[1] At the onset, a disclaimer: these are reflections
for a half-hour, not so much comprehensive as suggestive,
investigative, provocative ¼ characterized as
much by musing and wrestling as by research, especially from one on
the theological side of the equation:
[2] "I believe in God the Father Almighty, creator of
heaven and earth, and of all things visible and invisible."
[3] "In the beginning, God created the heaven and the
earth. And the earth was without form, and void: and darkness
was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved
upon the face of the waters. And God said, Let there be light,
and there was light. And God saw the light, that it was good,
and God divided the light from the darkness." (Gen. 1:1-4).
[4] "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with
God. All things were made by him; and without him was not
anything made that was made. In him was life; and the life was
the light of men. And the light shines in the darkness, and
the darkness has not overcome it." (John 1:1-5)
[5] "He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn
over all creation. For by him all things were created: things
in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or
powers or rulers or authorities; all things were created by him and
for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold
together." (Colossians 1:15-17)
[6] "O LORD, our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the
earth! Who hast set thy glory above the heavens.
¼When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy
fingers, the moon and the stars, which thou has ordained; What is
man that thou art mindful of him, the son of man that thou carest
for him, for thou has made him a little lower than the angels, and
has crowned him with glory and honor. Thou madest him to have
dominion over the works of thy hands; thou has put all things under
his feet ¼" (Psalm 8:l, 3-6)
[7] "All have sinned, and fall short of the glory of
God." (Romans 3:23)
**** **** **** ****
[8] The "Yahwist account" in the second chapter is, as the
scholarship runs, the older of the two Genesis renderings of God's
good creation. Both of them testify, in modest-but-brilliant
contrast to other ancient accounts, to the essential unity of
creation - that is to say, by the action of God, and spoken into
reality: "And God said, 'let there be light,' and there was
light." No cosmic struggle here, to say nothing of open
warfare between the good and evil deities. No split between
spirit and matter, of whatever dualistic stripe. No conjugal
setting between goddess and god, whether of the nurturing sort or
the competitive. The creation is not God's victory over
enemies, nor the fruit of divine lust. God the Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit spoke the κoσμoσs into
reality, in the beginning. The Spirit of the living God moved
over the face of the deep. The Logos is the One by Whom and
for Whom all things are made. No other surviving account of
any ancient people as to the origin of the universe couches that
origin in the One God Who Created by Declaration, accomplished
through the instrumentality of the Logos, in Whom all things
cohere.
[9] From light years and a hundred million galaxies to
subatomic particles, from the wholeness of humanity to the
specifics of genetic structure, a common Source and a common
Author. St. Paul claims that in Him all things cohere. In
Him all things hold together.
[10] As to the nature of creation and the nature of
humanity, the affirmation that "in Christ all things hold together"
has been challenged from two fronts, the spiritual and the
material. The first challenge was from the existing gnostic
Weltanschauung, that "spirit" is both antecedent to and
transcendent to matter. That the two are products of separate
creations, separate gods. The Apostles Creed affirms the
Christian response: that God created heaven and earth; that Jesus
was truly human rather than only appearing to be human; that belief
in the resurrection of the body is central to the faith, rather
than merely a base way of affirming intrinsic immortality now
pleasantly destined. The gnostic challenge of the ascendancy
of spirit over matter is countered by Christian affirmation of the
essential wholeness of God's creation as to both provenance and
intent.
[11] On the other hand, since Darwin's On the Origin
of Species, at least, the challenge has come as to a merely
"materialist" account of both the origin of the universe and the
origin of life. That is, from the "big bang" to the current
events, there is no direction or intrusion from a Transcendent
Force, of whatever sort. Materialist causality attributes to
the laws of nature only "emergence" as to their provenance. Mind,
rationality, and spirit are human attributes that represent the
current "peak" of evolution ¼ now able to probe space
for evidence of other mind and other spirit. Is this the only
mind in the cosmos that is "conscious of itself as
mind"? Perhaps, given the billions of stars, there are other
planets on which life and mind have emerged and
evolved. Perhaps. I had a conversation with a friend in
Chicago during the past week, a friend of high academic stature who
teaches constitutional law at Loyola. He argued that friends
from the University of Chicago in the physical sciences are
persuaded that all of the cosmos has its basis only in matter, that
in the billions of galaxies and stars, "life" of one sort or
another is ¼ by mere percentages
¼ likely if not necessarily "emergent"
¼ in forms and paradigms alien to our own
¼ that the universe is, as Aristotle once
argued, without "beginning." It follows, for these folk, that
biochemistry, genetic research and other related disciplines
will not only map but explain in the complexities of matter
the genesis of life and mind.
