I think most great moral truths work their way into the laws of nations that regard them.
As Stripe said below, I don't know of any nation, past or current, that aside from having God guide them in some clear way, ever thought, "hey, we should implement this law against [insert crime here] because it's moral truth."
In fact, just about every nation that has ever existed has eventually broken down morally, including the US.
I also would say that history answers your question and is why we didn't do that more directly.
For the record, my question did not end after laws, it continued on, because I was contrasting the first part of my question with what you suggested we do.
Here it is again:
Why not model our laws after the Lawgiver's laws, instead of trying to model them after fallible man's laws?
I then went on to clarify that I was not talking about religious laws, such as "do not eat certain foods," and "do not wear certain fabrics together", etc.
So first of all, I agree, history does answer my question. It answers it by showing that man is wicked, and doesn't like morality, thus nations have eschewed God's laws in favor of their own, because it puffs them up. History does not say, "because they (the Lawgiver's laws) do not work."
Second, You went on to say the following:
The worst thing you can do to religion is give it power to deny and punish. It draws the corrupt to use it as a means to power.
... as if I did not just state, EXPLICITLY, that I'm not talking about religion, but about laws that apply to EVERYONE, regardless of religion.
So tell me, Town, Why did you make a strawman that you could easily beat down, instead of responding to what I said, which was about morality, not religion?
Third, what you just said regarding religion, "It draws the corrupt to use it as a means to power," equally applies to secular governments, especially democracy, in fact, even more so, because it then becomes possible for someone who is corrupt to lord it over his neighbor.
Which brings me, once again, back to my worldview, which asks, "Why not model our laws after the Lawgiver's (God's) laws, instead of trying to model them after fallible man's laws," and, "why not use the kind of government God chose for His people, rather than what man came up with that God rejected?"
(again, nothing about religion, only laws and government)
Instead, we have a secular nation where we are free to worship and believe and think as we will, with regard only for the rights of others as a consideration.
What makes you think that having a Christian nation (ie, one founded on principles found in the Bible) would take away the freedom to worship and believe and thing as one will"?
Why would having such a nation take away the rights granted by God, the right to Life and Liberty; to Worship, to Free Speech, to Purchase and Use Property; to Purchase, Own, and Carry Individual Defensive Weapons including Firearms; to Protect the Innocent; to Corporally Punish his Children; to Due Process of Law; and to Fail?
Not if you weren't a Christian and not even if you were,
Why?
Our nation was founded on Biblical principles (not as many as it should have been, but biblical nonetheless), and religious freedom is (was?) one of the biggest reasons for people to come here from other countries.
using history as a gauge of human nature, given how narrow that can become. Just so, we had Catholic and Protestant setting Europe ablaze over exegesis.
Right, and Christians, let alone the world, can JUSTLY condemn such actions as immoral. That doesn't make morality immoral.
Great moral truths, such as those, have mostly found a place in our laws, supra.
And they are being eroded away because of secular government.
Moral truth is that murder, adultery, theft, perjury, are all wicked, and should be punished by the government. As Stripe said, our current government has all but legalized all of those crimes.
I think many are, but they're running into a smaller but vocal opposition and an industry with enormous power and dedication.
I haven't presented a false dichotomy
You did.
You said:
. . . if we model our laws after established, superior examples that abound in other Western Industrial Democracies, we can share something else with them: a nation made safer from gun violence.
Or we can keep doing what we're doing and adding to the body count.
"If we do this, we'll have this result, OR we keep doing what we're doing, and we'll have that result."
That's a false dichotomy, because we can do "something else" and have "the other" result.
Namely, "if we implement Godly laws, and a Godly government, instead of trying to make up more laws based on man's wisdom, we won't have the problems we have now."
and you haven't set out why you think I have in any particular. I'd be happy to consider it if you want to proffer particulars.
See above.
It's important to know what you consider meaningful options
Would it have been a meaningful option for Christians in Germany during WWII to oppose the killing of millions of Jews by the Germans?
Was it a meaningful option for Christians to oppose slavery in the 18th and 19th century, to bring an end to it?
How much more so for Christians to want a nation that follows God's laws for man? To want a Godly government?
and whether or not when you use the term you're speaking to options with no possibility of being accomplished.
With that attitude, it never will happen.
Maybe you've heard the expression, "where there's a will, there's a way"?
If that's true, then the opposite is also true. Where there is no will, there is no way.
In the words of Edmund Burke:
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.” ― Edmund Burke |
By way of example, you might feel that changing human nature is an option.
Not at all.
And technically you'd be right, but it's unrealistic
Was ending slavery "unrealistic"?
Was stopping the Germans from murdering more Jews "unrealistic"?
Was the rebuilding of the walls of Jerusalem "unrealistic"?
Should objectives that are desirable, but "unrealistic" be abandoned because they are so?
and contrary to a reasoned examination of man.
All the more reason to have Godly laws and government.
It's an open ended hope with no guideposts for timeframes or measurables.
Should objectives that are desirable, but "unrealistic" be abandoned because they are so?
You might feel fundamentally tearing down the current government and instituting a different one could or would be an option, but it's one that's so improbable as to constitute an exercise in argument more than it would a realistic attempt to alter the current outcome.
Should objectives that are desirable, but "unrealistic" be abandoned because they are so?
To an extent, many of the alternatives are a bit like suggesting that because a boulder has fallen in the way of a tunnel we should dig a completely new tunnel . . . instead of simply removing the boulder.
When mineshafts collapse, do the miners typically try reopening them? or do they typically abandon them (assuming there's no one trapped inside)?
The situation we're in is that our system, a mineshaft of laws and government, is on the brink of collapse, and has already flooded in some places, killing millions, and collapsed in other places, imprisoning millions more under all the legal rubble. Better to save the people trapped inside and abandon it and find a new site, and to start mining using better laws and a better system.
Our government and legal system are old garments. Let's not try to patch them with new fabric, but let's rather put on new garments that don't ever wear down.
... or a bridge over the mountain....
You don't build bridges over mountains. On them, sure, but over them?