Category: ethics


We’ve all heard how there’s an unusually high ratio of boys to girls in India and China – due largely to a preference for boys which leads many parents to abort girl babies, a national tragedy in both countries.

Now some Indian parents have gone a step further, and baby girls are being “converted” into boys, by the hundreds every year, through a surgical process known as masculinising genitoplasty. Doctors say strict procedures are followed to determine the sex of the newborn, and if it is a girl, male hormones are introduced, and male external organs are crafted from female tissue.

There are huge problems with this development. The surgery may have profound longterm psychological effects on the patient; the patient will be infertile and the surgery irreversible; there is no system to monitor the claims of unscrupulous surgeons; and newborn babies cannot give their consent to this life-changing operation.

The Indian government must adequately regulate the practice of gender reassignment, and the medical community must act in the interests of patients.

Broadcast on 2CH Sydney, Sunday 10 July 2011.

This is a selective list of online resources for ethics and public theology.  Listing here does not imply endorsement of organisations or content.  There are many more, with new ones appearing almost every week. 

If you find other helpful links, or if links below are inactive, please contact ethics@morling.edu.au

All links were active on 27 July 2011.  This page will be updated periodically.

 

AUSTRALIA — CHRISTIAN

Australian Centre for Christianity & Culture – http://www.csu.edu.au/special/accc

Australian Christian Lobby – http://www.acl.org.au

Australian Family Association – http://www.family.org.au

Baptist Social Issues (Baptist Churches of NSW & ACT) – http://baptistsocialissues.com

Centre for Christian Living (Sydney Anglican) – http://www.ccl.moore.edu.au

Centre for Public Christianity – http://www.publicchristianity.org

Church & Nation Committee (Presbyterian Church of Victoria) – http://candn.pcvic.org.au

CultureWatch (Bill Muehlenberg blog) – http://www.billmuehlenberg.com

Edmund Rice Centre (Catholic) – http://www.erc.org.au

Ethos Centre for Christianity & Society (evangelical) – http://www.ea.org.au/Ethos.aspx

Eureka Street (Catholic) – http://www.eurekastreet.com.au

Family Voice Australia (formerly Festival of Light) – http://www.fava.org.au

Gordon Moyes (issues factsheets) – http://www.gordonmoyes.com/parliament/factsheets

iDigress (Rod Benson blog) – http://rodbenson.com

Lutheran Church of Australia Social & Bioethical Questions – http://www.lca.org.au/action/lifeissues/csbq

Micah Challenge Australia – http://www.micahchallenge.org.au

NSW Council of Churches – http://www.nswchurches.org/content/issues.aspx

Plunkett Centre for Ethics (Catholic) – http://www.acu.edu.au/about_acu/research/our_research/research_centres_-and-_institutes/plunkett_centre_for_ethics/

Religion & Ethics Australia (news links) – http://twitter.com/reaustralia

Salt Shakers (Peter Stokes) – http://saltshakers.org.au

Salvation Army (Australia) Positional Statements & Guidelines – http://www.salvationarmy.org.au/about-us_65047/about-the-salvation-army/positional-statements–and–guidelines.html?s=1744586070

Seventh-Day Adventist Church (Australia) Perspectives on Social Issues – http://adventist.org.au/about_adventists/perspectives_on_social_issues

Social Issues Executive (Sydney Anglican) – http://www.sie.org.au

Southern Cross Bioethics Institute (Catholic) – http://www.bioethics.org.au

Uniting Justice (Uniting Church in Australia) – http://www.unitingjustice.org.au

Yarra Institute for Religion & Social Policy – http://www.yarrainstitute.org.au

 

AUSTRALIA — OTHER

ABC Religion & Ethics – http://www.abc.net.au/religion

ABC The Drumhttp://www.abc.net.au/news/thedrum

Australia Institute – https://www.tai.org.au

Australian Policy Online – http://www.apo.org.au

Catalyst – http://www.catalyst.org.au

Centre for Applied Philosophy & Public Ethics – http://www.cappe.edu.au

Centre for Independent Studies – http://www.cis.org.au

Centre for Policy Development – http://cpd.org.au

Institute of Public Affairs – http://www.ipa.org.au

Per Capita – http://www.percapita.org.au

St James Ethics Centre – http://www.ethics.org.au

 

INTERNATIONAL

Baylor University Center for Christian Ethics (Baptist) – http://www.baylor.edu/christianethics

Cambridge Papers (Jubilee Centre, UK) – http://www.jubilee-centre.org/resources.php?catID=1

Center for Applied Christian Ethics (Wheaton College, USA) – http://www.wheaton.edu/CACE

Centre for Social Justice (UK) – http://www.centreforsocialjustice.org.uk

Centre for Theology & Public Issues (University of Edinburgh) – http://www.ed.ac.uk/schools-departments/divinity/research/centres/theology-public-issues

Christian Ethics Reading Room (Tyndale Seminary, Canada) – http://www.tyndale.ca/seminary/mtsmodular/reading-rooms/ethics

Ethics Daily (Baptist, USA) – http://www.ethicsdaily.com

Ethics Resource Center (USA) – http://www.ethics.org/resources

European Ethics Network – http://www.ethical-perspectives.be/

Joint Public Issues Team (Baptist, Methodist & Reformed Churches, UK) – http://www.jointpublicissues.org.uk

Jubilee Centre (UK) – http://www.jubilee-centre.org

Kirby Laing Institute for Christian Ethics (UK) – http://www.klice.co.uk

Social & Political Issues (Baptist Union of Great Britain) – http://www.baptist.org.uk/social-and-political-issues.html

Theos (UK) – http://www.theosthinktank.co.uk

This afternoon, after lunch with fellow Australians Ken Manley, Frank Rees and David Parker, and foreign ring-ins Richard Pierard, Charles Curran and others, I attended the first of three meetings of the BWA Commission on Christian Ethics, chaired by Richard Wilson. There were 27 present (although three or four arrived quite late), and Samuel K. Roberts presented an academic paper titled, “But how does the Spirit work in moral action? A case for the utility of virtue theory.” Roberts is E. Hervey Evans Professor of Theology and Ethics at Union Presbyterian Seminary in Richmond, Virginia, USA.

