Item Upon
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > News and Society > Religion > Moses v. Jesus: Why do Conservative Christians Prefer Moses' Commandments to Jesus' Beatitudes?

Tags

  • shall
  • decided
  • persecute
  • parsimonious response
  • shall receive
  • happen blessed

  • Links

  • Customer Service ??“ Customers Serving Customers?
  • Why Do You Call Me Lord, Lord?
  • Words That Are Like Magnets to Money
  • Item Upon - Moses v. Jesus: Why do Conservative Christians Prefer Moses' Commandments to Jesus' Beatitudes?

    Police Abuse: Wiccans Beware-Your Civil Rights are Not Guaranteed
    Police ignoring civil rights has become a harsh reality for not only Wiccans and Pagans, but also every other minority. No longer does the First Amendment provide freedom of religion, speech, to gather and engage in peaceful demonstration. No longer does the Fourth Amendment guarantee your home, car or business will not be searched without a warrant signed by a judge. Instead, there are a growing number of law enforcement officers who believe they are above the law; they see themselves not as public servants, but public masters who should not be questioned or criticized. Instead, they should be blindly and meekly obeyed. To do otherwise is to risk being harassed, physically attacked and jailed with little cause.Under the banner of self-defense, police have used traffic stops to justify warrant less searches. Such was the case of a northern Michigan Wiccan Priestess. Returning home from work, she was stopped. The Deputy initially refused to disclose why she was pulled over. Instead, he ordered her from her vehicle and searched it without her consent. In the bottom of her purse, he found a small athame set--the largest knife was under three inches, but it had a double edged blade. He arrested her; however, he refused to notify her of the reason for the stop or the arrest until they reached the jail. At that time, she was informed she was stopped for swerving twice in the several miles he had followed her, but she arrested and charged for felony-concealed weapon for having daggers in her purse. She did not threaten him, nor was she given an opportunity to explain why she had the athames. Several attempts were made a paying her bond, however the deputies on duty misrepresented the facts and she was held for over fifteen hours.During such time, she was denied medication for her asthma and proper nutrition for her hypoglycemia. Instead, the wheels of justice rolled over her civil rights. Although she had a clean record and the officer had a history of alcohol abuse, lying on the stand and violence against women, her court appointed atto
    hen constructing a state based on Christian principles?

    I think the answer lies in ideology and authoritarianism. People prefer the easy answer to the question of who is good and who is bad. Mosaic Law provides the most parsimonious response to both criminal conduct and behavior outside the mainstream. In fact, Mosaic Law (or, at least those parts of it that we like to keep around – the “stone my mother at the gates of the city” part is a bit pass?) is applied much more easily and consistently (particularly within the state) than Jesus’ mercy and peace. From that standpoint, it is more coherent, and almost scientific in its application. There is action, and there is reaction. Law becomes routinized, predictable, and consistent. It is a man-made list of proscriptions, but it ultimately takes on the form of a natural and undeniable force applied unthinkingly and automatically. You do the crime, you do the time. Punishing those whose behavior is offensive makes logical sense from a self-centered point of view. It’s supposed to make us feel better when the state carries it out. Retribution restores our faith that, if we behave as the state wants us to behave, we will be protected. For those who behave against the authority of the state, there will be retribution. People demonstrate the same kind of faith in the systems’ ability to pass judgment in the economic sphere as well. Americans conflate economic success with personal virtue.

    The difficulty with the legal paradigm based on Mosaic Law is this – it is not the