[12] There is currently, and more prominently in the last
fifteen years, a rejoinder from "intelligent design." What
Hume consigned to religious superstition and thus to the
philosophical dustbin has been resurrected (!) by scholars in
sciences as diverse as astrophysics and
biochemistry. As to both cosmic forces and
cellular structure, the resident complexity implies - indeed,
requires - consideration of a designer, probably even a
Designer. Mathematicians such as Walter Dembski and
biochemists such as Michael Behe (Darwin's Black Box, citing
"irreducible complexity" in cellular structure) have reopened the
case for what Hume prematurely dismissed in his rejection of
teleology. In the discourse of some circles of the academy, as
to creation, God is back. Or at least Intelligence, with a
capital "I". Even as by an inference, materialist reductionism
is thus challenged.
[13] Christians affirm that from light years and a hundred
million galaxies to subatomic particles, from the wholeness of
humanity to the specifics of genetic structure, there is a common
Source and a common Author. St. Paul claims that in Him all
things cohere. In Him all things hold together. Which is
to assert that the present enterprise to map the human genome and
to explore genetic intricacies is in principle a legitimate subject
for investigation and research, a project not alien to human
enterprise and human well-being.
From this theological understanding of God and creation, one is
prompted to ask in the present day, as the agenda records: "In
the Light of Genetics, How Do We Think about Human Uniqueness,
Human Identity, Freedom and Determinism, the Nature of the Soul,
etc.?"
[14] The "nature of the soul" is the least accessible
concept to the science of genetics and related fields of
inquiry. For Lutheran Christians, the nature of the soul is
not reducible to a radical dualism of being, certainly not to a
"pre-existent soul pool" from which an individual soul enters a
body for a biological sojourn. St. Paul speaks of an anthropology
of "body, mind, and spirit" in I Thessalonians (5:23), of which
Apollinaris of Laodicea and others made much in the Christological
debates. But one does not have a soul. The human
being is "a living soul," rather than a "being" who possesses,
among other things, a pre-existent, immortal soul.[1] For Christians,
immortality is a gift in resurrection to eternal life, not an
intrinsic characteristic of a pre-existent soul.
[15] Is there only a genetic or purely materialist
answer to "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of
God"? Are the collective phenomena of deploying human emotion,
strength, reason and will in the service of taking advantage of
one's fellow humanity, or not telling the truth, or doing harm to
others, or committing murder ¼ reducible only to
biochemical imbalance, or the history of human evolution? I
think not. Intellect, memory, and will - however much
inadequate to Luther as "exhausting" the imago dei - are not
reducible to matter only.
[16] During the Trinitarian discussions of the early fifth
century, Augustine argued that intellect, memory and will are
vestigia trinitatis, vestiges of the Trinity within the human
being, reflecting if not constituting creatio imago dei. Are
intellect, memory and will reducible to biochemical or
electrochemical impulses, or random firing of brain cells? Are mind
and spirit (intellect, memory, and will) reducible to brain
chemistry or genetic manipulation? Are they random
functions of body chemistry, rather than dimensions about which
human beings self-consciously ponder, intend, and direct? I
think not. However much the cellular environment may affect brain
chemistry, the will has great capacity to be deployed. At this
level one must not only reject mere materialist reductionism, but
also explore freedom and determinism vis-à-vis human
will.
[17] Consider an example from my own life: for a
little over twenty years, I was a smoker. First a pack or two
of cigarettes, during the sophomore year. Then, after marriage
and ordination, more often a pipe - at home, at night, rather than
carrying the pipe and tobacco. In graduate school, cigarettes
again ¼ but back on the campus as chaplain and
then professor, the pipe was daily, but not ubiquitous. I
remember smoking the pipe during discussion sessions of both honors
and community-based Great Books, in the Lenoir-Rhyne board room
¼ a circumstance not now imaginable, to say
nothing of forbidden. And, on the occasion of Synod Council
meetings, a pack of cigarettes, as a "reward" for enduring the
confinement of the gathering.
