Transcript Slide 1

After investigating the definition of
morality and moral values and looking at
two different arguments which probe the
question ‘what is morally good’, we have
been examining religious influence on
morality. E.g. religious belief, tradition and
authority all help guide the religious to
moral decision making.
Today: we shall be looking at one of the
more important guides for morality for a
religious follower in the shape of religious
texts.
Lesson outline
• Identifying different religions main sacred
writings
• Looking at the importance of text in
relation to morality
• Advantages and disadvantages of using
holy scripture for moral guidance.
Sacred writings
• Islam-
Qur’an & Hadith
• Sikhism-
Guru Granth Sahib
• Judaism-
Torah
• Christian-
Bible
Importance of text
• In Islam the Qur’an is regarded as the
actual words of Allah. While the Hadith is
believed to be the teachings and example
of the Prophet Muhammed.
• Sikhism- the Guru Granth Sahib is thought
to be a living Guru or teacher and is a focal
point in their worship. The Guru Granth
Sahib is so important that it has its own
room in the Gurdwara and is woke up in
the morning and put to be at night.
• Judaism has the Torah (or scrolls of the
law) which are considered to be so holy
that they can only be touched by a silver
pointer called a yad.
•For Christians the bible is the holiest book.
Christians believe that the Bible was inspired
by God and some believe it is the actual word
of God.
• These holy texts are the main reference
point for religious believers when it comes
to morality.
• The scriptures (dependant upon the
interpretation by the individual or religious
authority) will set out and give examples of
a moral code or guidelines for which
religious believers should follow.
• Even non-religious groups such as the
British Humanist Association have a guide
for which they recall for moral guidance.
British Humanist Association
• humanists believe that moral values follow on
from human nature and experience in some way.
Humanists base their moral principles on reason
(which leads them to reject the idea of any
supernatural agency), on shared human values
and respect for others. They believe that people
should work together to improve the quality of
life for all and make it more
equitable. Humanism is a full philosophy, "life
stance" or worldview, rather than being about
one aspect of religion, knowledge, or politics.
Strengths
• Religious people relying on Holy texts for
moral guidance can consult their scripture
to see what is right. – they don’t have a
Hal moment!
Weaknesses
• Alternative possibilities: killing is wrong,
what about killing animals for food or selfdefence?
• Do they account for modern dilemmas?
• Translation of sacred texts
• Genesis describes how the world was
created in 6 days – but does day mean
24hours? – difficulty of language.
• Contradictory views – Hindus respect the
idea of non-violence, but the Holy texts
depict glorious battles and many killings.
The same can be said for the Hadith and
the Prophets journey to Medina.
Interpretations
• There are many different translations and
interpretations of text.
• E.g. on the journey to Medina Muhammed giving
permission to fight – is it permission to kill?
• It is said that religious scholars must interpret
the writings by what they meant at the time they
were written