    Topography by Sharon Olds
    Sharon Olds is one of the best representatives of English speaking literature and poetry in particular. What is more noteworthy is the fact that she became popular nowadays, so we may say she is a contemporary author. Probably, my words may sound too excited but I cannot speak otherwise about a person who succeeded in poetry and in literature at large in the age of pop art and mass culture when different, often quite simple works of modern art replaced really deep and thought provoking masterpieces. Works of Sharon Olds are really impressive and attract a reader by the actuality of themes the author writes about, they also have a well worked out structure and represent a perfect example of poems from the point of view of their organization and richness in stylistic devices and different artistic details.Traditionally her poems are full of images and metaphors that are very symbolic and at the same time very precise that, in its turn, certainly makes her poems so memorable and interesting to read. One of the best poems written by this author is “Topography” which is undoubtedly a great work of literature. In my paper I would like to dwell exactly upon this poem because I really liked it. But before I started to speak about the poem itself I would like to say that this poem was included in her collection “The Gold Cell” that was published in 1987 and immediately became one of the most significant in the whole book.What does then make this so interesting and attractive for readers? There may be different ideas about it but personally I think that the main reason is the fact that this poem is close to our life, its theme is quite actual and presented in such a way that makes “Topography” even worthier our attention than numerous poems either of other authors or some of Sharon Olds` ones. However, I would not call this poem an exception, on the contrary it is just one of the best in the row of very good and masterfully composed poems. But returning to the poem itself I have to underline its stylistic and artistic richness which naturally helps the aut
    Why are conservative Christians so concerned about displaying the Ten Commandments in public and especially in courtrooms?

    Conservatives and their lawyers claim that the Ten Commandments are (or, should regain their position) at the heart of American jurisprudence because the Decalogue represents our commitment to Rule of Law. And, they have made these arguments in cases like McCreary County v. ACLU of Kentucky[1] (in which the ACLU challenged the legality of displaying framed copies of the Ten Commandments in two Kentucky courtrooms) and Van Orden v. Perry[2] (involving a challenge to the legality of a Ten Commandments monument displayed as part of a statehouse exhibit). Immediately after the Supreme Court decided these two cases, Mat Staver, the conservative Christian attorney who argued the McCreary County case, stated

    The Ten Commandments have become a universally recognized symbol of law because of its [sic] influence on our law and notions of right and wrong. The Court should recognize the Ten Commandments are more than an historical relic. The Founders would be outraged that we are even debating the constitutionality of the Ten Commandments. That the Ten Commandments would be deemed unconstitutional is an insult to the Constitution, to our shared religious history …[3]

    While the Supreme Court decisions released this week in these two cases did little to resolve the issue of religious displays, they elevate the issue in the American culture wars while obscuring a broader set of questions that we should consider: Are the Ten Commandments really a building block of American society, and a representation of our preference for order? If they are, should they be? Given our culture, tradition and values, should we display the Ten Commandments publicly as a sign of reverence for our institutions?

    Frankly, I doubt it.

    I am certainly not against religious displays in public.[4] But, I would be much more in favor of the idea if conservatives were arguing for the public display of what should be the set of tenets at the center of Christianity and its influence of society - the Beatitudes. In pursuing this discussion, it is easy to get off track, and onto a kind of argument that is not particularly productive - the appropriateness of displaying religious documents in public forums,[5] or appropriate standards of review for governmental policies implicating religion.[6] I hope we don’t, because I want to raise an issue related to the questions I posed above, one that I find much more interesting. It’s time for conservative Christians to decide – who do you like better, Moses or Jesus?

    It can’t possibly be both, because as we know from St. Paul’s letters that Jesus freed us from the Law (promulgated by God through Moses, in the Christian and Judaic traditions). Jesus’ Beatitudes are a “new law” of redemption leading to freedom, peace, charity and happiness. The word beatitude itself comes from the Latin beatitudo (meaning happiness). Jesus’ mission to the world was to preach that “the Kingdom of God is at hand.” He did not tack on “and, God is really angry so there’s going to be hell to pay.” In short, Jesus’ message was not one of retributive justice carried out by a set of state institutions that enforce a religious code for living. So why are conservative Christians, the heirs of Jesus’ mercy and love, supporting Moses over Jesus?

    Rejection of the Ten Commandments by courts has contributed to disaffection with the society, belief that Christian values are under attack, and sustained political and legal action on the part of the conservative Christian social movement. Certain, not all conservative Christians would side with Moses on this score, but they are the exceptions to the rule. If others thought about it, they would realize that they are backing the wrong horse, and could make a better argument using the Beatitudes. I would like to see courts argue against a public display of words like “blessed are the peacemakers,” or (even better) “blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy.” I’m certain courts would insist that such words would have to be placed within an historical context. But, can you see courts today objecting to consideration of the beatitudes and “blessed are the merciful” before sentencing, as they did recently when they overturned the decision of a jury that considered the Old Testament during deliberation?

