A Christian friend is studying to be a “reader” or somesuch lecture-in-church thing, and as part of her coursework was set a questionnaire to poll a selection of 6+ friends who are/are not church attendees, young, old, etc – and she asked me to participate, so I popped around this evening for a mug of tea and 10 minutes with a biro:

click images to link through to larger versions Seeing the photos I think I missed the “derivation of moral principles question”, which I am astounded has no space for “worked it out for myself from my environment” – including novels, scifi, school both secular and nominally catholic, and general cogitation whilst looking at the stars.
Also the questions are a bit simplistic; there is a lot of space for action / answer, but not much for context, so in a couple of questions I didn’t really bother – it was either be blunt or take a couple of hours over it.
If an aunt gives you a present and it’s hideous, what do you do? For me, the answer depends less on morals than it does on being really crap at telling white lies. Whether my being crap at that comes from morality, is a different question.
Same with the returning money to the bank question, they’re probably looking for the moral choice of theivery… but if it was a 50p on the street and not 100 quid in a cash machine with cash machine, a camera, and audit trail, then what would you do?
If (and occasionally when) I find a windfall like a tenner in the street, I try to do something useful for other people with it. I like making people happy, so I buy cookies for the office, or drop it in a preferred charity box (British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research) – I just believe it’s nice to spread the good karma.
It’s a bit hard to fit that into a square inch, though. 🙂
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