What is owed to God? I submit that condoning or acquiescing to evil is failing God. Damage to one's soul or doing evil is a separation from God. That is where Thirsk failed God from a Christian perspective. Where he failed his original moral code. Where he might have used that separation to better recognize where his duty to God lies.
n7axw wrote:
From a Christian point of view, the heart of morality is love of neighbor as opposed to centering upon the self. If Thirsk cannot better the situation by acting, he is not necessarily absolved, but his responsibility is directly proportional to the amount of impact he can have.
Then there is the question as to who is the neighbor. No doubt but what the prisoners have first call on that status simply due to their helplessness, their vulnerability. So if he can improve their lot, he is bound to do so. That is the lesson of the Parable of the Good Samaritan -- though far from the only one.
Also claiming neighbor status are the men under his command. He must ask how his possible absence would impact them, how they would fare under less effective leadership.
His family also claims neighbor status. To act in a manner that would put his daughters, their husbands and children at risk when there is no way that he can change the condition or the fate of the prisoners would not be moral, at least not in my book.
Then there is the matter of the fate of Thirsk himself. On the one hand, the last person involved in the situation whom he should be concerned with is himself. That includes worry about staining his soul. Yet on the other hand, God calls upon us to value life, including our own.
Add into this matters of vowing to serve his country, his perceived responsibility to the church and you wind up with a very complex brew.
Finally, when push comes to shove, all Thirsk can really do is to try to do the right thing within the limits of the situation in which he finds himself and entrust the results to God.
Don