    So, why then is the punitive justice of Mosaic Law equated with Christian principles when Jesus himself preached peace and mercy, not “an eye for an eye?” The answer is not that conservative Christians are uncomfortable with a legal status that places them on the outside. Conservatives of all stripes actually feel much more comfortable on the outside of the system then the inside. Once they gain political power they have just as much trouble as any other winners in managing the state and maintaining their principles. The strange part is that they would want to win at all. The images of Mosaic Law are the armies of Israel conquering Canaan, and later the armies of Christian Europe conquering Jerusalem. The image of the Beatitudes is of the suffering Christ on the Cross, put there by the state. If conservative Christians today feel that they have been cut off from government (and their values shunted aside), isn’t that what is supposed to happen? “Blessed are ye when [men] shall reproach you, and persecute you, and say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake.”

    Even more perplexing, if conservative Christians did manage to dominate the institutions of government, why would they want to put the principles of Moses into practice rather than those of Jesus who superseded him? The Ten Commandments are the symbol of a system that while claiming to be Christian (if not in origin, then in practice) in no way resembles the work of Christ. This system endorses a way of living that shows little of the respect for human dignity that is at the heart of Jesus’ work. Yet its adherents claim to be followers of Christ. So, why do they endorse the “eye for an eye” logic that Christ himself refutes when constructing a state based on Christian principles?

    I think the answer lies in ideology and authoritarianism. People prefer the easy answer to the question of who is good and who is bad. Mosaic Law provides the most parsimonious response to both criminal conduct and behavior outside the mainstream. In fact, Mosaic Law (or, at least those parts of it that we like to keep around – the “stone my mother at the gates of the city” part is a bit pass?) is applied much more easily and consistently (particularly within the state) than Jesus’ mercy and peace. From that standpoint, it is more coherent, and almost scientific in its application. There is action, and there is reaction. Law becomes routinized, predictable, and consistent. It is a man-made list of proscriptions, but it ultimately takes on the form of a natural and undeniable force applied unthinkingly and automatically. You do the crime, you do the time. Punishing those whose behavior is offensive makes logical sense from a self-centered point of view. It’s supposed to make us feel better when the state carries it out. Retribution restores our faith that, if we behave as the state wants us to behave, we will be protected. For those who behave against the authority of the state, there will be retribution. People demonstrate the same kind of faith in the systems’ ability to pass judgment in the economic sphere as well. Americans conflate economic success with personal virtue.

    The difficulty with the legal paradigm based on Mosaic Law is this – it is not the

    Consulting to Significantly Improve Results
    If you work as an organizational consultant, you are sure to hear all types of request from clients. Instead of consulting with you the client actually brings you a solution that he or she wants implemented. You know that following that line is the wrong thing to do and more importantly it will not provide your clients with the results that they are look for.So, what do you do?This is the story of one of my favorite client engagements. I call it "Disconnecting the Phone Doctor." Take a look at the client's request and you'll understand why.THE TRAINING REQUESTThe manager said that he had 125 people in the technical center and that they had recently experienced an 8% drop in our customer satisfaction and responsiveness ratings. Customers reported that the phone rang too many times before being answered, the hold times were too long, and sometimes there was no answer at all. The customers said that they had to call back to get an issue resolved.Could you please deliver "Phone Doctor" training?The “Phone Doctor” is a training class to teach people better phone etiquette. This was a sophisticated telecommunications network center staff with telecom specialist, engineers, and systems professionals. The center was responsible for building client networks, monitoring the networks, and troubleshooting network failures.MY IMMEDIATE THOUGHTIf performance was good what caused the 8% drop. I don't seriously think that it is because people don't know how to answer a ringing phone or speak when they answer it. After all they all had telecommunication or information technology degrees and they had communicated well enough to get the job.THE FINDINGSThis manager had hired 15 new people within a 45-day period. Someone had the bright idea that the best way to get the new people up to speed was to immediately expose them to the types of issues that they would be handling. Management decided to assign the new people to phone detail. They were to answer very technical telecommu
    ould consider: Are the Ten Commandments really a building block of American society, and a representation of our preference for order? If they are, should they be? Given our culture, tradition and values, should we display the Ten Commandments publicly as a sign of reverence for our institutions?

    Frankly, I doubt it.

