Xmo1
Registered Senior Member
The important thing to remember:
The ethics of a civilization are the binding agreements that people have among them. The U.S. has adopted the Christian (as the predominate religion of the day) model of an ethical life in its constitution. Regardless of what individuals believe that model must be held intact. The Constitution clearly defines and delineates the relevance of the Christian model in social action as it applies to law in the U.S.
Church, as an institution, and state can be separated in part in law, that is the doctrine, rituals, and so forth that comprise the religious social institution can remain separate, but the model of an ethical life contained in the Constitution, and derived from the Christian religion, cannot be separated from the law of the land in the case of the U.S. else the civilization fails without foundation by definition.
My view is that we may, in government and law, praise the ideals of the Christian model of an ethical life, and indeed erect symbols that reflect our shared ideals whether religious or governmental, as with the American flag. If people, especially lawyers, separate out the Christian model, then they are leaving the ethical model open to definition by things other than the Constitution of the United States, which is exactly what is happening in judicial findings regarding corporate personhood and power, and in other venues as a direct result of the misanthropic dialog that has been allowed to rise to the top of the society. Again, civilization without a clear ethical model fails by definition, and that model is written into the Constitution of the United States.
The ethics of a civilization are the binding agreements that people have among them. The U.S. has adopted the Christian (as the predominate religion of the day) model of an ethical life in its constitution. Regardless of what individuals believe that model must be held intact. The Constitution clearly defines and delineates the relevance of the Christian model in social action as it applies to law in the U.S.
Church, as an institution, and state can be separated in part in law, that is the doctrine, rituals, and so forth that comprise the religious social institution can remain separate, but the model of an ethical life contained in the Constitution, and derived from the Christian religion, cannot be separated from the law of the land in the case of the U.S. else the civilization fails without foundation by definition.
My view is that we may, in government and law, praise the ideals of the Christian model of an ethical life, and indeed erect symbols that reflect our shared ideals whether religious or governmental, as with the American flag. If people, especially lawyers, separate out the Christian model, then they are leaving the ethical model open to definition by things other than the Constitution of the United States, which is exactly what is happening in judicial findings regarding corporate personhood and power, and in other venues as a direct result of the misanthropic dialog that has been allowed to rise to the top of the society. Again, civilization without a clear ethical model fails by definition, and that model is written into the Constitution of the United States.
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