Moving Values from the Freezer to the Medicine Cabinet
April 10, 2005 Posted by Roger Overton
Joe Carter at The Evangelical Outpost has initiated a symposium on “Judeo-Christian Values in an Ethically Pluralistic Society.” What follows is my entry into the discussion.
The first task is definitions. Dennis Prager recently did a ten-part series on Judeo-Christian values, which are worthwhile reads. I will borrow from his defining of terms to propose that these values are that which is found in the Old Testament (or Hebrew Bible) and is of concern to both Christians and Jewish peoples (and often Roman Catholics, Mormons, and some others). For more on that, read Prager.
An ethically pluralistic society can be taken two ways. On one hand, pluralism is evident. There are a plurality of ethical standards around the world today, and the Judeo-Christian standards are just one set of many. The Bible assumes this will be the case for believers when it gives guidelines for interacting with culture (in both the O.T. and N.T.). The other way pluralism can be taken is to mean that everyone’s moral values are equally true. In other words, it is moral relativism. Though we have many differing values that are often contradictory, all values are equally right.
It is this second definition of pluralism that is the mindset of most people in American culture, especially in the university. What I’m concerned with here is why contradictory values are generally held to be true. This mindset is evidenced when we hear statements such as “you can’t judge me”, “that’s just true for you”, “you shouldn’t try to impose (or force) your views on me.”
The fundamental problem is that our culture does not believe that ethical values constitute an area of knowledge. A chasm has been dug between those things that are “facts” and those things that are “values,” such that facts are universally binding and values are relevant only to individual choice. Facts are the insulin. If you have diabetes, you must have insulin. If you want to fly, you need propulsion. Values are the ice cream. I like Cookies ‘N Cream, Greg Koukl likes Butter Pecan, and there are no consequences to either preference.
Francis Schaeffer characterized this as the divide between the “Lower Story” and the “Upper Story.” In the Lower Story we have placed only those things that are scientifically verifiable. In most cases, this means only materialistic explanations can constitute knowledge that is true for all people. We have thrown everything else into the Upper Story- ethics (Kant), religion (romanticism), the mind (Descartes), literature (Derrida), etc. No matter how strongly we hold to a belief in any of these areas, we can never claim that our belief constitutes something knowable, something true beyond the confines of our individual existence.
Judeo-Christian values are meaningless in such a culture, as are any other values. We have no basis for telling someone it is wrong to kill their baby, and likewise, they have no basis for telling us we’re wrong in our assessment. It is no wonder why so many people believe we can’t legislate morality; if morality were a matter of personal choice then it would make no sense to legislate it. Of course, if this were the case we would have nothing to legislate. Those things that are universally true in this framework have already been legislated- like the laws of thermodynamics.
This dichotomy of facts and values is necessarily self-contradictory. More technically, it is self-referentially absurd. When this framework is applied to itself it falls flat on its face. It’s not scientifically verifiable. I can’t engage it with my five senses. It has no rational argumentation. In the end it explains nothing; nothing except what G.K. Chesterton told us, “When people stop believing in God, they don't believe in nothing — they believe in anything.”
The Biblical worldview has always stood up against such nonsense, arguing that ethics, theology, etc. constitute knowledge. That claims of this nature correspond to the real world we encounter on a regular basic. C.S. Lewis made this argument in Mere Christianity by appealing to our intuitions. “Think of a country where people were admired for running away in battle, or where a man felt proud of double-crossing all the people kindest to him… [Men] have always agreed that you ought not put yourself first. Selfishness has never been admired… But the most remarkable thing is this. Whenever you find a man who says he does not believe in a real Right and Wrong, you will find the same man going back on this a moment later. He may break his promise to you, but if you try breaking one to him he will be complaining ‘It’s not fair’ before you can say Jackie Robinson.”
The foolishness of moral relativism isn’t new. Since the fall of man people have sought to do what is right in their own eyes. And history has shown the consequences of such efforts. We have experienced this problem in our own lives. Almost every time we feel hurt it is because someone decided to do what felt right for them instead of what is right for all.
If we desire to fulfill the Cultural Mandate, that is, develop and harness the social and natural world, then we must start by shifting “values” back down to the Lower Story. We must show that certain “values” aren’t simply ice cream in the freezer, but are really medicine in the cabinet. As Nancy Pearcey puts it, “to recover a place at the table of public debate, Christians must find a way to overcome the dichotomy between public and private, fact and value, secular and sacred. We need to liberate the gospel from its cultural captivity, restoring it to the status of public truth.” (Total Truth, 22)
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April 10th, 2005 at 11:47 pm
I think you have two great ideas regarding the two different views of relativism. Here is where I differ: I'm not convinced that American's are moral relativists. They do believe that there are rights and wrongs… the majority of them believed that Terri Schaivo should have been allowed to die without a zillion court challenges. They did care. It wasn't that they had no opinion about this case. It wasn't that they are hoping a 'culture of death' prevails.
Instead, they hoped that there would be a means by which people could still die with dignity even if the brain is liquid and incapable of functioning.
I'm not convinced that the data gives us real evidence that we are in this moral relativism many suggest…
I strongly agree that we need the private square to move into the public square… but the means by which we do this seems to differ greatly.
Some people will suggest gentleness and respect for people of differing opinions; others will use hell and firestorms to get their private square into the public.
The former approach has been termed relativism by those in the later camp…
April 11th, 2005 at 1:18 am
Maybe my understanding of American culture is disproportionate to the larger society since I went to a public university, but even so most non-Christians, and many Christians, I encounter are in some way relativists. Very few people if asked will affirm that “all values are equally true if contradictory,” however, their relativism is apparent in the ethical views they hold. Take for instance “I personally think abortion is wrong but it should be up to the mother.” This is a view that many people hold and it is basic relativism. If it is wrong universally, then it shouldn't be up to the mother. If it's not wrong universally but only for the person making the claim, then that's relativism.
I don't think the Terry Shaivo case is a good example of relativism either. I've actually tried to refrain from talking at all about here, I think this is the first I've mentioned it. All I'll say is that I've learned from the past that we shouldn't trust controversial/heat of the moment polls. I've encountered plenty of people on both sides of the Shaivo issue. I'm not at all convinced that either side had a majority.
Who refers to “gentleness and respect for people of differing opinions” as relativism? I don't know anyone who has, and I've read a good number of materials on relativism. I'm all for gentleness and respect, especially since it's Biblical (1 Peter 3:15), and I believe we've always been such here- even though we aggressively critique certain ideas like relativism and postmodernism from time to time. The ministries I'm aware of that critique relativism also emphasis reflecting Christ's character- Stand to Reason, Reasons to Believe, Ravi Zacharias, etc. That's not to say everyone is going to be Christ-like, certainly some haven't, but I think it's unfair to broadbrush critics of relativism in this way.
Thank you for your comments.