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Monday, November 06, 2006

Hypocrisy acclaimed

Dear God, can there be anything that a right wingnut can be criticized for when David Frum can excuse Haggard as follows?

Consider the hypothetical case of two men. Both are inclined toward homosexuality. Both from time to time hire the services of male prostitutes. Both have occasionally succumbed to drug abuse.

One of them marries, raises a family, preaches Christian principles, and tries generally to encourage people to lead stable lives.

The other publicly reveals his homosexuality, vilifies traditional moral principles, and urges the legalization of drugs and prostitution.

Which man is leading the more moral life? It seems to me that the answer is the first one. Instead of suggesting that his bad acts overwhelm his good ones, could it not be said that the good influence of his preaching at least mitigates the bad effect of his misconduct? Instead of regarding hypocrisy as the ultimate sin, could it not be regarded as a kind of virtue - or at least as a mitigation of his offense?

After all, the first man may well see his family and church life as his "real" life; and regard his other life as an occasional uncontrollable deviation, sin, and error, which he condemns in his judgment and for which he sincerely seeks to atone by his prayer, preaching, and Christian works.

Yet it is the first man who will if exposed be held up to the execration of the media, while the second can become a noted public character - and can even hope to get away with presenting himself as an exemplar of ethics and morality.

How does this make moral sense?


The hypocrit is now the good guy, and the honest gay is the goat. If the world weren't round, it would be standing on its head.

1 Comments:

Blogger ChiTom said...

Note, too, that the second man does not exist-- a straw gay. "Vilify": there's the right-wing projection machine at work!

AND it is the virulent hypocrisy of Haggard's concealing his inclinations behind a barrage of anti-gay denunciations and actions that is the public issue here.

Had Haggard's indiscretion been with a female prostitute, it would still have been grounds for his dismissal from the church. Either way, the unfaithfulness to his wife stands, no matter with whom: that is the private issue (and the baseline ecclesiastical one).

(And notice by the way that Haggard's drug use/purchase hardly seems to have been raised as an issue? That alone would be grounds for disciplinary action.)

10:54 AM  

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