My experience is that this framework is not consistently applied, though.
For example, I’ve tried pointing out that it follows from these beliefs that if our moral judgments reject what we’ve been told is the will of God then we ought to obey our moral judgments and reject what we’ve been told is the will of God. The same folks who have just used this framework to reject treating something reprehensible as an expression of the will of God will turn around and tell me that it’s not my place to judge God’s will.
Yeah, that happens too. Best argument I’ve gotten in support of the position is that they feel that they are able to reasonably interpret the will of God through scripture, and thus instructions ‘from God’ that run counter to that must be false. So it’s not quite the same as their own moral intuition vs a divine command, but their own scriptural learning used as a factor to judge the authenticity of a divine command.
My experience is that this framework is not consistently applied, though.
For example, I’ve tried pointing out that it follows from these beliefs that if our moral judgments reject what we’ve been told is the will of God then we ought to obey our moral judgments and reject what we’ve been told is the will of God. The same folks who have just used this framework to reject treating something reprehensible as an expression of the will of God will turn around and tell me that it’s not my place to judge God’s will.
Yeah, that happens too. Best argument I’ve gotten in support of the position is that they feel that they are able to reasonably interpret the will of God through scripture, and thus instructions ‘from God’ that run counter to that must be false. So it’s not quite the same as their own moral intuition vs a divine command, but their own scriptural learning used as a factor to judge the authenticity of a divine command.