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the starry heavens above the moral law within and conscience PDF

105 Pages·2011·0.82 MB·English
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1 THE STARRY HEAVENS ABOVE THE MORAL LAW WITHIN AND CONSCIENCE Lars Wilhelmsson 2 CONTENTS PREFACE 3-4 INTRODUCTION 5-9 CHAPTER 1 THE STARRY HEAVENS ABOVE 10-18 CHAPTER 2 THE MORAL LAW WITHIN 19-25 CHAPTER 3 THE CONSCIENCE 26-37 CHAPTER 4 THE CONSCIENCE IN WESTERN LITERATURE 38-42 CHAPTER 5 KINDS OF CONSCIENCE 43-47 CHAPTER 6 NATURE, THE MORAL LAW AND CONSCIENCE AS EVIDENCE FOR GOD’S EXISTENCE 48-63 CHAPTER 7 CONSCIENCE AND MORALITY 64-67 CHAPTER 8 CONSCIENCE AND JUSTICE 68-74 CHAPTER 9 CONSCIENCE AND THE WORD OF GOD 75-78 CHAPTER 10 NATURE, THE MORAL LAW, CONSCIENCE AND ETERNITY 79-85 CHAPTER 11 THE BAD NEWS AND THE GOOD NEWS 86-90 NOTES 91-100 BIBLIOGRAPHY 101-103 RECOMMENDED READING 104-105 3 PREFACE “Insomnia gets most of the blame that conscience deserves.” --Anonymous The ancients used to talk of a gold ring which had the appearance of any other ring, yet differed in at least one quality—the wearer, should he brood over an evil thought or contemplate an evil deed, would feel the ring pressing hard upon his finger. Each of us has within us a thing still more wonderful—something that registers the approach of moral danger, or the transgression of known standards of morality. This is conscience. The word “conscience,” like conscientiousness, faithfulness, etc., has fallen on hard times. After having listened to sermons for over 50 years, I can only recall one that addressed this topic. When the word has come up, it has usually been mentioned in a negative way. Immediately the word guilt comes to mind and the many words associated with it such as offense, failure, mistake, wrong, sin, whether real or imagined. It is also associated with negative feelings such as shame, remorse, anguish, torment, self-condemnation, self-unforgiveness, self- judgment and in extreme cases, severe depression. Like so many others, when I was young I was told to let my conscience be my guide. As I grew older such a statement didn’t seem to make sense since people who claimed to follow that counsel, thought and said things and acted in ways that seemed anything but right. Part of the problem is the confusion that surrounds this issue. Some of the questions that come to mind are: If we all have a conscience, how come we act so differently? If we all have a conscience, how come some are able to commit heinous crimes and sleep like a baby while others turn and toss because of seemingly insignificant thoughts, words and deeds? What is the difference between true guilt and false guilt? What things can potentially harm the conscience? What is the difference between a seared conscience and an overactive conscience? 4 What is the answer to the individual who is influenced by his own inner impulses and perceptions instead of being influenced by the Holy Spirit and by the tenets of God’s Word? Part of the problem is that we fail to distinguish between the moral law and the conscience. Most only refer to one of those categories and lump in the other. To what extent is one’s conscience “the voice of God?” To what extent does it have grounding in objective moral norms? Or, is it autonomous? If the latter is so, can it claim a moral basis equivalent to one who believes his conscience is based on the will of God? Conscience has always based its claim on an authority outside the self, sitting in judgment on the self. It is the purpose of the book to help people understand the place the starry heavens above (creation), the moral law within and conscience play in our lives so we can grow in our relation to God and others. 5 “I sat alone with my conscience In a place where time has ceased, And I thought of my former living In the land where the years increased. The ghost of forgotten actions Came floating before my sight, And things that I thought were dead things Were alive with a terrible might. And I know of the future judgment, How dreadful so o’er it be, To sit alone with my conscience Will be judgment enough for me.” --William Stubbs, “Castles in the Air” 6 INTRODUCTION 7 1 “Conscience is the perfect interpreter of life.” --Karl Barth 2 “Reason deceives us often; conscience never.” --Rousseau “The antagonism between life and conscience may be removed in two ways. 3 By a change of life or by a change of conscience.” --Leo Tolstoy 4 “Good friends, good books and a sleepy conscience: this is the ideal life.” --Mark Twain 5 “A clear conscience is a good pillow.” --American Proverb A man consulted a doctor, "I've been misbehaving, Doc, and my conscience is troubling me," he complained. "And you want something that will strengthen your willpower?" asked the doctor. "Well, no," said the fellow. "I was thinking of something that would weaken my 6 conscience." Similarly, a man wrote the following letter to the IRS: “I have been unable to sleep knowing that I have cheated on my income tax. I understated my taxable income and have enclosed a check for $200.00. If I still can’t sleep, I will send the rest.” Our modern era rushes to anesthetize whatever we find uncomfortable. The religious notion of a sense of guilt has been replaced by a psychologized culture where understanding is the answer no matter how deep the problem may be. The psychologist’s couch has replaced the minister’s confessional. Our courts are filled with lawyers who recommend a "not guilty" plea no matter what the truth happens to be. Is it any wonder that religious conversion is not only no longer needed but regarded as a worn-out and unwanted phenomenon? I still remember hearing and seeing on television Bishop Fulton Sheen's opening line several decades ago: "Thank God for pain! Thank God for guilt!" Then he eloquently explained that because man is composed of body and soul, he is a composite of material and spiritual components. He went on to point out that God in His infinite wisdom designed into our nature an alert system in each component and that if it were not for the sense of pain physically, we would die of undetected and thus untreated illness and that if it were it not for the sense of guilt, we would die in our sins, unrecognized and thus unrepentant. 