2008 Archive
- My Wish List for Christmas 2008
- Protecting Conscience in Healthcare
- Digitalized Decadence
- Will Obama’s Policies Reduce Abortions in America?
- Of Hope, Change and Reason
- Joe the Embryo: Considering what hangs in the balance today
- Expect Obama to Sign FOCA in the first 100 days
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 4
- The Most Important Issue--Revisited
- So what's the most important issue?
- Abortion Changes You
- An advocate for all of us
- Catholics, Human Life and the Vote
- Seventh Anniversary: 9/11 and the Current State of Jihadism
- Stem Cell News We Can't Afford to Miss
- End of Summer Reading - Father Thomas's Selections to Feed the Mind and Soul
- Critical Thinking About the Role Science is Playing in American Politics and Culture
- Conscience Protections in Healthcare
- Moral Conscience - Part III
- Moral Conscience - Part II
- Moral Conscience - Part I
- Political Responsibility - Catholic Style
- What Americans Think About Embryo Research
- Toward the New Serfdom
- America and Jihad--A Gathering Storm?
- America and Jihad--where do we stand?
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 10
- Developmental Biology
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures -9
- Benedict at Ground Zero
- What Will Benedict Tell America?
- When Do We Die?
- Morality and the Emerging Field of Moral Psychology
- When it is Reasonable to Say 'No' to Unreason
- Morality as Genetic Predisposition and Neurobiology
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 8
- McNihilism goes to church (when it feels like it)
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 7
- Reason in the Public Square, Part II
- Reason in the Public Square, Part I
- Just when you thought you understood
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 6
- The Many Meanings of 'Freedom' and 'Liberty'
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures -5 Enlightenment Culture
- Roe v. Wade at 35
- Faith, Reason and Jihad
- A Papal Appeal to Natural Law
2007 Archive
- Speaking "Rationally and Softly"
- My Wish List for Christmas 2007
- Religion and Public Life
- The Beginning of The End of the Stem Cell Wars?
- IPSCS: What the Scientists are Saying
- Eliminating Down Babies
- Of 'Moral Ecology' and the Human Embryo
- Bush Administration Mandates Definition
- Time to Get Real About Stem Cell Research
- The Age of "Savior Siblings"
- The Fate of Frozen Embryos
- What's Up With Higher Ed?
- 9/11 Jihadism and Reason
- Suffer the Children
- We’re Closer to Getting Pluripotent Cells out of Normal Adult Body Cells
- Stem Cells, the Presidential Candidates and the Bush Principles
- Atheists: A Summer to Stand Up, Be Proud, and 'Come Out.'
- Back to the Future: Eugenics
- When Science Goes Offside
- Religion vs. Science? Look More Deeply
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 10
- Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research: What if?
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures -9
- Yearning to Blast a Hole in the World
- What the Senate Vote Meant
- Altered Nuclear Transfer
- Alternatives to Embryo-Destructive Research
- Thoughts for Good Friday
- Embryo-Friendly Stem Cell Research
- Teach the Bible as Literature?
- Hitting Rewind II
- Another Stem Cell Fact
- Hitting Rewind
- Got Natural Law?
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 8 "God saw...And behold it was very good."
| Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 7 |
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Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 7
He begins by reminding us that the foregoing historical and philosophical critique of Enlightenment thought is not tantamount to a rejection of the Enlightenment and Modernity. On the contrary, Benedict reiterates a theme deeply entwined in the message of the Second Vatican Council, namely, that Christianity, as "the religion of the Logos " and "a religion in keeping with reason," shares much common ground with the best that Enlightenment thought had to offer. Christianity and Enlightenment have shared the aspiration to be "open to all that is truly rational." But again, Benedict cogently insists that their apparent irreconcilability is reducible to a disagreement about the nature and scope of human reason:
Benedict holds that Christians must continue to engage a secularized culture with a vision of reality in which rational activity, human consciousness, and the experience of freedom, far from being understood as the bi-product of mindless biochemical evolution, are in fact the product of "creative reason", gifts of the Logos to humanity. And on the basis of such a positive vision, and in the light of his foregoing commentary, Benedict ends Part I , with a challenge. He recalls that some Enlightenment thinkers responded to the religious and intellectual upheavals of their day by trying to shield the fundamental tenets of the moral life from similar scrutiny and upheaval by suggesting that "even if God did not exist" ( etsi Deus non daretur ) those moral tenets would still be true -for all peoples, in all times and places. In the wake of the tragedies spawned by modern and contemporary God-less secularism, the Holy Father ends by suggesting that today secularists would be wise to do just the opposite, "to live as if God existed" (veluti si Deus daretur). 'Pascal's wager', as it is traditionally called, is ever enticing. To live as if God did exist-perhaps it is on the basis of such a wager that both believers and non-believers, secularists and non-secularists, can yet today find common cause in any number of worthy enterprises for the betterment of the human family, and build a culture worthy of persons endowed with logos. ***
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