[18] Came February of 1986, and a bout with the flu,
perhaps even a little pneumonia. During the week-long illness,
no tobacco. Afterward, searching for my pipes, eldest son
Nathan calmly told me that he and Joshua and David had thrown away
the tobacco and the pipes. That I should quit, because "we
love you, Daddy."
[19] I quit cold turkey, on the spot. No nicotine
patch. No "one last bowl" or "one last puff." No
nothing. Second hardest thing I ever did. Brain and body
chemistry were captive to nicotine. During the first six
months, I probably spent two hundred dollars on bubble gum. I
vowed that if I lived to be ninety, I would begin smoking again and
smoke as much as I pleased. The craving, the narcotic, had
hold of me. But in the times when the will became weak, the
bubble gum served as proxy. And the echo: "because we love
you, Daddy." After about six months, the craving went
away. Tobacco is a distant memory. I am 21 years closer
to 90, and have no intention of ever smoking
again. Anything. Ever.
[20] Love for my sons, and desire for their continued
respect, put the necessary steel in my spine. In that sense,
love and will overcame the addiction. The brain, as repository
of neurons and electro-chemical impulses, reflected and demanded
satisfaction that the whole body yearned for in the nicotine
fix. Freedom, exercised as will, overcame the addiction's
determinism. The will directed and controlled intellect and
memory - Augustine's vestigia trinitatis - to enhance purity
of lungs, if not purity of heart.
[21] Are mind and spirit (intellect, memory, and will)
reducible to brain chemistry or genetic manipulation
¼ are they random functions of body chemistry,
rather than dimensions about which human beings self-consciously
ponder, intend, and direct? However much cellular
environment may affect brain chemistry, the will has great capacity
to be deployed.
[22] On the other hand, there is, at least as things now
stand, a certain kind of genetic determinism. That I am 6'3"
instead of 6'1" may have a partial factor of diet and nature to
it. But that I am 6'3" instead of 5'8" is a piece of
genetics. That I have brown eyes instead of blue is a piece of
genetic determinism: the genes "fell" that way in the moment of
conception, and carried through embryonic development. Allow
me thus to assert the present condition, and historic hegemony, of
"genetic determinism," bracketing out cosmic or theistic
determinism.
[23] In my own life, something on the order of genetic
determinism made itself prominently evident two weeks after my
baptism, and ten weeks after my birth. On a Monday morning in
early August of 1943, my mother observed in her firstborn a
paleness in the face, a paleness unprecedented in her limited
experience. Despite the advice of my grandmother to the
contrary, she took me to the doctor. Dr. John Fitzgerald
examined paleness and checked the hemoglobin, the latter of which
was extremely low, and said: "If we can get some blood into this
child within the hour, we may save him." With no time to match
for blood types, my mother became an instant donor, the blood
running directly from her arm into a vein they found (on first
prick) in the tiny forehead. No match, no child. No
transfusion, no child. High stakes on a doctor's examining
table.
[24] The blood was a match. The color
returned. But the problem was thus noted. Monitored
during the next several weeks, the phenomenon recurred, but with
sufficient advance observation that a second transfusion was not
conducted in such dire time constraints as the first. After an
autumn of testing here and there, the doctors at Duke rendered the
verdict in December of '43. "The situation is not leukemia,
but the child was born with a bone marrow that does not produce red
cells, an anemia to which there is (i.e., was then) only one
answer: transfuse the child when he needs it. That's all we
know to do. He may live a few years, absent a bad match on the
transfusion. If you want a child, you'd better have another
one."
[25] Over the next two years, and counting the ones from
the beginning, there were twenty-seven episodes of
transfusions. A roster remains from Mama's notes, of young men
home from the war, young men not yet off to war, and young women
from Daniels Lutheran Church in western Lincoln County, North
Carolina.
[26] Then in January of 1946, two years after the
diagnosis, Dr. Fitzgerald made the careful but astonishing
observation, on the occasion of a scheduled transfusion, "I think I
see some new cells. Bring him back in a week." The next
week: "I do. I see some new cells." In short, the
otherwise non-functioning marrow had "kicked in," a circumstance
rarely otherwise observed in that era. A congenital deficiency
was rectified by a process or event otherwise not premeditated or
mediated through medical knowledge or
effort. What was determined by incomplete
prenatal formation became suddenly, and for the duration,
functional. A circumstance certainly not expected, I am told
that it was recorded in the medical journals of the day, though
I've never verified that by research. At any rate, that event
was for the doctors unaccountable if not unprecedented and, for my
parents, a miracle.
