Have you ever
wondered what your conscience is and how exactly it guides you? If
making moral decisions is simply a matter of following our conscience,
then why do Christians agonize over so many of the choices they make in
their lives? And how can two conscientious people come to separate
decisions on the same issues?
WHAT IS CONSCIENCE?
Conscience is not a thing;
it's an activity. It's your active, inner sensing of right and wrong
that moves you to make individual decisions but also guides your whole
life direction. In other words, your conscience acts to make you
a certain kind of person. That is your overall, lifelong project.
Conscience isn't just negative, either; it isn't directed toward wrongdoing
alone. It's also positive. It actively tells you to do certain
things and to live by certain ideals.
I believe that your entire
being, both your conscious and unconscious life, is what we traditionally
call the soul. It is the whole existing human being's life as known
to God. The human spirit, what psychologists call the self, is that
part of the soul that is knowable to us and others. It is that part
of the soul that makes choices and has an outward identity. Therefore,
it is the spirit, or self, that directs the activity of conscience.
And the urgings of your conscience are based on the influence of all the
parts of your being -- your free will, your reason, your emotions, and
your unconscious motivations.
Your conscience is often
called the light of the Holy Spirit within you. Thus, the human spirit,
or the conscious self, is drawn to the divine Spirit. We are called
toward spiritual responses that are based on reality and truth. That
is why you reflect in conscience before you act. It is your arbiter
of reality and truth. Your conscience is formed by what it knows
to be reality or truth and responds to the good. You process information,
arguments, and impressions. Your moral decisions are based on this
knowledge. Therefore, it is very important to keep your conscience
well informed. A conscientious person is someone who is trying to
keep his or her conscience informed by constantly seeking the true and
the good.
IS IT ENOUGH JUST
TO KEEP YOUR CONSCIENCE INFORMED?
No, you must care about the
knowledge you gain. You must act upon what you know to be right;
otherwise, you will be denying the truth and turning away from God.
You must also be constantly vigilant that you are not deceiving yourself
or misinterpreting the truth. With every decision that you make,
you must ask yourself: is this good in the long run? In the
long run will it hold true and make me deeply happy, or is only a superficial
part of me convinced of the truth in this action? What does the most
central me wholeheartedly want and believe? You must be open to the
truth and aware of all the factors that affect your vision of the truth.
When experts talk about making
ethical decisions, they often fail to take into account the role of such
important areas of human experience as emotion, aspiration, affection,
and relationships with other people. They assume ethical decisions
should be based solely on deductive reasoning. I'm a very rational
person myself, but I think ethical decisions are based on reality; and
reality encompasses much more than deductive reasoning alone.
For example, I just
wrote a paper on surrogate mothering. I objected to the idea that
reproduction could be looked at strictly in terms of a contract between
two parties. Some ethicists have come to the conclusion that surrogate
motherhood is morally acceptable as long as the principles of autonomy,
liberty, and procedural fairness are observed. In my mind, this approach
is much too narrow. To answer the question about surrogate motherhood,
you must consider what it means to be a parent and a child. You can't
just take abstract principles that are good principles in their proper
place and apply them to an interpersonal situation of this particular complexity.
WHY DO PEOPLE'S
SENSE OF RIGHT AND WRONG OFTEN DIFFER?
On fundamental morality most
people probably would be in agreement. Most people everywhere would
agree that it is better to do good than evil. But the question is,
then: why, if we agree on general principles, do we fly in completely
different directions on particular issues? It might be because we're
working with different facts; or, more important, we're weighing the same
facts differently. Because of our individual backgrounds and personal
values, we hold certain facts to be more significant than others.
For example, in the abortion issue, one person could choose to be pro-choice
because he or she holds the right of privacy and a woman's individual freedom
above the right of the unborn. The other person, given the same set
of facts about the issue, could choose to be pro-life because he or she
holds the right to life above all other fundamental rights. Both
people are convinced they are taking the right stance.
In situations such as these
there is often nothing for people to do but follow their conscience and
let God be the ultimate judge. In the end it may be that one person
was actually more open to the truth than the other, partly by being more
aware of what influences affect his or her moral decisions. Self-awareness
is essential in making ethical decisions.
HOW CAN WE BECOME
MORE SELF-AWARE?
It's very hard, but the church
has set up all kinds of ways for us to know ourselves better. We
can learn a lot about ourselves and consequently others through prayer,
meditation, examining our conscience for Confession, worship, reading Scripture,
living in community, working with other people, and being in committed
relationships. There are also formation programs and psychotherapy
to help us. We've gotten very sophisticated in this culture about
methods for self-examination, growth, and change.
