Ethical Systems

 

organic disciplemaking.

Gary DeLashmutt and Dennis McCallum

Nomism

DEFINITION: The ethical rules stated in the Bible are all applicable to today, because the God who gave them does not change. It is our responsibility to bring into expression as many of the biblical rules as possible, even if this requires restructuring society to do so.

Examples:

Critique

Situationalism

DEFINITION: As a reaction against nomism, situationalism argues that every situation is different. Therefore, absolute rules are inappropriate because they are too inflexible. The only ethical "rule" is to love, which Christ said was the greatest commandment. Love alone, because it has its own moral compass, can be trusted to know what to do in any situation. The Bible may give us a record of what loving decisions looked like in concrete situations, but those decisions are not binding.

Example:

Critique:

Principlized Ethics

DEFINITION: Principlized ethics is a middle ground between nomism and situationalism. It looks both to scripture and natural law for general ethical rules and values. Natural law refers to ethical knowledge that is available to man apart from special revelation (see Rom. 1:26-28,32; 2:14,15). Equality and justice would be the main ethical principles distilled from natural law. It sees natural law as the basis of ethics in society.

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