THEO 20605 Lecture Notes: Scripture I
Descriptive Dimension: From each character’s perspective, the problem is different (depending on how important one thinks football is to the life of the school, whether or not one ought to be looking for connections with the community in this way, or whether we are looking at it from an institutional perspective [is there at least a mixed message being sent]). Similarly, we each have different views on how this problem strikes us (maybe not as problematic at all)
Normative Dimension: Must the university recognize multiple goods as important if it is to carry on its mission? Is everyone faced at some level with this kind of conflict of goods in their career choices? Is the university or each of the characters we discussed using appropriate principles to sort out these conflicts (I must serve now; I will give to the University later if resources are available; we must balance the aims our alums and respect what each contributes)?
Practical Dimension: By what standards should we evaluate the current policy? Is this as simple as WWJD? (Hint: You are not J, so consider other methods of evaluation). What would the good disciple do? Or in which ways is the situation more complicated than this?
Fundamental Dimension: Whatever your career choice, do you get to a point in your life where the choices you made in the past make it very hard to make different choices (perhaps one’s you might later consider more virtuous) than the one’s you have developed a habit for making? Should the University aim directly at building character in its students (here, football ticket policies and parietals policies converge)? What kind of character?
Sources for Discernment: Today we will focus on Scripture as a source of discernment.
What does it mean for scripture to function as a source?
Ideally, we would have time to look at how the context and authorial intention sets the boundaries of interpretation (something that you should be familiar with from your Foundations course). But for now we are looking at how scripture functions as a source for moral knowledge.