by jimwalton » Sun Nov 06, 2022 11:40 pm
I agreed that some sins are worse than others, and therefore it makes sense there is a hierarchy. But your argument doesn't take me anywhere.
> I think that there is strong New Testament teaching to indicate that when moral values clash, there is a hierarchy to such values and that in choosing the higher value present, the agent does not sin.
You said there's a "strong" NT teaching, but then you give but one example, and even admitted that "Scripture does not clearly/explicitly lay out the hierarchy this implies," which tells me it's NOT a strong argument, but rather a subtle and only implied one that appears only in one place. It's not what I'd call "strong."
I agree with you that Luke 14.5 teaches that when commands or values clash, there can be humanitarian exceptions. It agrees with what I also said. What I did claim, though, is sin is never justified and that we are never shown what the hierarchy is. So though Luke 14.5 implies a clash and a hierarchy, the hierarchy is never defined. My problem is that humans are inclined to set the hierarchy to their perspective, which is often, if not always, bound to be wrong. In other words, we have no clue what that hierarchy is, and I wouldn't trust any person to set it. Would you agree with that analysis or no?
Last bumped by Anonymous on Sun Nov 06, 2022 11:40 pm.