In his paper, Roberts commended the application of virtue theory as a primary way in which the work of the Holy Spirit comes into being in our lives (in his introductory remarks he said, joking, that he used virtue theory as a hammer to hit anything that looked like a nail). He referred to quotes by Basil of Caesarea and William Alston who indicated the direction in which Christian virtue theory might be marshalled, and noted the explicitly virtues-oriented work of Stanley Hauerwas and Alasdair McIntyre as examples of how “Protestant theological ethicists began to engage in a lively conversation about the promise of virtue ethics for giving us a full and robust account of the Christian moral life.” Central to Roberts’ argument was the view that “the chief good for the believer in Christian virtue theory is becoming a person whose disposition and actions are consistent with the will of God.”

But what of Baptist theologians/ethicists? Roberts went on to examine selected works of Francis Wayland (1796-1865), Billy Graham (b. 1918) and T.B. Maston (1897-1988), showing how each expressed their view of the work of the Holy Spirit in the individual Christian leading to virtuous/ethical/just living. He concluded that “Faithful response to God’s gift of sanctification constitutes in a very real sense the essence of the Christian life,” and that “virtue theory approaches [as illustrated in the writings of Wayland, Graham and Maston] just might be particularly useful as we seek to understand with great clarity our rich theological and ethical heritage.”

Roberts spoke for almost an hour, and his address was followed by a second hour of lively questions and comments. There was no formal responder to this paper. I had the impression that we could have gone on for another 30 minutes of fruitful discussion. I took notes on the responses, some of them quite illuminating and challenging, and may summarise them here later.  I might even say what I thought of the paper.

New words and phrases about ethics appear from time to time – such as “co-belligerence,” “consistent pro-life ethic,” and “public theology.”  Co-belligerence refers to the waging of war by two or more parties against a common enemy, especially where there is some kind of remoteness between the co-belligerent parties, cultural, ideological or otherwise. 

 An example of co-belligerence in Christian ethics is where Baptists and Catholics unite to oppose moves to legalise abortion on demand, or physician-assisted suicide.  An unusual example that I heard of recently is the Australian Christian Lobby and the Eros Foundation, which both campaigned against changes to film classification laws (ACL on classical Christian moral grounds, and Eros because lowering standards would hurt their X-rated film revenue!). 

 A consistent pro-life ethic refers to an ethical position that opposes abortion and also opposes capital punishment.  Many Christians, especially in North America but also in Australia, are strongly opposed to abortion on the ground that it is the murder of a human life, but feel quite comfortable with imposing the death penalty on certain criminals, even though that sentence also requires the murder of a human life (albeit by the state). 

 What of “public theology”?  My bio describes me as an ethicist and public theologian, and people are always saying, “What’s that?”  Let me explain.

 First, what it’s not.  Public theology is not the opposite of private theology (whatever that is).  And it’s not the theology expressed by ordinary Australians, or by post-religious people who retain elements of “residual Christianity.”

 Public theology is concerned with how the Christian faith addresses matters in society.  It is concerned with the “public relevance” of Christian beliefs.  It seeks to provide resources for people to make connections between faith and practical issues facing their community.

 For Clive Pearson, a prominent Australian public theologians, public theology assumes that theology is relevant to everyone (not just to Christians), and to other academic disciplines; and that theologians should attend to the specific needs of different audiences (e.g. the world, the church and the academy).

 Pearson would also say that public theology has no privileged status in today’s marketplace of ideas.  Its aim is not proselytism but the common good – the well-being and flourishing of a whole society.

 At their best, Baptists have always been advocates for public theology and for the common good.  Indeed the sixteenth-century Baptist insistence on religious liberty was grounded in a concern for the common good: freedom to practice religion, or no religion, according to conscience.  Today we face fresh challenges to strengthen our heritage of radical thought, freedom and progress.

Now a word of caution.  We may extend the boundaries of public theology to embrace what philosopher John Rawls describes as “public reason” – to translate religiously-based concerns into universal values.  This is what many politicians and academics tend to do.  For example, while Kevin Rudd and Barack Obama are both public Christians and use the language of public theology, their rhetoric sometimes stretches toward the universal, losing its Christian distinctiveness. 

We need public theology (and public theologians!).  But let’s keep our ideas and arguments firmly anchored to Jesus Christ and the biblical witness.

This article first appeared in the Victorian Baptist Witness, March 2008.

One of the best films of the year, in cinemas now, is Never Let Me Go, directed by Mark Romanek and based on the novel of the same name by Kazuo Ishiguro, who also wrote The Remains of the Day.

The story centres around three children at Hailsham, a private British residential school, who are brought up to believe they are special, and that their wellbeing is crucial to the society from which they are so carefully protected.

Despite its comforts and institutional charms, Hailsham is a state-run organ donor farm, and the three children, now adults, not only negotiate an emotionally charged love triangle, but the heavy burden society has given them, and the harrowing destiny each of them faces as their usefulness as organ incubators declines.

As the mysterious “Madame” says near the end of the movie, “You poor creatures; I wish I could help you.”

The dark themes are made bearable by great casting and beautiful cinematography, and a profound emotional depth.  And the film raises important ethical issues.  Do yourself a favour: go and see Never Let Me Go before it’s gone.

Broadcast on 2CH Sydney, 3 April 2011.

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