Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Jul 06, 2024 4:10 am
It's a nice sentiment to be forgiven by God, however, I just don't know if it's truly the way things work or ought to work.
I have learned a great deal through reading the Baltimore Catechism. It thoroughly lays out the Catholic-Christian practical ethics. Mostly that is what I take away from it: the authoritative demand that the practicing Catholic put all his social and ethical affairs in order as part of his religious and spiritual practices.
It is amazing to me how demanding the religious and social practice is. It is in no sense easy to live an exemplary Catholic life since the imperatives of moral demands are extended to all categories.
The “rules” as it were about the restoration you refer to fall under the ethical teaching pertaining to the 7th commandment. The notion of not stealing, and refusing the benefit for what was stolen, not only implies but demands that restoration be achieved before genuine of full “forgiveness” (by the Divine Authority) is given. No restoration, no forgiveness. It is not enough to feel remorse and to ask to be forgiven (by the Divine Authority), actual restoration must be made.
When one considers really large-scale “theft” (as for example, and it does fall under the category of the 7th commandment, at least largely) such as the destruction wrought against an entire country and people — like what the US did to Vietnam — the demand of restoration is nearly inconceivable in scope. How could it ever be adequately made up?
Taken to an extreme, Christian philosophy demands a total renunciation of those acts and activities that actually define culture and civilization. As I said previously about the Roman conquest of the primitive northern European tribal people — our ancestors: we were conquered, we were “forced to labor in the empire of the Roman will” and through that process became civilized.
The notion of Christian missionary work (in Africa and among primitives) is more or less non-different. Something (“crude savagery” “barbarism” “pagan believe” conceived of as thralldom to lower orders or to evil) is fought against, destroyed or modified, and a new order is introduced: civilized life.
It is really very curious: In one light the African people in the New World could be said to owe a debt to European culture though their introduction to it involved their enslavement. Even when concrete, legal enslavement ended, the process of being molded, transformed and “civilized” continued. There would have been no way back to the former, primitive (“savage”) state. (I use the terms primitive and savage in their former anthropological senses: pre-civilization).
The strange reality — when one thinks of imperialist or Christian conquest — is that it cannot ever be purified of its essential nature: both exploitative and beneficent. It all depend on how one chooses to look at it, to adjudicate it.
We could never
really come to embrace the raw, Nietzschean ethics by which imperialist enterprises are not apologized for and instead presented as reasons to be proud. Thus, Nietzschean ethics are in a real sense a sort of pipe-dream. And yet the entire world, taken at the level of nature and natural laws of energy flow, does not in any sense demonstrate “moral principals”.
The world is absolutely
amoral.
Christian ethics in this obvious sense places man in a straight-jacket. You cannot assert yourself on any plane or in any dimension. But then you actually do, and you must, and then are stuck in the moral conundrum of having to make compensation for your activities, or to convince your “victims” that Providence is compensating them.