Of course, you must maintain
a healthy balance between thinking about yourself and focusing on the outside.
If you're a highly self-conscious, psychological person, you can become
obsessed with scruples. You may begin to worry about every thought
you have or action you make. You feel an inordinate amount of guilt
because you are not perfect. If you find yourself caught in this
neurotic, circular self-consciousness, you just have to say, "God, I can't
think about this any more. Please just make me a good person and
make me love more." You simply have to throw yourself on the Spirit
in worship and start attending to God instead of worrying about your own
state. Otherwise you could lead yourself into really serious sin.
WHAT IS SIN?
Ultimately, it is breaking
the command to love God with your whole heart, your whole mind, and your
whole soul and your neighbor as yourself. Once you do that, you indulge
in all the ramifications of turning away from God, such as revenge, self-deception,
and self-destruction. But there are all different degrees of sin.
I think it is rare for people to commit mortal sins, that is, irrevocable
denials of God. I don't think most people are integrated enough,
or know themselves well enough, to do that. Probably only really
strong characters could commit mortal sins. It would take such extreme
self-understanding and knowledge of good and evil to freely turn away from
God and choose evil.
For most people the act of
turning away from God is not a completely free and conscious decision.
More often than not we merely are weak and allow ourselves to be deceived.
Our ability for self-deception allows us to convince ourselves that what
we know to be wrong is right. We can rationalize and defend our transgressions
to the point where we can completely block out what we don't want to hear
or don't want to know and so lose our sense of sin.
WHAT CAUSES US TO
SIN?
I think that some people
are much more predisposed by temperament to be evil or bad and others are
predisposed by temperament to be good. Thus, part of the genetic
throw you get is not only your brains and your looks and your talents but
also your temperament. For some people, their rebellious-aggressive
temperaments are such that it is much more difficult for them to be good
and to be morally socialized. That is why we can never condemn others
because we don't know what they started with or what they had to work with.
Psychologists used to believe
that people started with a tabula rasa, an empty slate, just waiting to
be written on. Now, we know that everyone comes pre-wired for all
kinds of things - for language, sexual behavior, guilt, shame, altruism,
empathy, a sense of fairness and justice, selfishness, and even self-deceit.
We are also greatly influenced and conditioned by our environment.
We are inculcated with systems and scripts from the time we are born that
can sometimes take a lifetime to recognize. Your family, especially,
has a tremendous influence on you as does your socioeconomic status, your
sex, your heritage, etc.
All of this is not to say
that a person's actions are completely determined. As Catholics we
believe that human beings are responsible for their actions. That
is why it is essential for us to strive for self-knowledge. It is
our duty to be conscious of our weaknesses so that we may avoid them.
But we must also be careful that we don't try to deny our darker sides.
We must learn to accept the good and the bad in ourselves and realize that
God loves us no matter what. Often in our proud attempts to deny
our capacity for evil we end up committing more evil. We try to distort
reality, which leads us into deeper and deeper self-deception.
In the end we must realize
that in order for us to get control of ourselves and somehow reconcile
the good with the bad we need God's help. There are simply certain
things in life that we can't accomplish on our own. We must pray
and ask for God's guidance to become the person that God wants us to be.
The first step in recovery is to come to grips with the fact that there
are certain things about yourself over which you have no control.
You must hand yourself over to a higher power and accept the things you
can and cannot change and pray for the wisdom to know the difference between
the two.
IS IT RIGHT FOR
A PERSON TO POINT OUT THE SINS OF OTHERS?
It depends on what your motivation
is. If, in the spirit of love, you are bringing a serious matter
of conscience to the attention of another person or persons, then, yes,
it is right for you to point out the error in somebody's ways. In
fact, it is your Christian duty to admonish the sinner, or remind a person
of what he or she really knows to be right.
Nagging implies a desire
to control people for their own good. When you condemn someone, on
the other hand, you're ending a relationship. In condemning someone
you are presuming that you know what God thinks about a certain matter.
"Judge not lest ye be judged" refers to condemnation, not moral judgments.
If you're a moral person,
you've got to make judgments. You know that some things are worse
than others, and you have an obligation to try to right wrongs. But
such judgments are not condemnations; they are shrewd assessments of what's
going on in a particular situation. That's where admonishing the
sinner comes in. When you admonish someone, you are gently pointing
out what appears to be a serious failing in that person. You're calling
the person back to a better self. You don't tell the person specifically
what to do; it is up to the individual to act in his or her conscience.
