Showing posts with label morality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label morality. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Truth, Discernment, and the Refusal of Enforced Unreality

When powerful institutions command people not to believe their own experience, Christians ought to recognize it as abusive. 

Truthfulness as Moral Obligation

Christian discipleship isn’t truth optional. 

Do not bear false witness. 

Insofar as authorities train Christians to distrust reality unless validated by power, they’re not doing politics; they’re undermining truth-telling as a Christian virtue.

Richard Hooker grounds our moral obligation in Christian anthropology: What it means to be human. 

Discernment Is Not Defiance

Discernment is biblical; Christians must practice active judgment.

They may never command it. 

Political Authorities Are Not Omnipotent

Christian theology does not say: Be obedient to the state. 

But Scripture also gives limits:

Jesus’ disciples weren’t crucified for defying Caesar. 

Authoritarian regimes are not new, but they have a timeless spiritual signature.

Power becomes demonic when it demands epistemic loyalty: When citizens are expected to trust an official story over their consciences and lived moral realities.

“We reject and despise…” says the Barmen Declaration, “the false doctrine that political powers and organizations, and national and racial interests, may set themselves above this Church and present themselves as its lord.”

Experience Isn’t Ultimate—but Governments Aren’t God

To be clear: This is not an experience-only argument. 

Through scripture. Yes. Through reason. Of course. Through tradition. Certainly. Through prayer. Undoubtedly. And through communal discernment.

It’s about who—or what—we trust instead. It’s not obedience to state authority. 

Christianity cannot enmesh itself in any power. 

Idols do.

Image of God Includes Moral Agency

To claim our experiences have been seized by autocratic horror isn’t hyperbole if we recognize what’s at stake: our moral agency. God created humans in God’s image, which means several things, including our shared capacities for perception, judgment, conscience, and truthful speech. A regime that replaces trained dependence on experts with trained incapacity to trust our own moral perception intends to degrade that reality.

Discipleship is Transformation, Not Programming

It’s faithful discernment: wary, not trusting; sober, not cynical. Instead, Christians should pause before panic, seek confirmation, look for corroborating evidence, examine fruit, refuse cynicism, and—when human dignity and lives are at stake—hold fast to conscience.

The public responsibility of the church, writes William Temple, is to “announce the principles of Christianity and show where particular social institutions or movements harmonize with or depart from those principles; and to equip Christian laymen to play their part.” This task includes clashes over truth itself.

To err is human; to repent, Christian. 

Quotes

  • "Christianity is not a theory or speculation, but a life; not a philosophy of life, but a life and a living process." Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • "Most people are willing to take the Sermon on the Mount as a flag to sail under, but few will use it as a rudder by which to steer." Oliver Wendell Holmes
  • "Perfection, in a Christian sense, means becoming mature enough to give ourselves to others." Kathleen Norris
  • "Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can." John Wesley
  • "The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and left untried." G. K. Chesterton
  • "One of our great allies at present is the Church itself. Do not misunderstand me. I do not mean the Church as we see her spread out through all time and space and rooted in eternity, terrible as an army with banners. That, I confess, is a spectacle which makes our boldest tempters uneasy. But fortunately it is quite invisible to these humans." C. S. Lewis
  • "When we say, 'I love Jesus, but I hate the Church,' we end up losing not only the Church but Jesus too. The challenge is to forgive the Church. This challenge is especially great because the church seldom asks us for forgiveness." Henri Nouwen, Bread for the Journey
  • "Christians are hard to tolerate; I don't know how Jesus does it." Bono
  • "It's too easy to get caught in our little church subcultures, and the result is that the only younger people we might know are Christians who are already inside the church." Dan Kimball