    I am certainly not against religious displays in public.[4] But, I would be much more in favor of the idea if conservatives were arguing for the public display of what should be the set of tenets at the center of Christianity and its influence of society - the Beatitudes. In pursuing this discussion, it is easy to get off track, and onto a kind of argument that is not particularly productive - the appropriateness of displaying religious documents in public forums,[5] or appropriate standards of review for governmental policies implicating religion.[6] I hope we don’t, because I want to raise an issue related to the questions I posed above, one that I find much more interesting. It’s time for conservative Christians to decide – who do you like better, Moses or Jesus?

    It can’t possibly be both, because as we know from St. Paul’s letters that Jesus freed us from the Law (promulgated by God through Moses, in the Christian and Judaic traditions). Jesus’ Beatitudes are a “new law” of redemption leading to freedom, peace, charity and happiness. The word beatitude itself comes from the Latin beatitudo (meaning happiness). Jesus’ mission to the world was to preach that “the Kingdom of God is at hand.” He did not tack on “and, God is really angry so there’s going to be hell to pay.” In short, Jesus’ message was not one of retributive justice carried out by a set of state institutions that enforce a religious code for living. So why are conservative Christians, the heirs of Jesus’ mercy and love, supporting Moses over Jesus?

    Rejection of the Ten Commandments by courts has contributed to disaffection with the society, belief that Christian values are under attack, and sustained political and legal action on the part of the conservative Christian social movement. Certain, not all conservative Christians would side with Moses on this score, but they are the exceptions to the rule. If others thought about it, they would realize that they are backing the wrong horse, and could make a better argument using the Beatitudes. I would like to see courts argue against a public display of words like “blessed are the peacemakers,” or (even better) “blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy.” I’m certain courts would insist that such words would have to be placed within an historical context. But, can you see courts today objecting to consideration of the beatitudes and “blessed are the merciful” before sentencing, as they did recently when they overturned the decision of a jury that considered the Old Testament during deliberation?

    So, why then is the punitive justice of Mosaic Law equated with Christian principles when Jesus himself preached peace and mercy, not “an eye for an eye?” The answer is not that conservative Christians are uncomfortable with a legal status that places them on the outside. Conservatives of all stripes actually feel much more comfortable on the outside of the system then the inside. Once they gain political power they have just as much trouble as any other winners in managing the state and maintaining their principles. The strange part is that they would want to win at all. The images of Mosaic Law are the armies of Israel conquering Canaan, and later the armies of Christian Europe conquering Jerusalem. The image of the Beatitudes is of the suffering Christ on the Cross, put there by the state. If conservative Christians today feel that they have been cut off from government (and their values shunted aside), isn’t that what is supposed to happen? “Blessed are ye when [men] shall reproach you, and persecute you, and say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake.”

    Even more perplexing, if conservative Christians did manage to dominate the institutions of government, why would they want to put the principles of Moses into practice rather than those of Jesus who superseded him? The Ten Commandments are the symbol of a system that while claiming to be Christian (if not in origin, then in practice) in no way resembles the work of Christ. This system endorses a way of living that shows little of the respect for human dignity that is at the heart of Jesus’ work. Yet its adherents claim to be followers of Christ. So, why do they endorse the “eye for an eye” logic that Christ himself refutes when constructing a state based on Christian principles?

    I think the answer lies in ideology and authoritarianism. People prefer the easy answer to the question of who is good and who is bad. Mosaic Law provides the most parsimonious response to both criminal conduct and behavior outside the mainstream. In fact, Mosaic Law (or, at least those parts of it that we like to keep around – the “stone my mother at the gates of the city” part is a bit pass?) is applied much more easily and consistently (particularly within the state) than Jesus’ mercy and peace. From that standpoint, it is more coherent, and almost scientific in its application. There is action, and there is reaction. Law becomes routinized, predictable, and consistent. It is a man-made list of proscriptions, but it ultimately takes on the form of a natural and undeniable force applied unthinkingly and automatically. You do the crime, you do the time. Punishing those whose behavior is offensive makes logical sense from a self-centered point of view. It’s supposed to make us feel better when the state carries it out. Retribution restores our faith that, if we behave as the state wants us to behave, we will be protected. For those who behave against the authority of the state, there will be retribution. People demonstrate the same kind of faith in the systems’ ability to pass judgment in the economic sphere as well. Americans conflate economic success with personal virtue.

