Rusty Claymore wrote:If you don't agree, call me an idiot and ignore me.
I won't, because I don't think you're an idiot. I just think you're wrong. You can be wrong without being an idiot.
Nazis: Corrie Ten Boom's book has examples of people hiding Jews, being confronted, and not lying.
That's pretty awesome. However, the fact that this is pretty amazing is because it was so inconceivable that it would ever happen. In other words, it's the exception, not the rule.
I know people who have gotten into horrible car crashes without a seatbelt on, and they lived. However, I'm always going to wear my seatbelt when I get in my car. Why? Because them surviving a horrible wreck without a seatbelt was a fluke. It wasn't the norm. It was miraculous.
And to say "I won't wear my seatbelt to have another miraculous event happen!" is well, pretty stupid.
The fact is, most people, had they told the truth to the Nazis, would have been signing the death warrants for the Jews they had been hiding. They may even be betraying their friends, or even loved ones, by not lying.
Lying to the Nazis is inherently wrong.
I disagree entirely. I think it is inherently right. I think it is praiseworthy and laudable. I think the people who lied are heroes and should be looked up to.
If some people were able to protect others without lying, that's great! No shame in that. However, it does not make the people who did lie wrong.
I just can't imagine God saying "Wow, you let the Nazis beat and torture you, you gave up your life, sacrificed yourself, to protect these people. Because of you, these people were saved from dying, you kept them from harm and did it without regard to your own safety. That's...oh wait you lied to do it, never mind, you're evil and horrible and wrong."
Romans: Paul is not talking about meat sacrificed to idols, he's talking about the spiritual strength of those who eat it.
Whoops! Okay, I got the verses wrong. I was thinking of 1 Corinthians. D'oh! However, I was right in the message even if I was wrong in the description. Verse 14 of Romans 14 says:
As one who is in the Lord Jesus, I am fully convinced that no food is unclean in itself. But if anyone regards something as unclean, then for him it is unclean.
So right there, Paul says if someone thinks something is wrong to eat, then it is...for that person. It is not wrong for someone else to eat it if that person thinks it's okay to eat. So we have the exact same act, let's say, eating pork (since pork was considered unclean). If one person thinks eating pork is wrong, then it's wrong for him to eat it. But if I think eating pork is totally cool, then it's totally cool for me to eat it.
But how can the exact same act be both right AND wrong at the same time unless there are moral gray areas? Now obviously it's not both right and wrong for one person, but I'm talking about the act itself. Paul restates this at the end of Romans 14:
But the man who has doubts is condemned if he eats, because his eating is not from faith]The trolly: What is right is to do everything in your power to avoid as many casualties as you can. Like de-railing the trolly.[/QUOTE]
Derail it with what, exactly? All you have is the switch, and you ain't strong enough to pull a switch out of the ground to derail it.
But okay, let's assume you can derail the trolley. Then you have the problem of what about the people IN the trolley? Let's say six people will die and 10 more will be badly injured if you derail the trolley. Now what do you do? Do you save the one, save the five, or save the six but kill six others and badly injure 10 more?
What is right in that situation? What is wrong? A completely black and white view of morality would be useless in such a situation.
While the trolley question is interesting, it'll probably never play out in real life (though again, black and white morality is fairly useless to answer it), but there are situations where you have to make a choice that cannot be simply answered by such a view. Such as...
There is always a right answer
I have heard stories of people forced to make horrific choices, I remember one guy who was in an accident and could only save either his wife or his son. Due to the specifics, it was impossible for him to save both, so he had to make a choice of which one to save...I think he ended up saving his wife if I remember correctly.
Was that the "right" choice? Was there a right choice and a wrong choice? Which one was right and which one was wrong, then? How do you determine that? What if he had been so paralyzed with fear, so horrified by the decision, that he lost his chance and ended up saving neither? Would that have been wrong?
Put simply, which is the right answer in the question "You can only save your wife or your son"?
Sometimes, there is no right answer.