cellio: (moon-shadow)
[personal profile] cellio
[livejournal.com profile] osewalrus posted an excellent essay on conflicts between religion and one's profession. He and I agree: you are completely free to practice your religion, but if doing so causes complications in your life, you -- not the rest of society -- need to deal with that.

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Date: 2006-07-19 05:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zachkessin.livejournal.com
No one said it would always be easy. Sometimes being a Moral Person requires you to make a hard choice. If you object to giving out Plan B or birth control pills or whatever that is YOUR problem and you need to deal with it. If you have to leave your job and find a new one to live with yourself than that may be what you have to do.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-07-19 06:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amergina.livejournal.com
The other question I have is do you abandon your profession for your morality if you are also serving people who share your morality?

This becomes a wider question of "Should there be Catholic Hospitals?" since the prevailing wind happens to blow against Catholic morality.

Recently, in a community I read, a woman posted (in a locked post) about having been raped and that she was given Plan B and told to take it as it was a part of her rape kit (for prosecuting her rapist). She is Catholic and only realized later, when she came out of the traumatic daze of having being raped, what had happened. She didn't have the choice to even choose her morality.

There's a growing vocal section of American society that thinks that circumcision of male children is child abuse, mutilation, and barbaric. Should there come a point in the future where the majority of Americans feel that it is immoral to circumcise, is the answer for all Jews and Muslims and anyone else who would like to circumcise their son to move out of the US?

When can you take a stand to preserve your job, your service to others, or your ability to live in a society due to your morality?

It is hard, yes. I realize this. But when do you sit down and shut up and when do you stand up and shout out? And *who* gets to decide this?

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