Stan at the Birds of the Air blog put up a post today about his understanding of Justice. As is often the case, his argument raises so many questions that I'd love to see answered, and yet, he never answers questions. So, here are some of the questions/concerns I have about what he's written, for what they're worth.
Stan... "as is so much the case these days -- words are shifting --
"justice" is shifting. Part of that is displayed in that simple first
definition above, where "fair and reasonable" becomes purely "What I
consider fair and reasonable.""
It is not currently defined as
"WHAT I consider fair and reasonable..." It has always been what the
culture at large considers fair and reasonable. Nothing is shifting
there.
Stan... "Instantly it becomes contrary and meaningless
because too many of us would define "fair and reasonable" in a way that
is neither."
Like, for instance, saying that a human who has
committed 1000 typical "sins" (no murder, rape, arson, grand larceny,
etc... more of the gossiping, slander, lying, etc sorts of sins)
"deserves" to be punished for an eternity of torture/torment... that is
most certainly not in any rational way far or reasonable... and yet it's
what conservatives routinely teach. So, insofar as you're talking about
traditional abuse of the word Justice by conservative Christians, yes,
it does become meaningless.
Do you understand why?
At the same time, I suspect that what is Just is not that difficult for the vast majority of us. We recognize that for a ruler/nation to punish someone for a lifetime for relatively minor crimes would be a travesty of justice. We recognize murder, rape, arson, abuse of innocents, assault, etc... to be offenses against justice. It's generally and broadly speaking, just not that difficult for most rational adults.
Admittedly, when it comes down to specifics, it can be trickier... what IS a just punishment for murder? Capitol punishment? Life in prison? Possible parole for good behavior? What if the murder was a woman killing her abusive husband? Same punishment or do the circumstances make a difference?
The details can be tricky and disputable and, to be completely clear, there are NO perfect answers. We don't have a perfect court or word from God that spells out the specifics of all the potentialities of what to do when someone harms another. But, nonetheless, generally speaking, it's not that difficult.
Stan (referring to a death penalty for eating the fruit in the garden in the Creation story)... "God thought so. We wouldn't. "
Stan thinks God thought so. But that's Stan's opinion and it's not a given and not proven.
IF the story is a mythic telling of Creation as
it appears to be at face value, then we aren't obligated to treat that
"punishment" as a literal suggestion that God thinks eating fruit
deserves a death penalty, which is irrational on the face of it. And
unjust as the word is defined.
Stan... "God considered adultery worthy of death (Lev 20:10); we don't."
Just to be clear: YOU, Stan, don't consider adultery (or talking back to your parents) to be worthy of death, do you? No answer forthcoming, I'm sure.
Stan...
"Perhaps you see, now, why simply "that which corresponds that what is
right" is something of an unhelpful definition for "justice" when we are
so deficient at knowing what is right."
Ah, and it comes down to
this. YOU are suggesting that we are "so deficient at knowing what is
right..." but you haven't proven this. It's an unsupported hunch on your
part. God has not said this. Reason does not demand it. It's what you
and your human tradition believes.
Do you recognize how this is correct?
Stan...
"His infinite perfections, infinite greatness, and infinite worth are
violated when we take it upon ourselves to circumvent Him."
Ah,
but what of those who never once decide to "take it upon ourselves to
circumvent God..."? The atheist and agnostic, for instance, who don't
believe the evidence supports a God are specifically NOT ever, not even
one time, trying to circumvent God. They just don't believe in God, so
they would have no reason to choose to circumvent God.
If they do
something wrong, it's never an intentional affront to God. At all. So,
by that measure (the one you're suggesting there), atheists can do no
wrong, it would seem. Does that make sense?
Also, what of all
those who DO love God and disagree with conservatives about how best to
follow God. We support the idea of aiding refugees and immigrants, of
abolishing the death penalty, of supporting a woman's right to choose,
of supporting women's rights in general, of supporting LGBTQ rights...
ALL in an effort to honor God and follow God's ways. There is zero
intention on our part to "circumvent God," even though conservatives
disagree with us on these points. But we're not beholden to
conservatives, are we? ...but to God, as best we understand God.
In that case, do you agree there is no intent to circumvent God... but instead, just the opposite?
Stan...
"If we understand sin like it is described in Scripture -- a violation
of God's glory, an assault on God's holiness, treason against the Most
High -- then lots of things change. Death for sin becomes reasonable."
