We've all been there.
Good catch: but no, I don't think we are.Yes, we can condemn a crime against man simply by virtue of its being a crime against God, and for no other reason, but if we condemn it on the grounds of crimes against man being wrong, are we not then making the mistake of letting our personal feelings and judgement about crimes against man play a role in the way we approach morality?IC wrote:Both, I think. For stealing impacts both man and God. Why should we suppose that if stealing is obviously a crime against man, it cannot simultaneously be a crime against God? It seems obvious to me that we can say both.Harbal wrote:Should we be indifferent to stealing, itself, and only be concerned with God's disapproval of it?
We would, though, be doing that if we severed the two questions from each other. If we argued that there is a rationale for objective morality that depends on God, and a separate, distinct and unrelated rationale that made it wrong for us to do certain things, and right for us to do others, in regard solely to man, then we'd be in trouble in just the way you suggest.
But the truth is that the duty to God is primary and definitive, and the duty to man -- while just as real -- is derivative. This is what John Locke saw: that man's moral standing is derived from his personal standing as the creature and rightful child of God.
So, for example, it is wrong to steal a) because it is contrary to the nature and revealed will of God Himself, and 2) because your neighbour has also his rightful standing and obligations to God, one of which is his disposition of property that God has given him; so to interfere with his duty, by stealing that property which God has put under his rightful disposal is an act which violates not merely a person's wholeness, but the role God has given him to fulfill, and violates your relationship to his Creator.
That's why severing the two always results in incoherence. We end up claiming that man has "rights" which turn out to be what philosophers have called "nonsense on stilts" (Jeremy Bentham) -- that is, high-sounding language, but language so lacking in underpinnings that when we examine it, it turns out to be supported by nothing.
If man has rights because of God, there's a reason he has rights. If we imagine man has "rights" without that, we become instantly powerless to say why any man has such "rights" at all.
There's something to that.In fact, from our point of view, it is hard to see how there could be such a thing as crimes against man, and we should only see crimes against God.
What most people don't want to acknowledge is that wronging is not just against another person (who, after all, has really no more power or justification to have anything than one oneself has: the robbed is human, and so is the robber...so who's to say which set of values gets priority?), but is an assault and insult against the inherent right of God to say what each man has, what he should have, how he should use his freedom, and what his ultimate purpose ought to be.
But once we understand that man's rights are derivative, not original with him, then we understand this. Moreover, we understand that it's even quite possible for a person to "sin against himself," since his subjective feelings and wishes to not define what is right or wrong for him, but rather the question of whether, in his various actions and choices, he is actualizing the best "self" that God intended him to be. So a man can morally violate against himself -- most obviously, by recreationally drugging his own body until his mind is damaged, or chain-smoking himself into cancer, and less obviously, by committing acts that make him a bad person, and perpetuate his state as a fallen creature, one incapable of the greatest good -- eternal friendship and fellowship with God Himself.