Politesse
Lux Aeterna
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2018
- Messages
- 16,513
- Location
- Tauhalamme/Laquisimas
- Gender
- nonbinary
- Basic Beliefs
- Jedi Wayseeker
No, you missed the main point. That reply does not engage it.
Indeed. Of course, there are people who believe that homosexual behavior is immoral, to the point that it would be just to punish it with imprisonment or similar. They are mistaken, but that is still not the point.
So, is it unbiblical to try to change the existing law and make it more just?Ruth Harris said:Jesus made no attempt to influence or change secular laws. Does this mean that we should not try to change them either? No, not necessarily. We are told to live in accordance with the existing law and in our country, that means living in accordance with the ideal of personal freedom when it does not harm others. There will be times when new laws are desirable to protect the individual from harm or injustice. This was not the case in New Testament times, when Roman rule was absolute and there was no expectation that laws would protect individual freedoms, nor were common people ever consulted on their view of the law.
Would it have been against Jesus's mandate to try to influence Roman law, and make it more just, because there was no expectation that the laws would protect individual freedoms?
Would it be against Jesus's mandate for people who live under totalitarian regimes (say, the USSR, China, communist regimes in Eastern Europe) to try to influence their laws, improve them, decriminalize homosexual behavior where it is outlawed, etc.?
First, attempting to enact pro-democracy laws would be not in accordance with the law of many countries (from the Roman Empire to China to the USSR, or Saudi Arabia, or any in a long list). Would then attempts to change it be unbiblical?Ruth Harris said:I do understand that you are saying Bible literalists would believe that they are wanting "just laws", but given the founding criteria of our country they would be incorrect. We do not live in a theocracy and attempts to enact laws which reduce personal freedoms to meet their interpretation of the scripture are not in accordance with the law we live under now - so these attempts are unbiblical.
Second, actually reducing personal freedoms by legal means (including, if needed, a Constitutional Amendment) would be in accordance to the law you live under now.
What sort of sense does that make? If insisting on a change because the Bible requires it would be immoral, refusing or resisting changes for the same reason would also be immoral.