1.
First of all, "scripture" LITERALLY never describes sin in those
terms... not that I can think of. Those are human interpretations of
Scripture, but literally NOT scripture. Just as a starting point, do you
recognize that?
(Briefly, in the Bible, there are two terms translated "sin..." The most common one, I'm told, is one that speaks of missing the mark - imperfection. Attempting to hit the target but falling short. That makes sense. We all recognize how we humans do that. The second, less-common in the Bible word is the notion of intentionally transgressing a law, going beyond boundaries that were set... neither of those ideas are comparable to "cosmic treason" or "an assault on God's holiness." Those are Stan's - and others' - reading into the Bible something that is literally not there.)
2. Even so, death does not "become
reasonable..." IF we are imperfect humans and we make mistakes and
choose wrong and do something God doesn't want us to do... HOW does
eternal punishment for being imperfect make rational, just sense?
It doesn't.
Stan...
"Christians who believe that Christ redeemed us by His blood (Rom 3:25;
Rom 5:9; Rev 1:5) are backwards, ignorant, and, basically, just as evil
as this god they believe in. Or, as I started to explain, they believe
in a different form of "what is right" and it is not consistent with
Scripture, history, or Christian doctrine."
That IS what much of
conservative evangelical history teaches, but it is ONLY what you all think Scripture teaches, it's not God's Word. It's your opinion of God's
Word, which many of us think is wrong for precisely the reasons you
cite here... You're relying upon your own interpretations which are, on
the face of it, unjust and unholy and irrational... which is, itself, an
indication that you've misunderstood and misinterpreted. Do you
recognize that distinction?
Stan,
seriously, there is just so much wrong, unbiblical, irrational and
unjust in what you're saying here. It really would help your case if you
could answer the huge questions about the huge holes in your argument.
And
if you can't answer them (and you almost certainly can't), then maybe
it would be time to humble yourself a bit and take a step back, take a
breath, open your eyes and ears to a fresh word from God... a Word that
isn't so crazily irrational and unjust and unholy.
Stan... "Thus,
the penalty for failing to meet that all-encompassing glory must be
equal to the size of the failure. That's what corresponds to what is
right."
???
Says who? And to be clear, I'm NOT disagreeing
with God. I'm saying DID GOD REALLY SAY THAT precisely because I know
the Bible and God did NOT say that. Any of that.
The Bible teaches of a perfectly loving, perfectly just God.
The Bible teaches of a God that wants ALL to be saved.
The Bible teaches of a God who has a table open to all, who saves by Grace, not by irrational fury.
The
Bible teaches of a God who is patient and forgiving, who knows us
better than we know ourselves and who loves us, just the same. BECAUSE
God knows us perfectly.
It's an unhealthy, irrational and unjust
human understanding of the Bible. A perversion of both God's great and
glorious grace and God's justice.
Think about it: We have flawed,
imperfect humans who sometimes make deliberate wrong choices, but more
often than not, we make mistakes... We THINK it's right to oppose gay
marriage, for instance, or we THINK it's right to support immigrants...
and it turns out we're mistaken. Our point was to honor God and do the
right thing. We're more often that not, I suspect, making errors from a
place of trying to do the right thing.
Consider: What if STAN and
his human traditions were wrong all along in their opposition and
oppression of gay people? They didn't even realize they WERE oppressing
gay people and causing harm (we conservatives have been, after all, but I
know I didn't realize it at the time and no doubt, you don't realize it
now)... but what if they were wrong? What if you were wrong?
Do
you think that you, a human created as an imperfect human "deserves" to
be punished "equal to the size of God's glory..."? How is that rational?
Moral? Just? Biblical?
MAYBE, if we were perfect gods and
everything we did, we did knowingly to cause evil... MAYBE then that
would make sense. But imperfect humans being imperfect "deserve" a
punishment as big as an almighty God??
You paint a rather petty and mean-spirited picture of a god who is irrational and unjust, by biblical standards.
Do you understand why or do I need to explain it to you? (That's a serious question, not meant to be insulting.)
More questions to Stan that will go unanswered by him or by conservatives, in general. At least, that has been my experience. I hope one day to find the conservative willing to wade into this and actually answer questions directly and rationally. I'm confident they exist... I just can't prove it, yet.