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One of Chuck Colson’s favorite ideas and phrases in the realm of cultural apologetics was “The Grand Sez Who?” Chuck first discovered it in a piece Philip Johnson wrote for the journal First Things in 1993.
In it, Johnson told the story of Arthur Leff, a renowned legal scholar at Yale. In an article entitled “Unspeakable Ethics, Unnatural Law,” Leff articulated what Johnson called the “modernist impasse.” It goes like this: If you believe that “God is really dead” and that we “have to decide all the big questions for [ourselves],” how “can we persuade other people that what they want to do to us is barred by some unchallengeable moral absolute?”
Leff’s conclusion was that you can’t, at least not with any logical consistency. Okay, stick with me here: You cannot simultaneously believe in an absolute and transcendent set of “propositions about right and wrong,” and the notion that “We are all we have,” that there is no God.
You may want to believe that “napalming babies is bad, starving the poor is wicked, [and that] buying and selling each other is depraved.” And you maywant to insist that “there is in the world such a thing as evil.” But, as Leff realized, the answer to these and every other moral claim is: “Sez who?”
Full article on Religion TodayIn it, Johnson told the story of Arthur Leff, a renowned legal scholar at Yale. In an article entitled “Unspeakable Ethics, Unnatural Law,” Leff articulated what Johnson called the “modernist impasse.” It goes like this: If you believe that “God is really dead” and that we “have to decide all the big questions for [ourselves],” how “can we persuade other people that what they want to do to us is barred by some unchallengeable moral absolute?”
Leff’s conclusion was that you can’t, at least not with any logical consistency. Okay, stick with me here: You cannot simultaneously believe in an absolute and transcendent set of “propositions about right and wrong,” and the notion that “We are all we have,” that there is no God.
You may want to believe that “napalming babies is bad, starving the poor is wicked, [and that] buying and selling each other is depraved.” And you maywant to insist that “there is in the world such a thing as evil.” But, as Leff realized, the answer to these and every other moral claim is: “Sez who?”
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