Monday, 6 May 2019

"jesus of nazareth: a-plus for ethics, b-minus for epistemology," suggests bryan magee


What came through to me most strongly was the radically ‘different’ character of Jesus’s moral teaching. So different is it, indeed, that it borders on the incomprehensible. Other moralists put forward rules of behaviour; other revolutionists in morals try to overthrow whatever are the existing rules and establish different ones in their stead; but Jesus is saying that rules, any rules, are not what morality is about. God, he says, is not in the business of awarding prizes to people live in accordance with moral rules. You will not win any special favours from him by being virtuous, but are only too likely to find – to your great chagrin, no doubt, as well as your incomprehension – that he loves sinners just as much as he loves you. If this infringes your sense of justice you have not understood the situation. It is no use being good in the hope of getting a reward from God: this is pure self-seeking, and therefore a self-contradictory conception of morally admirable behaviour. Only if you are good when it is not rewarded is your behaviour morally admirable. But then there is indeed no reward: so the goodness has to be its own justification, regardless of consequences. God’s loving you has nothing to do with your deserving it. He loves everybody, including the most undeserving, indeed he loves them as much as he loves you. Just as he loves the undeserving, so you also should love those who are undeserving of your love, including those who deserve it least, namely your enemies. Love is what matters, not deserving, and least of all rules. In fact, love matters about everything else. It is the ultimate reality, the true nature of existence, God. Perfect love is unconditional, and to unconditional love, deserving has ceased to matter or even have any significance. It is not that Jesus is against our living in accordance with rules. On the contrary, he recognises that rules are necessary wherever human beings live together, and he believes that they should be obeyed; but he sees them as arbitrary, superficial things that should be made subservient to human needs, not human needs made subservient to them. If we had enough love and concern for one another there would be no need for rules. We need them only because we are selfish. They are not, in themselves, good. 

These are only a few of the teachings of Jesus, but they are central to his message; and the fact that there was anyone at all going around preaching things like this two thousand years ago in a desert area of the Middle East is, to say the least of it, surprising. The extent to which they are original to Jesus is a matter that scholars dispute, and not one about which I know enough to have an independent opinion; but that the teachings themselves are unobvious, and full of deep moral insight, is clear to me. Jesus was also, although for some reason this is scarcely ever said, a profound psychologist. When, in addition to all this, one considers the audacity with which his views are expressed, and the poetically striking quality of many of his illustrations, he appears perhaps the most remarkable moralist there has ever been – a genius of a moralist, like Socrates: or perhaps even something in the way of a creative artist, like Plato. Like the historical Socrates, but unlike Plato, he confined his teaching to questions of morality. The nature of this world, and of our knowledge of it, do not appear to be concerns of his. In consequence he has nothing to offer that corresponds to the epistemological insights of Hinduism and Buddhism – and in that sense what he says might appear secondary, limited. But within the limitations of morality he goes as deep as anyone was to penetrate for the better part of two thousand years. When it comes to tellingness of moral insight, a question like ‘What will a man gain by winning the whole world at the cost of his true self?’ is unsurpassed.
from Bryan Magee's Confessions of a Philosopher. (See also 'not not a theist' and main post).

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