Date: 2006-03-13 10:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] badsede.livejournal.com
I can say the same thing about my ethics of personal empowerment.

Good, then allow us to do the same. Allow us the same freedom of dissent that you claim for yourself. Act with a bit of charity. Our belief system is frequently being challenged like this, our charitable goals being regulated so that we have to choose between continuing to deliver charity as we have been and compromise our beliefs or give up that particular means of charity and maintain fidelity to our beliefs and our very identity, our involvement in social justice issues being denied unless we kowtow to an entire platform which contains planks that we cannot accept, being told to endure the miseducation about our past, being told to shut up and take it when we are maligned in ways that would not be tolerated of most other religious groups. Why is it ok to say that Catholics should be expected to sacrifice their identity when it seems like it is not ok to say the same to other groups?

I suppose we could argue exegesis all day, but...

The Sabbath is one of the Ten Commandments.

Keeping Holy the Sabbath is the commandment. Jesus was challenging not the pharisees' insistance on keeping the Sabbath holy, but the method that they espoused, which actually was in contradiction to keeping it holy.

he law demanded that the woman be stoned to death.

That says something about punishment, about civil order, but what does it say about right and wrong. We already know that Jesus intensified the moral law, and this is an example of it, showing them that to judge in this way when they are not worthy of judging is also immoral. It was not a compromise of morality, it was an intensification of it.

Date: 2006-03-14 04:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sophiaserpentia.livejournal.com
Because no one can have everything their way. Certainly we all deserve a fair shot at that, but if different groups in society are aiming in different directions, at some point someone gets less than what they want. I don't see this an an excuse to stop doing good. Lord knows, if queer people stopped doing good because we didn't get everything our way... it wouldn't be pretty.


Jesus was challenging not the pharisees' insistance on keeping the Sabbath holy, but the method that they espoused, which actually was in contradiction to keeping it holy.

How's that? What does "holy" mean? In Jesus day, as today, it was pretty well established in Jewish tradition that the way you keep the Sabbath holy is by not doing any labor. (For good measure, cf. Ex. 20:8-11.) Picking wheat in public is pretty easy to categorize as "labor."


It was not a compromise of morality, it was an intensification of it.

An intensification that has the very odd effect of resulting in LESS punishment and thus looking suspiciously like mercy. Deuteronomy 17:1-7 says that God gave people the duty of 'purging the evil within their community' by stoning wrongdoers to death on the testimony of three witnesses. According to Lev. 20:10, one of the evils deserving of death is adultery. So according to the letter of the old law (of which, according to one statement of Jesus, not a jot or a tittle shall pass) it was the moral duty of the woman's accusers to have her stoned to death.

If Jesus intensified the moral code by asserting that only those who are without sin are worthy of passing judgment, that would contradict scripture by rendering impossible the duty of passing judgment (not the right, the duty) commanded in Deut. 17.

Date: 2006-03-14 05:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] badsede.livejournal.com
ecause no one can have everything their way.

That's not what I'm asking for, all I'm asking is that my faith not be subjected condemnation for acting in accordance with our faith.

Lord knows, if queer people stopped doing good because we didn't get everything our way... it wouldn't be pretty.

Catholic Charities is not stopping doing good, just redirecting. Considering Catholic charities is the largest provider of charity in the world - at one time, provided more charity than all others combined - saying that this move is tantamount to "stopping" is a bit of a stretch.

What does "holy" mean?

Something set apart.

In Jesus day, as today, it was pretty well established in Jewish tradition that the way you keep the Sabbath holy is by not doing any labor.

Jesus explains it in the scene itself, explaining how the Torah also provides the answer.

of which, according to one statement of Jesus, not a jot or a tittle shall pass

We've had this conversation. Considering that he contradicts Mosaic Law in the same scene where he says this, it is immediately obvious that he did not equate "The Law" with Mosaic law.

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