    The difficulty with the legal paradigm based on Mosaic Law is this – it is not the

    Use The Past, Learn For The Future
    This is one of those occasions when it gives me no pleasure to say, "See I told you so", but the Blair regime in the UK has finally realised that we actually need history to learn. After embracing multiculturalism and all but wiping the Britain out of British history he can now see the devastation it causes. We all need to feel we belong somewhere. And if we feel, we belong to something worthwhile then all the better. We allowed immigrants into Britain. Welcomed them. Why did they want to come? Because they felt it was a better place. So what did we do? Our Tony welcomed multiculturalism which says that even though you live in Britain, bring your old ways with you, live as you always have and forget joining in with your fellow countryman. It was a failure. It just didn’t work. Whilst he was taking away the hopes and aspirations of those immigrants who wanted to be a part of a better world, he and his brain dead friends systematically air brushed everything that Britain stood for out of history in the classroom. Everything seen to be British was removed from memory. More reminiscent of a dictatorship than a modern democracy. In 1977, I visited Kenya, a wonderful country, a fabulous people. I asked one local what it had been like under British rule. He looked at the woman with a bag of flour on her head, walking home in the dark from the collection point miles from home and said, “At least under the British, nobody went hungry”. Not exactly an emphatic endorsement of British colonialism but a far cry from the evil which is what Blair believed it to be. We need history. Not to gloat over our triumphs but to learn from our mistakes. A lioness teaches her cubs the good from the bad, the safe from the dangerous. Not because an elephant trod on her and killed her, but it did tread on another lion, so she knows enough to pass that danger on. History shows us a light. The light of discovery. The light to the best way, the safest way. Without which
    ” He did not tack on “and, God is really angry so there’s going to be hell to pay.” In short, Jesus’ message was not one of retributive justice carried out by a set of state institutions that enforce a religious code for living. So why are conservative Christians, the heirs of Jesus’ mercy and love, supporting Moses over Jesus?

    Rejection of the Ten Commandments by courts has contributed to disaffection with the society, belief that Christian values are under attack, and sustained political and legal action on the part of the conservative Christian social movement. Certain, not all conservative Christians would side with Moses on this score, but they are the exceptions to the rule. If others thought about it, they would realize that they are backing the wrong horse, and could make a better argument using the Beatitudes. I would like to see courts argue against a public display of words like “blessed are the peacemakers,” or (even better) “blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy.” I’m certain courts would insist that such words would have to be placed within an historical context. But, can you see courts today objecting to consideration of the beatitudes and “blessed are the merciful” before sentencing, as they did recently when they overturned the decision of a jury that considered the Old Testament during deliberation?

    So, why then is the punitive justice of Mosaic Law equated with Christian principles when Jesus himself preached peace and mercy, not “an eye for an eye?” The answer is not that conservative Christians are uncomfortable with a legal status that places them on the outside. Conservatives of all stripes actually feel much more comfortable on the outside of the system then the inside. Once they gain political power they have just as much trouble as any other winners in managing the state and maintaining their principles. The strange part is that they would want to win at all. The images of Mosaic Law are the armies of Israel conquering Canaan, and later the armies of Christian Europe conquering Jerusalem. The image of the Beatitudes is of the suffering Christ on the Cross, put there by the state. If conservative Christians today feel that they have been cut off from government (and their values shunted aside), isn’t that what is supposed to happen? “Blessed are ye when [men] shall reproach you, and persecute you, and say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake.”

    Even more perplexing, if conservative Christians did manage to dominate the institutions of government, why would they want to put the principles of Moses into practice rather than those of Jesus who superseded him? The Ten Commandments are the symbol of a system that while claiming to be Christian (if not in origin, then in practice) in no way resembles the work of Christ. This system endorses a way of living that shows little of the respect for human dignity that is at the heart of Jesus’ work. Yet its adherents claim to be followers of Christ. So, why do they endorse the “eye for an eye” logic that Christ himself refutes when constructing a state based on Christian principles?