You're just helping that person become aware of a problem.
By admonishing the sinner
you are saying: "I care about you and your ultimate good, and I will
tell you what you'd rather not hear, even at risk of pain, trouble, or
your rejection of me." You are in a situation of love with other
people; you can't help but care. As Christians we can't give up on
one another even if our attachments cause us suffering.
WHAT IS THE PURPOSE
OF TRYING TO DEVELOP THE BEST CONSCIENCE POSSIBLE?
I guess the purpose is to
be the best person that you can possibly be and the best person to live
with, too. I believe virtue is good for you and makes you happy and
sin is bad for you and makes you a mess. We're made for happiness,
which means we're made for virtue. When we don't act the way we should,
we sense that something is wrong; and things start going very badly for
us. Most normal people begin to feel guilt and shame. If we
didn't, we'd have a world full of psychopaths; we wouldn't be able to learn
or have a sense of self. The emotions of guilt and shame come with
moral standards and are the consequence of immoral actions. So, who
wants that? Most people would rather be happy, which comes with being
good.
I also believe the welfare
of society depends on how morally good its individuals are. Individual
morality influences a group, and a group's morality influences an individual.
If the moral fiber of individuals begins to break down, then the moral
fiber of society begins to fray; and thus, the integrity of other individuals
in society begins to disintegrate.
That is why developing the
best conscience possible is so important. The more conscious you
are, or the better conscience you have, the more aware you will be of the
suffering and injustice around you. You can only effect change when
you realize that there is a problem. Your conscience and consciousness
constantly have to be raised. You then must work to inform others
of a situation, and it is through the energy of a small group that society
changes and progresses. Groups can have a great positive force because
when you get people together you have the moral resources of many instead
of one. You also have everybody's instincts for moral correction
working for you. All kinds of interesting movements were spread through
the efforts of small groups, including Christianity.
Of course, groups, no matter
how good their ultimate intentions or goals, can also exert severe pressure
to conform. If you don't conform, you can really be made to suffer.
SHOULD YOU ALWAYS
LET YOUR CONSCIENCE BE YOUR GUIDE?
If you're a Catholic, you
have an obligation to follow your conscience and the voice of God within.
Now, you must inform your conscience by listening and seeking counsel and
so forth; you don't just automatically know everything. You have
the church as your guide, as a teacher. But ultimately you have to
follow your conscience. According to Aquinas, it is better to be
excommunicated than to go against your conscience.
There does reach a point
when you can't always be studying and reading to inform your conscience.
In order to act, every now and then, you must reach little plateaus and
say, "Well, this is all I can do right now. I can do no other."
BUT SINCE I KNOW
I'M NOT ALWAYS RIGHT, CAN I ALWAYS TRUST MY CONSCIENCE?
The better person you are,
the better your conscience will be. Thus, the more you can trust
it. But you will always have your suspicions about certain sticky
decisions you have to make that aren't crystal clear cases of right and
wrong. You know you've fooled yourself before, so you'll want to
be very careful and try to consider all angles and really examine your
conscience before you act. But regardless of whether you trust your
conscience deeply or not, you still must follow it. Throughout your
life there will be times when you will be uneasy about a decision you've
made that you will later come to see was right. There will be other
times when you will be absolutely convinced of the truth behind an action
only to discover later that you made a big mistake. Such assessments
of your actions keep you humble; you know that you're always open to growth
and improvement.
To become a mature person
and an adult in your faith, you must learn to make decisions and take responsibility
for your actions. You cannot abdicate the control you have over yourself.
Not even to those you consider wiser than yourself. No one can make
moral decisions for you. When you get to the final conversation with
Jesus and he asks why you acted in a particular way when you knew it was
wrong, it's not going to help you to say, "Well the church said it was
okay."
ARE YOU SAYING THAT
DOUBT AND DISSENT ARE GOOD?
Yes, when they are acts of
reflective conscience. You know, the Nazi motto was: "My honor
is my loyalty." If you think about that, it is really satanic because
it is saying that your honor is not to principles, or to the good, or to
God -- it is based solely on your loyalty to the group and its leader.
If the group leader tells you to kill gypsies, you kill gypsies; if the
leader tells you to bomb some city, you bomb the city. That is moral
suicide. You are abdicating responsibility for your actions, and
that is terribly wrong.
In the same way, your faith
is something you own; you are responsible for it. You cannot just
blindly follow the teachings of the church. You must try to the best
of your ability to ensure that your actions or omissions are what you truly
believe to be the will of God. There is no easy, automatic standard
like: if it feels good, it must be right; or if it feels bad, it
must be wrong; or if the church tells me it's right, then it must be right.
