Christian Ethics

Cards (9)

  • Theonomous Christian Ethics
    • place God at the centre, God‘s commandments are what is required for living morally
    • humans are sinful from the Fall, they can’t make decisions themselves so they must use the direct words of God, found in the Bible
  • Heteronomous Christian Ethics
    • a variety of sources of authority for morals
    • the Bible remains important, although is old so mortality requires additional support to be understood, eg. from the Church or from reason, or both
  • Autonomous Christian Ethics
    • the authority is placed onto the individual
    • love as a guiding force to make moral decisions
  • Analysing Theonomous Ethics
    some suggest that the Bible contains contradictions, eg. a change in approach to revenge and violence between the Old and New Testaments
  • Analysing Heteronomous Ethics
    the Bible is a form of “non-propositional revelation“ (the idea that God does not reveal himself through truth statements, so the revelation might need interpretation)
  • Analysing autonomous ethics: Is life sufficient to live a good life? - YES
    • love gives us all we need to have the confidence to follow our instincts
    • love is the only force that can fully recognise the ever-changing moral situations we find ourselves in
    • live is a fundamental and extreme human emotion and so God could well have expected that to drive us
    • love can empower Christians to put others first in challenging times
    • Jesus promoted love, his authority cannot be denied for Christians
  • Analysing autonomous ethics: Is life sufficient to live a good life? - NO
    • it is over-simplistic to suggest that Jesus’ teachings were only about love
    • it is naive to assume that we have a universal idea of love
    • love requires reason to understand how to live life, it is too complicated to be the solution on its own
    • love becomes an excuse for people to do what they want
    • agape love is not achievable to most humans, it is unlikely that God would expect the unachievable from him people
  • Are Christian ethics distinctive?
    • theonomous ethics will have lots in common with deontological ethics
    • heteronomous ethics overlap with utilitarianism and situation ethics
  • Hauerwas - Heteronomous Christian Ethics
    • Christian ethics can only be done within the Christian worshipping community
    • Christian ethics are part of a narrative which develops out of the Bible and continues on through Christian history and tradition