[27] At that level, genetic determinism, however great a
factor in the past, may well in the future concede to
science. Human freedom of inquiry is having significant
success in the science of genetics, both as to mapping and as to
the possibility of altering. But it is in the possibility of
altering that other issues of freedom and determinism
emerge.
[28] Allow me to use the personal instance from 1943 and
following in extrapolating to a contemporary, or near-future,
phenomenon. Consider, for example, my grandchildren. What
are the possibilities for one of them to be born absent the ability
of the marrow to make red cells? Doctors told my parents, and
later my wife and me, that the chances of such a circumstance were
dim. But if the knowledge and technology advance sufficiently
to learn, in advance, of such a deficiency, and such a deficiency
is discovered, what then? If the capacity to alter the
deficiency exists, either by gene therapy or some other means, then
¼ is it affordable and available? If it
does not exist, or is not affordable, do the putative parents
decide to terminate the pregnancy? Forewarned is
forearmed. Should that kind of decision be an option for the
parents, or for anyone, vis-à-vis the developing
fetus? For myself, I am grateful to parents who did their best
in a difficult circumstance, and to God for the dramatic turn of
events.
[29] The possibilities of, on the basis of data and
foreknowledge, interdicting genetic determinism by genetic therapy
or, failing that, to terminate the pregnancy, were not there for my
parents. They wept all the way back from Durham to Lincolnton
on the day that they learned the diagnosis. They endured two
more years of radical uncertainty as to how long they would have
their first-born with them. They persevered with the help of
friends and neighbors to find blood for transfusions. Their
vigil of prayers and devotion and faithfulness was blessed by what
they considered a miracle.
[30] The task of interdicting genetic determinism (as
classically understood) takes not only knowledge, from science and
technology, but also the means that would enable one even to
consider it. Not just for the effete and frivolous categories
of preference, but also for interventions of purely therapeutic
nature. The question of how much and who can afford it is not
one that the poor can entertain. Back to my possible
grandchildren: the health plan that enables those events to occur
will be even more expensive than the already-expensive ones of the
present. Health plans for the elite ¼
genetic engineering, whether of the "shopping" for egg or sperm
sort, or of the alter-the-embryo sort, separates to an even greater
degree, in terms of social justice, those who "have" from those who
"have not."
A Serious Question: Who Counts, as a Human Being? - the
Dimension of Abuse
[31] New knowledge and new frontiers bring new
conceits. Consider the frivolous: New York Times
columnist David Brooks, writing on June 15 of this year, cites "a
Harris poll (that) suggested that more than 40 percent of Americans
would use genetic engineering to upgrade their children mentally
and physically." Brooks describes the present level of inquiry
as "shopping" for egg or sperm donors with certain physically and
mentally desirable features: "Nor is brainpower neglected. One
sperm bank has one branch located between Harvard and M.I.T. and
the other next to Stanford. An ad in the Harvard Crimson
offered $50,000 for an egg from a Harvard woman. A recent ad
in the Chicago Maroon at the University of Chicago
offered $35,000 for a Chicago egg and stipulated, "'You must
be very healthy, very intelligent and very attractive, and most of
all, very happy. Liberal political views and athletic ability
are pluses.'" That for the frivolous.
[32] Or the unthinkable: S. M. Hutchens, a Senior Editor at
Touchstone, observed in May of this year (Volume 20, Number
4. May 2007, p. 6.) the following (quoting Hutchens): "A news
story in the Sunday Telegraph on 'a shake-up of Britain's
embryology laws' reported that 'one of the key proposals would
allow research on test-tube embryos that were part-human,
part-animal-referred to as "Chimeras."'"
"This, more than anything else, makes me wonder whether human
history may soon be brought forcibly to a close by God's
concurrence in man's self-destruction. As odd as this may
sound, it is one thing to massacre human infants in huge numbers,
but something else to attempt the annihilation of the human race by
effacing the divisions between the species. The public has
been prepared for it, though, not just by The Island of Dr.
