T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
957.1 | freedom demands responsibility | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Thu Aug 18 1994 14:55 | 20 |
| re: Note 957.0 by Jill "A tree with a rotten core cannot stand."
Hi Jill,
Many good questions. One quick thought of mine is that freedom demands
responsibility. It doesn't work in society without it. I think that the USA
(if not other countries) are getting into big trouble because of neglecting
the responsibility freedom demands.
On a more humorous (but slightly cynical) note, I'm reminded of the poem by
Piet Hein:
Freedom means you're free to do
Just whatever pleases you
Provided that, that is to say,
That what you please is what you may.
Peace,
Jim
|
957.2 | Less or more? | CSC32::KINSELLA | A tree with a rotten core cannot stand. | Thu Aug 18 1994 15:16 | 12 |
|
Thanks for responding Jim. I was worried that it was too lofty a
topic for most to want to think about on the downhill side of a week.
Okay responsibility. I can grasp that, but is it important to have as
much freedom as we do? I mean there are people in fallen communist
countries who do not like having to make so many decisions all of a
sudden. And by contrast there are people in this country who feel that
some of their freedoms are being taken from them and are extremely
upset. Which way is better? Less or more?
Jill
|
957.3 | From-To | DNEAST::DALELIO_HENR | | Thu Aug 18 1994 16:11 | 39 |
|
Freedom implies "from" or "to" something.
From a Christian perspective :
We are free from the Law (I'll get flak for this) and its demands
Most christians dont fully realize this.
"Or do you not know brethren (for I speak to those who know the law)'
that the law has dominion over a man as long as he lives? For the
woman who has a husband is bound by the Law to her husband as long
as he lives. But if the husband dies, she is released from the Law
of her husband. So then if, while she lives, she marries another man
she will be called an adultress, but if her husband dies she is free
from that law so that she is no adultress, though she is married to
another man.
Therefore my brethren, *you also have become dead to the law* through the
body of Christ
that you may be married to another, to him who raised from the dead
Romans 7:1-4 NKJV
The realtionship of the christian to the Law (the Torah) is the same as
That of a woman to her dead husband. She is free from him. She may marry
another.
"if the husband dies, she is released from the law of her husband"
but free to do what?
"that we should bear fruit to God" Romans 7:4b.
"But the fruit of the Spirit is Love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness
goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control, against such there is
no law" Galatians 5:22-23
Hank
|
957.4 | more musing... | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Thu Aug 18 1994 16:25 | 40 |
| re: Note 957.2 by Jill "A tree with a rotten core cannot stand."
Hi Jill,
> Thanks for responding Jim. I was worried that it was too lofty a
> topic for most to want to think about on the downhill side of a week.
.-)
I remember many years ago hearing what the difference was between the USA's
and the (then) USSR's philosophy of legal justice. (Whether this is actually
true or not is another debate.) Basically, the way the argument went was
out of a hundred people, would you rather free 99 criminals so that one
innocent person was free, or would you rather imprison 99 innocent people so
that one criminal was incarcerated? No system (except God's, of course .-) is
100% just and merciful.
I agree with you that after years of oppression, sudden freedom is a scary
thing. I remember when I finally had the freedom to drive a car. It was a
very scary. For quite a while as a high school senior, I didn't want to get a
driver's license, I was afraid of the responsibility. (I can now drive better
than the average Boston driver, thank you .-)
I think a more gradual process is easier to cope with, but turning the tables
and gradually decreasing freedom is something many would call gliding down the
slippery slope.
Which way is better? I agree with Thomas Jefferson who was afraid that a
"Bill of Rights" could be easily construed to allow *only* those rights which
were listed. Less or more? Only God knows.
Another thought is that in Western culture, we have blurred the division
between children and adults. At 16 you can drive, at 18 you can be sent to
fight a war, but you can't drink till you're 21. In many other, more
"primitive" cultures, there is a distinct ritual which brings children into
the adult world, with the freedom and responsibility that demands.
Peace,
Jim
|
957.5 | coming and going | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Thu Aug 18 1994 16:32 | 13 |
| re: Note 957.3 by Hank
> Freedom implies "from" or "to" something.
An excellent point. Several years ago my pastor gave a sermon on the topic of
from and to.
In the USA there is much talk of being free from ____, but the more important
side is what we are free to.
Peace,
Jim
|
957.6 | Comparisons... | CSC32::KINSELLA | A tree with a rotten core cannot stand. | Thu Aug 18 1994 16:48 | 25 |
|
I think based on what I know of the former USSR, the paranoia of
of their leaders, the lack of the accused rights in the legal system,
this is most likely true. However, I feel in our country we have gone
to the other extreme. I have a real problem with information being
thrown out because some cop screwed up on procedure. How can you expect
to get to justice based on the truth when you can't use all the
evidence. I prefer the European way of punish the law enforcement
people for their wrongdoing; but allow the evidence. Most Americans are
sick of how many crooks are getting off on technicalities.
Hmmm...interesting comment about the coming of age differences between
cultures. I'd have to agree the lines have been blurred in this
country thus the arguments over trying and sentencing juveniles as
adults.
Another question...are the freedoms that you have important to you or
would you mind them being taken away? And I guess I mean even just
beyond political, but how about if your physical freedoms were taken
away. One question I love to ask people is if you could only keep
2 of your 5 senses (sight,hearing,smell,taste,touch) which would you
choose? I mean a handicap definitely takes freedoms away. What
freedoms (any kind) would you be able to give up?
Jill
|
957.9 | | TINCUP::BITTROLFF | Creator of Buzzword Compliant Systems | Thu Aug 18 1994 19:19 | 25 |
| For me it's fairly simple.
If what I do does not physically harm you or your property, I should be free to
do it.
I realize that there are a LOT of gray areas here. Driving drunk does not harm
anything in and of itself, but it sure does increase the chances. There are
certain actions I can perform that are very intrusive but that probably don't
hurt you (loud music, for example).
The losses that bother me are laws that are passed to catch perpetrators in a
large net, rather than the ones that actually break the law. A curfew is an
example of this. Another is a law that puts an arbitrary limit on something. For
instance, in Colorado Springs you may keep only four cats in a house. The number
four is arbitrary. In some cases one may be too many, in other cases 10 may be
just fine.
I also dislike laws around victimless crimes, or those that are designed to
protect us from ourselves. (This type of regulation is where I find most of my
problems with organized religion). Mandatory helmet laws for motorcycles, seat
belt laws, blue laws, etc. On the other hand, if you do something that is self
destructive, society should not be expected to bail you out. This goes back to
the concept of responsibility.
Steve
|
957.10 | I'll catch up Monday. | CSC32::KINSELLA | A tree with a rotten core cannot stand. | Thu Aug 18 1994 20:03 | 9 |
|
Keep up the good work gentlemen. I'll be back to check in hopefully
on Monday. I'm leaving tomorrow to go soak in the Hot Springs for a
few days up in Glenwood Springs. Ahhh....I can't wait. I'll think
about you guys. Not! Have a wonderful weekend. I know I will.
Free at last. (at least for the weekend) ;^)
Jill
|