Episode 244: Manuel Cruz - What It Means to Be Moral

In this episode of The Bible for Normal People, Pete and Jared are joined by Manuel Cruz to discuss the philosophy of being moral, how morality intersects with the Christian spiritual life, and what we can learn about God from philosophers Jean-Luc Marion and Simone Weil. Join them as they explore the following questions:

  • What's the overlap between morality and love generally and more specifically in the Christian tradition?

  • How does our intuition help us discern what is right?

  • What kinds of theories exist about morality? How does that intersect with our intuition?

  • Do we need rules to be moral?

  • Is the quest for morality fundamentally subjective?

  • What can we learn from philosopher Jean-Luc Marion about morality and God?

  • How can we build an ethical framework of morality we can have ownership of?

Tweetables

Pithy, shareable, sometimes-less-than-280-character statements from the episode you can share.

  • For me, ethics is the working out of a fundamental intuition of conscience, of concern for the life of a stranger, of a person who is vulnerable. — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

  • Following rules does not make a person loving. It does not make a person just. Or to use the biblical language, "following the law" is not going to make a person righteous. — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

  • Independent of my Christian faith convictions, but then squarely doubling down on my faith convictions: love and justice are the two moral ends that a set of rules can help support, but that they in themselves cannot establish. — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

  • Morality is never individual. In fact, morality is always about you and another person, whether that is the person of God, or whether that is another human, your neighbor, alongside you. — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

  • Jean-Luc Marion says that when we love, it's not giving something to another—it's actually creating the space within our own life to let that other person give themselves as they really are. And the crazy thing is that is also the nature of God's love for us and our love for God. — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

  • When God loves, he creates a space within himself for us to exist. He wants us to be ourselves and so he creates a world in which we can exist in relationship to God. — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

  • On the cross, Christ breaks the power of sin, the power of evil, by refusing to return violence for violence. Rather than being driven toward vengeance, God gives himself over to offering love. — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

  • Even though there is this infinite desire in us [to love], when we experience enough of the pain in the finitude of life, there is a turning in on oneself. And what needs to happen there is that that finitude needs to be transformed in some way. And that transformation is something that only God can bring about. — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

  • There is something about sitting alongside another person and asking these fundamental questions. “What do you love?” And listening to what it is that they love. Not asking them to explain, not asking them to justify. "What brings you life?" — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

  • Have a consistent practice of prayer where you realize that what you are approaching is a God who wants to give you a gift of love, and receiving that love with both a sense of gratitude and a sense of responsibility. — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

  • One of the things that I've come to appreciate so much from my research in Jewish thinking and philosophy and scriptural study, is just how much the Jewish tradition understands love in terms of responsibility for one's neighbor. — @theologoi (Dr. Manuel Cruz)

Mentioned in This Episode

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Episode 245: Elizabeth Schrader Polczer - Resurrecting Mary the Tower

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Episode 243: Pete Enns & Jared Byas - Finding Wisdom in the Balance