Doubt and dissent do not
necessarily mean disloyalty. The church may not be a democracy; but
it is not a guerrilla underground, either, run by some elite corps whose
members must distance themselves from the masses and insist upon absolute
obedience and secrecy for security's sake. Doubt and dissent are
therapeutic. They keep us from self-deception. If you constantly
accept everything you are told and assume that things never change, then
you have lost sight of living reality. You are no longer in tune
with the truth with which you have a Christian duty to be. Change
is good; it is essential to Christian life. We are all called to
be transformed by the Good News. Transformation is a continuous process.
Your consciousness should continue to change and develop throughout your
life.
BUT IF WE ARE ALWAYS
CHANGING AND LEARNING NEW THINGS,
HOW CAN WE MAKE
COMMITMENTS?
When you make a commitment,
you are saying that you have enough trust in yourself to have the power
and control to be able in the future to abide by what you now want to sign
up for. You are committing yourself to make something happen.
It's not just that things go along, and you're the same person at the end
of your life; and if you're not, then you won't be able to be bound by
any past promises. You make a commitment that you will make a marriage
last, for example, or you will be faithful and loyal to God despite any
future adversity.
Making commitments is what
it means to be a person. It is the difference between people who
take charge and shape their lives and people who drift along letting life
shape them. By making commitments you, in fact, make yourself much
more open to change. You become someone who can accept diversity
and take on different forms without losing your fundamental identity and
sense of self. People who are afraid of change find it much more
difficult to make commitments. For Catholics that posses quite a
problem because commitment is a fundamental part of the faith. As
a Catholic you must believe in God's promises and God's fidelity; and God's
actions should inspire you to be committed and faithful to God and to others.
So, from a psychological and religious point of view, being able to make
commitments is an essential part of being human.
WHAT ARE SOME OTHER
AREAS WHERE RELIGION AND PSYCHOLOGY AGREE?
Psychology helps you to know
yourself - to understand how your mind works and what motivates you.
And knowing yourself is the key factor in developing your conscience and
avoiding sin. Our faith, in fact, makes many psychological demands
on us. We are called to be transformed, to die to ourselves, and
become slowly changed. Such transformation, in my opinion, is addressed
to the psyche, the mind and heart; it is a psychological command.
Therefore, understanding the mind more can help us follow such commands.
Faith also makes good psychological
sense because the more in touch with reality you are, the more sane you
are. From a Christian's point of view, reality is God; therefore,
the more in touch with God you are, the more healed and balanced and psychologically
healthy you should become.
In recent years, psychology
and religion have been meeting on many more levels. Nowadays, Freud's
ideas that all actions are predetermined are no longer generally accepted.
Human beings are thought to be basically good and able to overcome their
inherited traits and predispositions. That, of course, has always
been Catholic thought -- that human beings are wounded but not depraved
and that one is responsible for and free to choose one's fate. So
you see, psychology and religion have much to teach each other.
WHEN YOU LOOK INTO
THE FUTURE, HOW DO YOU THINK OUR SOCIETY WILL IMPROVE?
One crisis that seems to
be slipping up on us is the economic crisis. When I look around,
it seems to me that the craziest thing is the way the economy is run and
the way work is arranged in this country. The fact that people can
be homeless because they can't find work and other people have so much
money they don't know what to do with it just doesn't make sense.
People have accepted such
extreme imbalances without question. But now I think we're becoming
more conscious of the injustice of it. I would guess and I hope that
in the next twenty years the economic makeup of our society will be the
area in which there will be the greatest change. Down the road, I
think we will say to ourselves: how could we have accepted the fact
that there were 40,000 homeless people in New York City?
People can become hardened
to the injustice they see around them. I hope in the years to come
that our heightened sense of horror over the way the economy is run will
overcome our habituation to seeing so many poor and homeless people.
That's why it's so nice to have new generations: they aren't habituated
yet. They come into the world fresh, and they wonder and question
and challenge. So, there is hope and a chance for progress; and that
is the Good News.
Sidney Callahan, Associate
Professor of psychology at Mercy College in Dobbs Ferry, New York, is author
of WITH ALL OUR HEART AND MIND: THE SPIRITUAL WORKS OF MERCY IN A PSYCHOLOGICAL
AGE (Crossroad), and a member of the National Board of Directors of the
Association for the Rights of Catholics in the Church (ARCC).
Reprinted by ARCC with permission,
U.S. Catholic, Dec. 1988.
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