    I think the answer lies in ideology and authoritarianism. People prefer the easy answer to the question of who is good and who is bad. Mosaic Law provides the most parsimonious response to both criminal conduct and behavior outside the mainstream. In fact, Mosaic Law (or, at least those parts of it that we like to keep around – the “stone my mother at the gates of the city” part is a bit pass?) is applied much more easily and consistently (particularly within the state) than Jesus’ mercy and peace. From that standpoint, it is more coherent, and almost scientific in its application. There is action, and there is reaction. Law becomes routinized, predictable, and consistent. It is a man-made list of proscriptions, but it ultimately takes on the form of a natural and undeniable force applied unthinkingly and automatically. You do the crime, you do the time. Punishing those whose behavior is offensive makes logical sense from a self-centered point of view. It’s supposed to make us feel better when the state carries it out. Retribution restores our faith that, if we behave as the state wants us to behave, we will be protected. For those who behave against the authority of the state, there will be retribution. People demonstrate the same kind of faith in the systems’ ability to pass judgment in the economic sphere as well. Americans conflate economic success with personal virtue.

    The difficulty with the legal paradigm based on Mosaic Law is this – it is not the

    Copywriting to Cash!
    TECHNIQUES:#1 : GUILT This is the absolute best technique. Let me give you an example: There was once a donation fund that gave out roses to people at the flight check - in at an airport. Once the travellers reached their gate, they were asked for a donation. Almost all gave a donation. Why? Because they felt bad. They gave you a rose, so you need to give something back.#2 : STORIES Telling stories keeps the reader awake and into your sales message. It makes them keep reading. To see an example, visit the website mentionned herein.#3 : COMPARING APPLES/ORANGES Compare your product to something else and show it has extreme value. For example, on my website, I sell all the tools to set up a business. I compare an established business to my product - is an established business bringing in $100 a day worth $49.95?#4 : IMAGINE Stating the word IMAGINE: and then putting something like : losing 50 pounds, making money, getting this...This is a very strong technique that works very well. It wakes our emotions.Well, if you would like more techniques, visit http://salesletters.50webs.com or http://buyimpulse.50webs.com. Thanks!
    onservative Christians are uncomfortable with a legal status that places them on the outside. Conservatives of all stripes actually feel much more comfortable on the outside of the system then the inside. Once they gain political power they have just as much trouble as any other winners in managing the state and maintaining their principles. The strange part is that they would want to win at all. The images of Mosaic Law are the armies of Israel conquering Canaan, and later the armies of Christian Europe conquering Jerusalem. The image of the Beatitudes is of the suffering Christ on the Cross, put there by the state. If conservative Christians today feel that they have been cut off from government (and their values shunted aside), isn’t that what is supposed to happen? “Blessed are ye when [men] shall reproach you, and persecute you, and say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake.”

    Even more perplexing, if conservative Christians did manage to dominate the institutions of government, why would they want to put the principles of Moses into practice rather than those of Jesus who superseded him? The Ten Commandments are the symbol of a system that while claiming to be Christian (if not in origin, then in practice) in no way resembles the work of Christ. This system endorses a way of living that shows little of the respect for human dignity that is at the heart of Jesus’ work. Yet its adherents claim to be followers of Christ. So, why do they endorse the “eye for an eye” logic that Christ himself refutes when constructing a state based on Christian principles?

    I think the answer lies in ideology and authoritarianism. People prefer the easy answer to the question of who is good and who is bad. Mosaic Law provides the most parsimonious response to both criminal conduct and behavior outside the mainstream. In fact, Mosaic Law (or, at least those parts of it that we like to keep around – the “stone my mother at the gates of the city” part is a bit pass?) is applied much more easily and consistently (particularly within the state) than Jesus’ mercy and peace. From that standpoint, it is more coherent, and almost scientific in its application. There is action, and there is reaction. Law becomes routinized, predictable, and consistent. It is a man-made list of proscriptions, but it ultimately takes on the form of a natural and undeniable force applied unthinkingly and automatically. You do the crime, you do the time. Punishing those whose behavior is offensive makes logical sense from a self-centered point of view. It’s supposed to make us feel better when the state carries it out. Retribution restores our faith that, if we behave as the state wants us to behave, we will be protected. For those who behave against the authority of the state, there will be retribution. People demonstrate the same kind of faith in the systems’ ability to pass judgment in the economic sphere as well. Americans conflate economic success with personal virtue.