Moreau, but by 'mutant' films and fiction-the Dark Shadows and
Animorphs series come to mind, and books like James Patterson's
Lake House, with its beautiful avian children. One can say
this, at least for H. G. Wells: He knew he was inventing a
horror, and appeared to shrink from the prospect he was
contemplating."
That from Hutchens. One need not subscribe to apocalyptist
perspectives to be concerned by the prospect of "chimeras."
[33] For me, less immediately pressing but of much greater
importance in the question of "who counts, as a human being?" is,
of course, the matter of abortion. What Hutchens refers to as
a "massacre ¼ in huge numbers" is a question
long and hotly debated, but it resides also at the core of this
discussion. Given the present declared social "right" to
abortion, and given the possibilities of what genetic research will
reveal about how a given embryo or fetus is "constructed," what
about abortion for cosmetic, as well as therapeutic or merely
prudential reasons? I find no grounds for abortion in the
Christian understanding of creatio imago dei. But the
dimensions resident in the questions of genetics, human uniqueness,
the soul, freedom and determinism carry the discussion to new
levels of implication and meaning.
[34] In the matter of frozen embryos, how long to
preserve? Whether to use for research, a classic utilitarian
dilemma. The biological processes of nature generate and
discard embryos and zygotes, apart from human will. But the
present laboratory processes produce frozen fertilized eggs in
multiples. How long to keep frozen? And to whom do they
"belong"? The scriptures declare that God knows us, even when
we are yet in the womb. Is implantation in the womb a
necessary precondition to God's knowledge of the person?
The "simul" in Lutheran Theology
[35] The mythic and fabled stories and paradigms caution
the limits of both human arrogance and human striving: Icarus,
the Sorcerer's Apprentice. In Goethe's Faust
¼ Mephistopheles reports to God, in response to the
question, how goes it with humanity? "Der Mensch bleibt
Mensch." But one need not turn to myth and story. The factor
of rebellion is evident for all to see. St. Paul only put into
scripture what is already otherwise everywhere evident: all
have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. Lutherans
understand, in the simul of Lutheran theology, the dimension of
abuse, even within intentions devoted to what is understood as the
good. We are, at the same time, saints and sinners, always
penitent. And thus we are cautioned at the outset.
[36] The paradoxical pattern of simul justus et
peccator, semper penitens characterizes the Lutheran understanding
of the humanum, as well as the entire enterprise of
theology. On the one hand, we are saints, called to be God's
children in the waters of baptism. On the other hand, there
remains in us the old self. Daily we die to sin and rise to
Christ. At the far reaches of "on the other hand," the
peccator presence in the genetics discussion resides with the
putative "chimeras," which are, to me unthinkable. But, in the
memory of the Third Reich, not unimaginable. Human will
unfettered by laws of decency or laws of God has produced ghastly
results.
A Serious Set of Impedimenta
[37] We are, in that vein, presently up against a serious
set of ethical impedimenta. "If you continue in my word, you are
truly my disciples, and you will know the truth and the truth shall
make you free." There have been two significant
"sunderings" of this quotation from the Lord in St. John 's eighth
chapter. The first was the secular disengagement of the
conditional introduction from the second main clause: that is,
the separation of "if you continue in my word, you are truly my
disciples" from "you will know the truth and the truth shall make
you free." Modern education follows the Enlightenment premise
that indeed knowing the truth is a necessary precondition for
freedom, but that both knowing the truth and being made free are
enterprises that can be carried on quite apart from any
discipleship to the Lord. Indeed, from the secular point of
view, they can only be carried on quite apart from any prior
commitments to transcendent authority, other than to the ascendancy
of reason and an often unspoken adherence to material causality
only.
[38] The search for the truths of art and science and
philosophy are everywhere being conducted apart from any overt
assertion of the cosmic Christ, in whom all things hold
together. Is it enough that it is the church that knows this,
and not the present age? Perhaps. But, however one argues
it, one cannot deny that the sundering of "continue in my word" and
"disciples" from "you will know the truth" and "the truth shall
make you free" has both accompanied and facilitated not only the
relativization of truth and but also the enhancement of a freedom
that desires few bounds.
