6 Rio Alice 2017 Slavery After Rome 500 1100 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 870405 8 Nelson Janet L Rio Alice 2013 Bennett Judith Karras Ruth eds Women and Laws in Early Medieval Europe The Oxford Handbook of Women and Gender in Medieval Europe doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199582174 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 958217 4 Retrieved 6 April 2021 Klein Herbert S 2010 The Atlantic Slave Trade Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 48911 9 Harvey Paul 2016 Christianity and Race in the American South A History University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 41549 9 Rae Scott B Cox Paul M 1999 Bioethics A Christian Approach in a Pluralistic Age Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 4595 5 VanDrunen David 2009 Bioethics and the Christian Life A Guide to Making Difficult Decisions Crossway ISBN 978 1 4335 2183 6 Schuklenk Udo Stein Edward Kerin Jacinta Byne William 1997 The Ethics of Genetic Research on Sexual Orientation Hastings Center Report 27 4 6 13 doi 10 2307 3528773 JSTOR 3528773 PMID 9271716 Singer Peter 2011 Practical Ethics Cambridge University Press p 134 ISBN 978 1 139 49689 6 Global Survey of Evangelical Protestant Leaders Pew Forum 2011 Retrieved 31 October 2013 E vangelical leaders are divided over the consumption of alcohol About four in ten 42 say it is compatible with being a good evangelical while 52 say it is incompatible Leaders from sub Saharan Africa are especially likely to oppose alcohol use 78 of them say it is incompatible with being a good evangelical as do 78 of evangelical leaders who live in Muslim majority countries Cook Christopher C H 2006 Alcohol Addiction and Christian Ethics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 45497 1 Sulmasy Daniel P Travaline JM Mitchell LA Ely EW 2016 Non Faith Based Arguments against Physician Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia The Linacre Quarterly 83 3 246 257 doi 10 1080 00243639 2016 1201375 PMC 5102187 PMID 27833206 Battin Margaret P Rhodes Rosamond Silvers Anita 2015 Physician Assisted Suicide Expanding the Debate Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 79532 2 Northcott Michael S 1996 Clark Stephen R L ed The Environment and Christian Ethics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57631 4 Szasz Andrew Zaleha Bernard Daley 2015 Why conservative Christians don t believe in climate change Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 71 5 19 30 Bibcode 2015BuAtS 71e 19Z doi 10 1177 0096340215599789 S2CID 145477853 Preston Ronald 2013 1991 Christian ethics In Singer Peter ed A Companion to Ethics Blackwell Companions to Philosophy Wiley pp 103 104 ISBN 978 1 118 72496 5 Retrieved 9 August 2024 Leys Wayne A 2011 1941 7 Rationality and duty Ethics And Social Policy Read Books Limited Prentice Hall Inc p 132 ISBN 978 1 4474 9493 5 Retrieved 9 August 2024 Rebellion against the demands of traditional morality had been in fact the frame of mind that initiated the quest for general ethical principles Welshon Rex 2004 1914 The Philosophy of Nietzsche Continental European philosophy Acumen Haskell House Publishers Ltd p 97 ISBN 978 1 902683 89 8 Retrieved 1 December 2023 Smith Craig R 2023 Romanticism Rhetoric and the Search for the Sublime 2nd Edition A Neo Romantic Theory Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 92 ISBN 978 1 5275 9292 6 Retrieved 9 August 2024 Sources Anderson Elizabeth 2007 If God Is Dead Is Everything Permitted In Hitchens Christopher ed The Portable Atheist Essential Readings for the Nonbeliever Philadelphia Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81608 6 Blackburn Simon 2001 Ethics A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280442 6 Brunner Emil 2002 The Divine Imperative A Study in Christian Ethics James Clarke amp Co ISBN 978 0 7188 9045 2 Childress James F Macquarrie John eds 1986 The Westminster Dictionary of Christian Ethics Philadelphia The Westminster Press ISBN 978 0 664 20940 7 Harper Kyle 2013 From Shame to Sin Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 07456 9 Hill Jonathan 2005 What Has Christianity Ever Done for Us Its Role in Shaping the World Today Lion ISBN 978 0 7459 5168 3 Hill Jonathan 2013 The History of Christian Thought Lion ISBN 978 0 7459 5763 0 Long D Stephen 2010 Christian Ethics A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 956886 4 Further reading De La Torre Miguel A Doing Christian Ethics from the Margins Orbis Books 2004 Doomen Jasper Religion s Appeal Philosophy and Theology 23 1 133 148 2011 al Faruqi Isma il Raji Christian Ethics A Historical and Systematic Analysis of Its Dominant Ideas McGill University Press 1967 N B Written from an Islamic perspective Hein David Christianity and Honor The Living Church 18 August 2013 pp 8 10 External linksChristian Ethics Reading Room Online Literature Tyndale Seminary Kirby Laing Institute for Christian Ethics Institute based in Cambridge England KLICE triannually publishes Ethics in Brief issues of which can be read here Catholic Encyclopedia Ethics Catholic Encyclopedia Moral Theology Thomas Aquinas Moral Philosophy Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Three Good Deeds Archived 25 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine Collection of resources focused on the Judeo Christian values of caring for the environment yourself and others