    The difficulty with the legal paradigm based on Mosaic Law is this – it is not the

    What is The Internet, Really?
    The Internet is the Wow Medium of Your GenerationYou should consider yourself blessed because you were able to witness the birth and quick growth of the newest medium of communication: the Internet.More than millions of interconnected computers around the world, the Internet is a new medium. It is the "wow medium" of your generation.Right now, people are still "wowing" over it.However, most people don't seem to get it. Most people don't quite yet seem to realise that the Internet is a medium just like television, radio and newspapers.For example, the wow medium of your great grandparents would have been the printed press. The wow medium of your grandparents may have been the radio. The wow medium of your parents may have been the television. Now, your wow medium is the Internet.People are learning fast and furious that the Internet is a serious medium like any other and can burn you badly if you play with its fire. Don't believe me? Well I am writing down a list of people with whom you can verify that statement:- US Senator John Kerry who lost the elections versus George W. Bush- CBS star journalist Dan Rather whose story had gaping a hole in it and this was discovered thanks to the Internet.- Europe's 2nd largest telecom whose profits fell below expectations because they didn't pay attention to the phenomenon of Internet telephony.- Miami florists whose business shrunk thanks to online florists- Sampson Nanton who no longer works at CNC 3 thanks to e-mails circulating purportedly of him.- and now the pastor's 14-year-old daughter Deena "Danah" Alleyne is coming to grips with the reality that the Internet is as powerful as TV when shaping public opinion.- the singer Akon, who was caught on camera with the above in compromising positions, may also have learnt some harsh lessons from the Internet but with stars, you never really know; it could have very well been a planned publicity gimmick that backfired.The bottom line is that the Internet flexes its muscles every
    hen constructing a state based on Christian principles?

    I think the answer lies in ideology and authoritarianism. People prefer the easy answer to the question of who is good and who is bad. Mosaic Law provides the most parsimonious response to both criminal conduct and behavior outside the mainstream. In fact, Mosaic Law (or, at least those parts of it that we like to keep around – the “stone my mother at the gates of the city” part is a bit pass?) is applied much more easily and consistently (particularly within the state) than Jesus’ mercy and peace. From that standpoint, it is more coherent, and almost scientific in its application. There is action, and there is reaction. Law becomes routinized, predictable, and consistent. It is a man-made list of proscriptions, but it ultimately takes on the form of a natural and undeniable force applied unthinkingly and automatically. You do the crime, you do the time. Punishing those whose behavior is offensive makes logical sense from a self-centered point of view. It’s supposed to make us feel better when the state carries it out. Retribution restores our faith that, if we behave as the state wants us to behave, we will be protected. For those who behave against the authority of the state, there will be retribution. People demonstrate the same kind of faith in the systems’ ability to pass judgment in the economic sphere as well. Americans conflate economic success with personal virtue.

    The difficulty with the legal paradigm based on Mosaic Law is this – it is not the work of Jesus. Under the Mosaic Law, justice is imputed – citizens are not called upon to evaluate the effectiveness of the system in achieving justice, or its usefulness in establishing social arrangements and distributions of power, wealth, or status. Furthermore, citizens are not required to think carefully about themselves in relation to others. In promoting consistency and uniformity, the law asks no one to be unselfish, to turn the other cheek, or to set aside asserting one’s rights against someone else in favor of forgiveness and community with others.

    This is a way of thinking about life characterized by atomism more in line with scientific theory than with religious doctrine. Unfortunately, in America alternative modes of thinking are difficult to defend in the abstract – mainly because they are abstract and have no adherents to defend them. Social scientists recognize this. Jennifer Hochschild argues that we have “individualized”[7] even personal responsibilities and duties to community. In other words, there must be some individual benefit for Americans if they will endorse policies that require recognition of others’ rights or needs. Placing the Ten Commandments in courtrooms merely reinforces our ideological attachments, rationalizes a type of justice that is distinctly unchristian, and focuses our attention on what is best for self rather than what is most useful for building the rich human interaction that is the basis for any productive society. Law-abidingness (even when that law is clearly unjust) is considered a sign of virtue, merit and innate goodness. The Ten Commandments are the very embodiment of this kind of justice – losers deserve to lose and criminals to be punished, and those who do not conform should experience punishment because nonconformity is a purely personal failing. That is the essence of democratic authoritarianism. As Hochschild notes, there is no absolute reason for envisioning life in this way, it is “simply an epistemological choice … But to the degree that the focus carries a moral message, it points to a weakness at the very heart …”[8] of Americanism because we have been deceived into believing its universality.