[39] That's the first sundering: to separate continuing in
God's word from knowing the truth that makes us
free¼ But there is another divorce, more
recent and more serious, and, for the church, more
virulent. That is the sundering of "truth" from "freedom," not
only in the culture but even, especially, in the church. I
cannot improve on the work of John Paul II in this regard. His
Veritatis Splendor, 1993, stands as a monument at the end of
the 20th century, a brilliant attempt to correct errors
in moral theology in the church.
[40] Wrote the late Bishop of Rome, in 1993: "A new
situation has come about within the Christian community
itself, which has experienced the spread of numerous doubts and
objections of a human and psychological, social and cultural,
religious and even properly theological nature, with regard to the
Church's moral teachings. It is no longer a matter of limited
and occasional dissent, but of an overall and systematic calling
into question of traditional moral doctrine, on the basis of
anthropological and ethical presuppositions. At the root of
these presuppositions is the more or less obvious influence of
currents of thought which end by detaching human freedom from its
essential and constitutive relationship to truth. Thus the
traditional doctrine regarding the natural law, and the
universality and the permanent validity of its precepts, is
rejected; certain of the Church's moral teachings are found simply
unacceptable; and the Magisterium itself is considered capable of
intervening in matters of morality only in order to 'exhort
consciences' and to 'propose values,' in light of which each
individual will independently make his or her decisions and life
choices." (VS, # 4, emphasis added)[2]
[41] Catholic moral theologian Russell Hittinger describes
this situation of what he calls "uncommanded man" as accurately
illustrative of men and women inside and outside the church who
will not be commanded by God but who have usurped with their
freedom the prerogative of defining the content of the
good. That is, interpreting Hittinger: in our freedom we wrest
from God the truth of what is good and what is evil. Adam and
Eve began the enterprise and humanity has continued it across time,
sometimes surreptitiously. But in the present day now openly
and often with great pride: the Bible is culturally
conditioned. All truth is culturally conditioned. Truth
is radically subjective. I will spin as I will. I will
decide what is good. Your definition is not the
same as mine. Words are what individuals make them.
[42] This in the church of Rome. Absent a formal
Magisterium since the sixteenth century, now awash in dissent from
the authority of the scriptures, many Protestant communions are
reduced to task forces, discussions, and democratic majority
votes. The diagnosis is often the therapeutic "I'm ok, you're
ok" rather than the theological: "we are all sinners who fall short
of the glory of God. In Christ we are called to repentance and
amendment of life. We are forgiven and again made whole. Go
and sin no more." Instead of submitting to the will of God, we
absolutize freedom and relativize truth: if my freedom is absolute
then I can define my own truth.
[43] The theological problem with this is
primary. Primary that is, as to the first
commandment: Who is God here? The ethical
problem is immediately following: Who will determine what is
Good, much less mandate one to do it? What is the Good becomes
a matter of personal judgment or preference and, finally, a matter
of power-whether of force or of votes.
[44] The questions resident in the genetics discussion test
the limits of this understanding of freedom. And they are yet
to be resolved.
[1]
There is no reference, so far as I can recall or find, to
the term "immortal soul" in the Christian scripture. St. Paul
is the only biblical writer to reference immortality, per
se, and that in four locations: first, in Romans 2, concerning the
judgment of God, "who will render to every man according to his
deeds: to them who by patient continuance in well doing seek for
glory and honor and immortality; eternal life" (2:6-7). Second, in
I Corinthians 15, "For this corruptible nature must put on
incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality, so when this
corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall
have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying
that is written, 'Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where
is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?' The sting of
death is sin; and strength of sin is the law. But thanks
be to God, who has given us the victory through our Lord Jesus
Christ." (15:53-56). Third, in I Timothy 6 (speaking of
Christ) "Who only hath immortality, dwelling in the light which no
man can approach unto, whom no man hath seen nor can see, to whom
be honor and power everlasting. Amen." (6:16). And finally: II
Timothy 1:10 "But (which holy calling) is now made manifest by the
appearing of our Savior Jesus Christ, who hath abolished death, and
hath brought life and immortality to light through the gospel."
[2]
The present Bishop of Rome has declared, in the same
vein: "We are moving toward a dictatorship of relativism which
does not recognize anything as for certain and which has as its
highest goal one's own ego and one's own desires." - Joseph
Ratzinger
© February 2008
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 8, Issue 2