Saturday, August 11, 2018

Laws are just guides


LAWS, of course, are very important. Imagine a society
without laws. Chaos can only be expected. But laws should be
understood simply as guides and not as the ultimate end itself.
  
            And especially in the case of human laws, we can find many
exceptions to them because of their inability to capture all the
possible situations that man can get into. That’s the reason why many
of them become obsolete, or are even outrightly rescinded, or at least
updated, modified, fine-tuned, etc.

            Even the sacred laws can suffer changes as situations
demand. Take the example of the Sabbath law of the Jews as dramatized
in Matthew 12,1-8. Some Pharisees faulted Christ’s disciples for
picking and eating grain on a Sabbath. But Christ immediately
corrected them.
  
            He explained that exceptions can be made. “Have you not
read what David did when he and his companions were hungry,” he said,
“when he and his companions were hungry, how he went into the house of
God and ate the bread of offering, which neither he nor his companions
but only the priests could lawfully eat?”
  
            Still more: “Or have you not read in the law that on the
Sabbath the priests serving in the temple violate the Sabbath and are
innocent?”
  
            Then he explained why such exceptions can be made. “I say
to you, something greater than the temple is here. If you knew what
this meant, ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice,’ you would not have
condemned these innocent men. For the Son of Man is Lord of the
Sabbath.”
  
            It is quite clear that laws are made to serve our ultimate
end, and that can only be that we be led to God, our original source
and ultimate end. Our laws should be such that they should not negate
nor even undermine the achievement of this fundamental purpose of the
laws. Even our traffic laws, so insignificant if impacted with our
ultimate end, should respect this fundamental purpose.
  
            But what do we have? We sometimes absolutize our laws as
if they are the ultimate purpose in our life. They can be so rigidly
and indiscriminatingly applied to all cases when there can be
exceptions or even exemptions that can be made. We fall into some kind
of legalism.
   
            And nowadays, there are even laws that undermine the
ultimate purpose of our life, that is, our proper relation with God.
Christ himself complained about this. “You have let go of the commands
of God and are holding on to human traditions.” (Mk 7,8) We are now
making ourselves as the ultimate lawgiver, as if we are the creator of
the universe.
  
            Even worse, we can directly contradict God’s law, as
illustrated in Psalm 94,20: “They do injustice under cover of law.” We
just do not tolerate injustice and outright sins, but we now sanction
them. That is why we now have such laws that legalize abortion,
euthanasia, same-sex unions, etc.
  
            We need to recover our proper bearing with respect to our
understanding and attitude toward our laws. I am afraid this will need
a tremendous effort, because the current mainstream attitude is that
we ourselves are the ultimate lawgivers. We just depend on our
consensus.
   
            Of course, some will say that there should be separation
of Church and state, and respect for religious freedom and freedom of
conscience as bases for such attitude. But they have twisted these
concepts to accommodate their bias of removing God and his laws from
our life.
  
            With God removed, we are left with our own devices that
unavoidably can lead us sooner or later to some forms of injustice,
since we cannot avoid our differences and conflicts. The strong will
always take advantage of the weak, the rich of the poor, etc.


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