    This leaves us few options for evaluating the usefulness of our system of justice. It also explains why it is so hard to argue for the Beatitudes, and why conservative Christians see an ancient law, outmoded by the work of their own savior, as embodying the central tenants of their faith. We can, however, draw two conclusions. First, the tenets of conservative Christianity are based in part on socio-cultural norms and preferences for behavior. Perhaps if conservative Christianity endorsed Christ as its central figure it could make some legitimate claim to universality. But, it has failed to do so. Furthermore, conservative Christianity fails to endorse all Mosaic law, picking and choosing which laws to follow and enforce based solely on what is socially acceptable. Thus, all that can be said about this is that conservative Christians favor a culturally derived sense of justice, that they represent this cultural derived sense of justice as both universally good and related to Christ, but that it actually emanates from the Ten Commandments, a law outmoded by Christ himself. If we can agree on this (and I doubt we will), then perhaps we can begin a public dialogue about what social arrangements and definitions of justice are most useful for promoting social good.

    Second, conservative Christian social activism could in fact be very useful. It is not the activism that is the problem, but the inconsistencies in the principles underlying that action. Perhaps there is a way to endorse the idea of social change, but fundamentally reshape the values that underlie it. However, this project holds little chance for success because conservative Christians deride the idea that social good should ever be a basis for our decisions. This brings us back to the first conclusion – the values espoused by conservative Christians supporting the display of the Ten Commandments are culturally derived and time bound despite claims to the contrary.

    In the end, conservative Christians are fighting the right battle (for social change) using the wrong list. The Beatitudes at their core are pragmatic. Unlike the Ten Commandments, the Beatitudes are distinctly lacking in authoritative commands, dogmatic principles, or rigid standards. Take for instance that portion saying Blessed are the poor in spirit, and Blessed are the meek. Poverty in spirit and meekness are qualities of humility, not dogmatic certitude. One cannot imagine the poor in spirit and the meek leading a crusade to kill the infidel – they could never be so certain. Thus, both suggest that lacking dogmatic belief and certitude are appropriate characteristics for followers of Christ. They might read “blessed are the humble, who are not so arrogant to believe that they know everything and have the right to impose that knowledge on others.” Under this mode of thinking, any religious conviction that cannot tolerate uncertainty and that fears open critical self-examination is a form of idolatry. Thus, the Beatitudes supplant the Ten Commandments by introducing an approach to living that contradicts the old list at every point. Even more strikingly, the Beatitudes imply that if you want to be successful you cannot act as the Ten Commandments dictate – you cannot angrily persecute non-adherents from a list of dos and don’ts. In fact, such persecution is precisely what those who follow the Beatitudes should expect for themselves. Furthermore, Blessed are the merciful presents us with a range of potentially pragmatic behaviors applied across social institutions. Those who show the mercy of Christ are blessed, not those who impose authoritarian power to punish, or those who impose their ideas about right religion on others or even themselves. Unfortunately, the word righteousness in blessed are they who hunger and thirst after righteousness is too often taken to mean the dogmatic form of religiosity. But, in context with the other Beatitudes, it seems to imply that taking t

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.itemupon.com/article/198629/itemupon-Moses-v-Jesus-Why-do-Conservative-Christians-Prefer-Moses-Commandments-to-Jesus-Beatitudes.html">Moses v. Jesus: Why do Conservative Christians Prefer Moses' Commandments to Jesus' Beatitudes?</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.itemupon.com/article/198629/itemupon-Moses-v-Jesus-Why-do-Conservative-Christians-Prefer-Moses-Commandments-to-Jesus-Beatitudes.html]Moses v. Jesus: Why do Conservative Christians Prefer Moses' Commandments to Jesus' Beatitudes?[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Attract More Clients with Free Seminars

    Profit with a Loan - Low Cost Secured Loan

    Online Unsecured Loans: Easier, Convenient and Risk Free

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com