THEO 20605 Lecture Notes: What is Morally Relevant? How Do We Reason Morally?
Process:
On the one hand, what is really going on is that the university or an employer thinks that it can actually overcome a basic level of sinfulness and corruptness that affects all human moral behavior; in other words, that it has some hope of forming the moral character of the people that study or work there.
On the other hand, one could say that what is really going on here is that students think they are entitled to a time of life that does not count in the final equation, that there should at least be a period of four years where they are free from the demands of morality, where even if they believe in God they can count on God’s infinite mercy to the point that they can behave however they want without consequence (this is, by the way, known in Catholic theology as the sin of presumption, that we know ahead of time God’s will and how God will treat us). It can reveal a particular theology, of a God who is all treats and no tests.
One could also say that there seems to be a basic human need to invent pictures or representations of oneself that are more attractive and palatable (and less complex and less true) to potential friends. What does this say about one’s view of the nature of the human person? About the possibility of there being people of character that one can trust?