One
of my “least favorite” jobs as Academic Dean at a previous college was
passing judgment on what artwork should hang in the gallery. From time
to time I'd receive a call, usually from the chair of the art
department, asking me to come over and examine pieces scheduled to be
hung on display. Generally, the art faculty had no qualms at all about
the pieces, but a “little birdie,” sometimes “inside” and sometimes
“outside” their heads would chirp a warning. “Is this piece offensive
or not?” “Is the nudity gratuitous or essential?” The challenge was to
consider the various kinds of visitors and to balance the demands of
manners and morality.
Spiritual formation requires
development of good judgment, and that training is a big part of our
mission at Greenville College . A piece of that process that sometimes
goes unnoticed is teaching the ability to distinguish between issues
that have to do with morality and those that are really just about
manners.
I say “just manners” advisedly. While
manners are primarily about what is considered socially acceptable, and
not necessarily what is morally right or wrong, it's not that simple.
There is a connection. Standing too close in public, raising our voice
in the movies, flossing at the table, wearing hats in church, even
failing to stop at stop signs have moral dimensions. First, because
manners usually do reflect a group's deeper moral commitments; for
example, to justice and respect. Second, because our non-compliance
with them also reflects our unwillingness to submit our own personal
freedom to the good of the community.
But still, it
is easy to confuse or even equate manners with morality. What makes
impoliteness “wrong” is often nothing more than that it surprises other
people because it is not what they expect. As our experience with other
cultures shows, it may be impolite, but not a sin, to stand closer to
someone in line than we are accustomed to doing in the U.S. And
generations differ too! What is appropriate (mannerly) for public
display or public conversation is probably quite different for someone
raised in the 1950s than for someone raised in the 1990s. It is
tempting to suppose that lack of manners is lack of morals.
We
can also make the opposite mistake. When someone raised with the
manners of our current age considers whether and how they should enter
the “public square” with art, or discussion, or music, it is tempting
for them also to confuse manners and morality. They may assume that
because something is socially acceptable—for example, open discussion
of sexuality or liberal exposure of skin in dress—it is therefore
morally right. This however, runs the risk first of offending others,
by itself a real moral question. It also runs the risk of overlooking
the moral worth of modesty, a virtue that protects our own spirit.
Perhaps most importantly, it risks falling into the thinking that
current manners determine what is eternally right and wrong. Just as
one set of manners should not be used uncritically to define
"wrongness,” contemporary manners should not be raised to the level of
moral “rightness.”
Spiritually mature Christians
understand that right and wrong (morality) is determined by God, not by
what our culture or our generation judges to be socially acceptable.
Our manners, like our theology, are only imperfect human attempts to
put that in words.
In a Christian liberal arts
community, we are devoted to helping young people mature spiritually.
Discerning where manners and morality intersect, and where they part
company is a subtle but crucial part of this work. At Greenville we
address this not only in the classroom, but perhaps even more
significantly by the discussions in which we engage publicly, the
activities and events we sponsor, the posters and art we permit, as
well as the rules we impose and enforce. It is facilitated by the
presence of diverse cultures and generations who talk to each other
with the shared purpose of spiritual growth. As with all learning
environments, it is a laboratory in which mistakes are made, but one in
which we undertake experiments in a controlled environment. We pray God
will give us wisdom to do this carefully and Christianly.
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