8 Germaine De Stael accurately pointed out, “The voice of conscience is so delicate that it is easy to stifle it; but it is also so 7 clear that it is impossible to mistake it.” (Emphasis added) A strange affair took place during WWII which became known as “The Hardy Case.” Hardy was a member of the French Underground, and toward the end of the war it was suspected that he was the man who had been betraying his comrades to the Gestapo. When the war was over, he was brought to trial. But he had a very talented lawyer who managed to create so much doubt in the minds of the jury that his client was acquitted. Then after the trial was over, Hardy admitted that he was guilty. When asked why he had confessed after he had been declared innocent, he answered, “I couldn’t live a lie forever.” The feeling of guilt, the capacity to recognize guilt, belongs essentially to our spiritual make-up and the person who is numb to guilt, who is without remorse, is spiritually ill. This sad condition is often the result of sinful attitudes and habits. What sin does to one's soul AIDS does to one's body in that it attacks the built-in recovery system itself. Conscience and guilt are debilitated or suppressed by sin because sin creates a proclivity to sin and engenders vice by repetition of the same acts. This results in perverse inclinations which cloud conscience and corrupt the concrete judgment of good and evil. Thus sin tends to reproduce itself and reinforce itself taking foothold in a person’s life. The impressionate painter Vincent van Gogh wrote in a letter to his brother Theo in 1878 that "one must never let the fire in one's soul die, for the time will inevitably come when it will be needed. And he who chooses poverty for himself and loves it possesses a great treasure and will hear the voice of his conscience address him every more clearly. He who hears that voice, which is God's greatest gift, in his innermost being and follows it, finds in it a friend at last, and he is never alone! . . . That is what all great men have acknowledged in their works, all those who have thought a little more deeply and searched and worked and loved 8 a little more than the rest, who have plumbed the depths of the sea of life." The 1957 Ingmar Bergman’s film Seventh Seal portrays the journey of a medieval knight (Max von Sydow) returning disillusioned from the crusades and anxiously asking, "What is going to happen to those of us who want to believe, but aren't able to?" Across a plague-ridden landscape, he undertakes a game of chess with the personification of Death until he can perform one meaningful altruistic act of conscience overturning the chess board to distract Death long 9 enough for a family of jugglers to escape in their wagon. 9 ACKNOWLEDGED OVERWHELMINGLY The concept of some notion of conscience is acknowledged overwhelmingly by all societies throughout human history. The quotations in this treatise reflect the broad spectrum of peoples with their various backgrounds who recognize the voice of conscience. “All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.” —United Nations, Universal Declaration on Human Rights Article 1 “Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.” —United Nations, Universal Declaration on Human Rights Article 18 “Everyone shall have the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion. This right shall include freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice, and freedom, either individually or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in worship, observance, practice and teaching.” —United Nations, International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Article 18.1 Immanuel Kant, a central figure of the Age of Enlightenment, likewise claimed that two things filled his mind with ever new and increasing admiration and awe: "the starry heavens above me and the moral law within me.”10 This statement may be Kant’s most famous passage and this statement in his first sentence was even inscribed on his tombstone. Kant concluded his Critique of Practical Reason with this passage in 1788 and the appearance of the Critique of Pure Reason in 1781 marked the beginning of modern philosophy. These texts are read on all continents, and his influence continues to be global. 10 CHAPTER 1 THE STARRY HEAVENS ABOVE

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rises at one end of the heavens and makes its circuit to the other; nothing is . He also demonstrated the generalized binomial theorem, .. Conscience, in Roman Catholic theology, is "a judgment of reason whereby . Kant continues his analysis by advocating God as the origin of conscience because.
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.