Would
mandatory church lead to moral rebirth? This was the question raised by many
after Republican Sen. Sylvia Allen remarked, “probably we should be debating a bill
requiring every American to attend a church of their choice on Sunday to see if
we can get back to having a moral rebirth.” The statement which was made during
a committee meeting regarding, concealed-carry gun bill.

In
the article, Evan Selinger an ethics philosopher at Rochester Institute of
Technology in New York stated, “It's
overly-simplistic to believe that genuine moral sensitivity can be engineered,”
Professor Selinger says. “People can regularly participate in religious rituals
... and still turn out to be insensitive, selfish, apathetic, and even cruel.”
This subject of religion has often been associated with good
morals and behavior. Although religion may play a significant role in
developing our moral values, but a philosophical investigation of moral issues
must involve more than faith in a religious authority. It is believed that
rational argument and reasoning can be a way of people to arrive at a decision.
Chapter 1 of our textbook discusses the subject of moral issues
and religion a strong statement which I want to share is this, “a good way to
communicate about ethics for both believers and non-believers is to approach
the issue through the language of reason.” Today’s social thinkers believe
being religious is neither a prerequisite to being moral, nor assurance that a
person will be moral.
References:
Sen. Sylvia Allen: Would 'mandatory church' lead to 'moral rebirth'? ( video). (n.d.). Retrieved March 29, 2015, from http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Society/2015/0327/Sen.-Sylvia-Allen-Would-mandatory-church-lead-to-moral-rebirth-video?cmpid=addthis_mailto
Rosenstand, N. (2013). The moral of the story: An Introduction to
Ethics (7th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.