The Daily Portion

Simply because when reflecting on your life, a daily portion is more than enough.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Freedom?


Lawmaking. What is the point? Why do we have state and federal offices dedicated strictly to receive proposed bills, revise them, and then vote to either approve or decline that bill in the process to become law? A few generally accepted answers come from these questions such as to maintain civil order, to protect the public, even define economic processes.

These are just a few reasons, but everyone can agree that these are good and noble purposes. Where the people tend to butt heads is how do we maintain civil order, how do we protect to the public, how to define economic processes. Today the state is so diverse in its makeup of culture, ideologies, religions, ancestries, careers, agendas, and so many things that it is no surprise there are conflicts when it comes to public law and order. There is an apparent conflict that exists between the modern citizen (especially young college aged people like us) and the “system.”

Education is all about diversity, freedom, self-expression, making your impact on the world, but when it comes to law and order this is not the case. We are expected to live within boundaries. Don’t speed in your vehicle, don’t sleep with your neighbor’s spouse, do your homework. We are given a list of things we must do, or not do, and if we break those codes a punishment is given. It seems to be the anti-thesis of freedom, self-expression, to make your impact on the world!

It is quite the amusing paradox, and not amusing at the same time, that in college we are taught to be ourselves and let no one stand in our way, but in the public square there are certain groups of self-expression that are under suspicious scrutiny.

Recently, a respected professor came to our school and shared a lecture on how religious, in particular Christianity, influence on Louisiana public policy is bad. The Christian Church is constantly accused and berated for imposing its morality upon the people, especially when it comes issues of the family and sexuality.

When it comes to issues of family and sexuality the Church is looked upon as archaic, discriminatory, repressive. The public outcry is a ubiquitous raised fist of “who are YOU to tell me what to do? What do a bunch of old celibate men know about sex?”

Here is the problem. Everyone has the same evidence, how that evidence is interpreted is the issue. Dependent upon the risks in life you participate, we are exposed to certain instances of loss or suffering. Yet regardless of the decisions we make in life we are CONSTANTLY DISCRIMINATED against choices. We allow a red light to determine whether or not we can drive, we allow markets to determine what we pay for items, we allow teachers to determine if we pass a test subject.

I’ve never seen a person raise their fist shouting “what are you red light? To tell me I can’t drive? Who are you security guard, to not let me steal? Who are you professor to determine whether or not I pass this course?” Why not? They are discriminating against your freedom! You don’t see someone doing these things because they understand the consequences of breaking those rules. You don’t have to ask the “why” behind the “what.”

In matters of family and sexuality we see the “what” but no one ever asks “why.”  Those conversations are personal, and often times painful. Regardless of whether or not the conversation is related to religion, we need to seek integrity of ethics and laws as they related to the protection and dignity of the human person. Regardless of idealogies, we need to have the conversation of what is the BEST decision for family life and sexuality. We sacrifice freedom for the sake of other drivers, for the sake of education . . . why not sacrifice a little freedom for the sake of family and sexuality?